Page 140 U. S. 166
as "for taking and certifying depositions to file," was a proper
charge, under Rev.Stat. § 847. By section 4256 of the Code of
Alabama, it is provided that
"upon a complaint being made to any one of the magistrates
specified in section 4680, that such offense has, in the opinion of
the complainant, been committed, the magistrate must examine the
complainant and such witnesses as he may propose, on oath, take
their depositions in writing, and cause them to be subscribed by
the persons making them."
By section 4257,
"the depositions must set forth the facts stated by this
complainant and his witnesses, tending to establish the commission
of the offense and the guilt of the defendant."
Under these sections, it is made the duty of the committing
magistrate to reduce the deposition or complaint of the principal
witness or witnesses to writing, and we see no reason why he should
not be paid therefor. This was the view of the court of claims of a
similar claim made under the practice of Alabama in the case of
Ravesies v. United States, 24 Ct.Cl. 224. The objection to
this item is therefore overruled.
(a) Petitioner is also allowed a fee of 10 cents for each oath
administered in connection with these complaints, and 15 cents for
each jurat, as for a certificate.
United States v. McDermott,
ante, 140 U. S. 151.
(b) He is also entitled to a fee of 10 cents for filing such
complaint, under section 847 and under the clause of section 828
"for filing and entering every declaration, plea, or other paper,
10 cents."
2. No objection is made by the government to the second series
of items for issuing 45 warrants at $1 each, entering 128 returns
thereon at 15 cents per folio, and filing such warrants at 10 cents
each, nor to the charges for like services in connection with the
issuing and return of subpoenas.
3. The fourth series of items relates to charges in connection
with the recognizances of defendants for examination. We have
already held in
United States v. Ewing, ante, 140 U. S. 142,
that a charge for the acknowledgment of recognizances was proper,
though but one acknowledgment for each recognizance can be allowed.
There is no valid objection to the allowance
Page 140 U. S. 167
for the oaths of sureties and the jurats to such oaths. It is
usual and proper to require that persons offering themselves as
sureties for the appearance of the accused in court shall justify
to their pecuniary responsibility, and the expense of so doing
stands upon the same footing as the recognizance itself. It is true
that the taking of recognizance or bail for appearance is primarily
for the benefit of the defendant, and in civil cases it is usual to
require the costs of entering into such recognizances to be paid by
the defendant or other person offering himself as surety. But in
criminal cases it is for the interest of the public as well as the
accused that the latter should not be detained in custody prior to
his trial if the government can be assured of his presence at that
time, and as these persons usually belong to the poorest class of
people, to require them to pay the cost of their recognizances
would generally result in their being detained in jail at the
expense of the government, while their families would be deprived
in many instances of their assistance and support. Presumptively
they are innocent of the crime charged, and entitled to their
constitutional privilege of being admitted to bail, and, as the
whole proceeding is adverse to them, the expense connected with
their being admitted to bail is a proper charge against the
government.
4. The same rule will apply to recognizances of witnesses
summoned at the expense of the government.
5. The charge per folio for payrolls of witnesses is proper, as
well as the charge of 10 cents for each oath administered to a
witness in support of his claim for attendance and mileage.
6. The charge per folio for transcripts of proceedings is
lawful, under Rev.Stat. § 1014, which provides that
"copies of the process [issued by the commissioner] shall be
returned as speedily as may be into the clerk's office of such
court, together with the recognizances of the witnesses for their
appearance to testify in the case."
In most districts, it is the habit of commissioners to send up
the original proceedings before them, a practice to which there
seems to be no objection, conducing as it does to a diminution of
expenses to the government; but where the requirements of
section
Page 140 U. S. 168
1014 are literally adhered to, the expense of preparing such
transcript is a proper charge against the government.
7. The charge per folio for depositions taken on examination is,
we think, fairly allowable, upon the same principle on which we
have allowed it for preparing complaints. Section 4286 of the
Criminal Code of Alabama requires that "the evidence of witnesses
examined must be reduce to writing by the magistrate, or under his
direction, and signed by the witnesses, respectively." As there is
no special provision for the allowance of a charge for such
evidence, it may be considered as a deposition within section 847,
for the taking and certifying of which the commissioner is entitled
to 20 cents per folio. We held a similar charge to be proper in the
case of
United States v. Ewing, ante, 140 U. S. 142.
8. But the charge for filing such depositions should be
disallowed. Section 828 allows "for filing and entering every
declaration, plea, or other paper, ten cents." Each deposition is
not necessarily a "paper" within the meaning of this clause. If two
or more depositions are embraced in a single paper or a series of
sheets are attached together, they form but a single paper within
the meaning of the law. We had occasion recently to pass upon this
question in the case of
Schell's Executors v. Fauche,
138 U. S. 562,
where two letters pasted together were held to constitute but one
in law.
These embrace all the items to which objection is made by the
attorney general. It remains that, upon being modified by deducting
the last item of $10.80, the judgment of the court below must
be
Affirmed.