Eustace v. Greenville County
Eustace v. Greenville County
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The facts in this case appear in the judgment of the court below, which will be set forth in the report of this case.
Sec. 622 of the Gen. Stat. provides that: “Each county shall pay witnesses’ fees, in State cases, for actual attendance on the Circuit Courts, as provided by law.” Sec. 835 of the Gen. Stat., amongst other things, provides: “And the accused shall in felonies, and no other case, have the like process to compel the attendance of any witness in his behalf as is granted or permitted on the part of the State.” Sec. 2197 of the Gen. Stat. provides that: “No fees or other compensation shall be allowed to any witness, bound over or summoned to testify in the Court of General Sessions, unless the Circuit Judge who tried the cause in which the witness was summoned shall certify that such witness was material, and in that case the witness shall be allowed fifty cents for each day of his attendance, and
Plaintiff’s second exception is as follows: 2. “Because his honor erred in not holding that the defendant county is liable for the pay of defendant’s witnesses in all cases of felonies, where it appears that said witness was regularly bound over, and the Circuit Judge who tried the case certifies that such
Taking all the sections aforesaid under consideration, we think it was the intention of the legislature that when it provided: “The accused snail in felonies, and no other case, have the like process to compel the attendance of any witness in his behalf as is granted or permitted on the part of the State,” such witnesses should receive their fees just as v,fitnesses bound over for the State, in the absence of any provision of the law that a distinction should be made in the payment of such witnesses. This exception is sustained.
A copy of the witness certificate is as follows: “The State against George C. Head. Indictment, house breaking and larceny. July Term, 1892. The County of Greenville to J. C. Eustace, to 7 days, $3.50. Total, $3.50. Appeared before
This certificate is not sufficient. The certificate is not made by “the Circuit Judge who tried the cause in which the witness was summoned,” but by the clerk of the court; nor is the certificate to the effect that the witness was “material,” but that he “was regularly bound, over as a material witness in the above stated case.” It is true, the presiding judge signed his name under the word “Approved,” written on the certificate, but this was not a compliance with the statute. The object of the statute was that the question of materiality of the witness should be decided by the presiding judge, and that the certificate should be signed by him. The certificate, before it was “approved” by the presiding judge, was clearly illegal, and the approval by him did not give it validity in law. This question was not decided in the case of Hellams v. Greenville County, 32 S. C., 441. This exception is overruled on the grounds stated in respondent’s notice above mentioned.
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the court below, for the reasons herein stated, be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- EUSTACE v. GREENVILLE COUNTY
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Felonies — Defendant’s Witnesses. — Under tlie statutes of tliis State, now of force, the defendant in ail cases of felony is entitled to like process as the State to compel the attendance of witnesses, and the witnesses so bound over are entitled to be paid in like manner as State witnesses. These provisions are not limited to cases of capital felony. 2. Ibid. — Witnesses—Certificate.—A witness in a case of felony is not entitled to demand his per diem and mileage from the county, unless the Circuit Judge before whom the case was tried shall certify that such witness was material. This requirement of the statute is not satisfied by a certificate of the clerk of court that the claimant was “bound over as a material witness,” and by the trial judge marking such certificate “approved.”