Court Opinion

ID: 5467541
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 20:03:25.739232+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:10.568342
License: Public Domain

Welles, Justice.
The first section of the act entitled “ an act to regulate the fees of district attorneys, and to repeal the several acts relating to the same, passed May 7th, 1839,” among other things enacts as follows: “Ho other or greater fees shall be allowed to any district attorney in any county in this state, (the city and county of Hew York, and the counties of Erie, Genesee, Rensselaer, Washington and Onondaga excepted,) for any services rendered by him in the discharge of the duties of his office as chargeable against the said county, than such as. are hereinafter provided.” The section then proceeds to provide for various services of the district attorney, and in relation to subpoena, is as follows: “ For every subpoena actually and necessarily issued, returnable before a grand jury or court, twenty-five cents, including subpoena ticket; but no other allowance shall be made for any draft or copy of subpoena, or any draft or copy of subpoena ticket for any witness ; and no more than one subpoena and subpoena ticket shall be allowed for each witness subpoenaed either before the grand jury or court; and no allowance shall be made for any subpoena and subpoena ticket issued for the same un'tness, more than once in the same cause, except when it shall become necessary to subpoena the same witness before the court, after having been subpoenaed before the grand jury.”
This seems to me to settle the question. Only one subpoena is to be charged for the same witness in the same cause, after the indictment found; and only one for the same witness before the grand jury; so that no more than two subpoenas can be charged, in any case, for the same witness, from the commencement of the prosecution before the grand jury to its conclusion by verdict and final judgment. There is no room for construction or interpretation of the statute. It may, in some eases, produce inconvenience to district attorneys, and may possibly require them, occasionally, to render a service without compensation. Indeed, this they have to do every term of the court. They are required to attend before the grand jury for the purpose of examining witnesses in their presence and giving them advice upon legal matters, (2 R. S. 725, § 32,) for which no compensation is provided; besides a great variety of other duties and labors, as the experience of almost every vigilant district attorney will prove. The Legislature has seen fit to select from their various duties a portion, for which compensation is given, doubtless *238deeming that sufficient for the whole. Whether the compensation is adequate, is not for courts to determine.
With respect to the particular question under consideration, it is believed the Legislature upon the subject was prompted by complaints of recklessness, not to say rapacity, of some district attorneys, who were guilty, among other things, of neglecting to have the witnesses recognized, and thus creating a necessity for issuing subpoenas a second time, or oftener, for the same witnesses in the same cause. The evil was not only, or mainly, the expense of the additional subpoena, but it led necessarily'to the expense of serving them, which, upon an average, was quadruple .that of issuing them. To avoid this, the district attorney is to put the witness under recognizance to appear, if another attendance is necessary. If the witness disobeys the subpoena when duly served, he is in contempt, and may be brought in on attachment, and will be compelled to pay the expense of the proceeding against him, and may be fined besides, unless he shows a good excuse for not attending. After a witness is duly recognized and neglects to attend, in pursuance of his recognizance, he may be proceeded against by attachment in the same manner as if he had failed to appear in obedience to a subpoena. (Session Laws of 1845, ch. 180, p. 187, § 20.) In this way the attendance of witnesses may always be secured, if at all, at all the different terms of the court, after the indictment is found, upon being once subpoenaed.
It may be that the statute is too strict with the district attorney in not allowing him to charge for the subpoenas for witnesses in case of a second trial becoming necessary in consequence of the disagreement of the jury on the first, as was the case with respect to a portion of these rejected items. It is usual, after the testimony on a trial is closed, to discharge the witnesses. It would be regarded oppressive upon them to require them to remain in attendance after their examination is closed, and until the jury are discharged, or to enter into a recognizance for further appearance in the same cause. But however this may be, the remedy is -with the Legislature, and not with the judicial authorities. The statute before recited is too specific and comprehensive to leave any doubt upon the subject.
The taxation by the county judge is affirmed, and the appeal dismissed.