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year the governor of this state may in his discretion grant and issue an unconditional pardon to two convicts in the penitentiary who have been confined therein for ten (10) years or more, and whose conduct while incarcerated in the penitentiary has been such as to entitle him or her to the benefits of the good time act. [1889, Chap. 36.]

SEC. 569 d. [Same.]-Said pardons shall be issued upon the written recommendation of the warden of the penitentiary, the attorney general, secretary of state, and the chief justice of the supreme court.

SEC. 569 e. [Same.]-This act shall not be construed or taken to abridge or deny the power now vested in the governor to grant pardons, but shall be an addition

thereto.

SEC. 570. [Release or parole.]-That the governor shall have power in the case of any prisoner, who is now, or hereafter may be, imprisoned in the state penitentiary under a sentence other than murder in the first or second degree, who may have served the minimum term provided by law for the crime for which he was convicted (and who has not previously been convicted of felony and served a term in any penal institution within the United States of America), and in the case of any prisoner who is now or hereafter may be imprisoned under a sentence for murder in the first or second degree, and who has now, or hereafter shall have served twenty-five full years, to allow any such prisoner to go upon parole, outside of the enclosure of said penitentiary, to remain while on parole, within the state under the control and in the legal custody of the governor, and subject at any time to be taken back within the enclosure of said institution; and full power to retake and reimprison any convict so upon parole is hereby conferred upon the governor, whose written order shall be a sufficient warrant, for all officers named therein, to authorize such officers to return to actual custody any conditionally released or paroled prisoner; and it is hereby made the duty of all officers to execute said order the same as ordinary criminal process. [1893, Chap. 36.] SEC. 571. [Provided for taking effect Sept. 1, 1873.]

CHAPTER LIII.-ERRORS FROM INFERIOR COURTS.

SEC. 572. [Review on error.]—That in all criminal cases tried before county judges, police judges, justices of the peace, police magistrates, and all other courts inferior to the district court, wherein the accused shall be convicted of a violation of any law of this state, or of an ordinance of any municipal corporation in this state, and adjudged to pay a fine or to be imprisoned, or both, such judgment may be reviewed on error in the district court of the county in which any such trial and conviction had. [1883, Chap. LXXXV.]

may be

SEC. 573. [Transcript.]—On application by or on behalf of such convicted person to any such officer or court before whom such trial and conviction may have been had, and upon tender of the legal fees, such officer shall make and deliver to such convicted person or his counsel a complete certified transcript of the judgment and all docket entries made on the trial of such case, and on receipt of a copy of the summons, as hereinafter set forth, shall forward to the clerk of the district court the original papers in the case.

SEC. 574. [Petition in error.]-The proceeding to review any such judg ment shall be by petition in error, to which shall be attached such transcript, and also any original papers received by the clerk, and the court in which the review is sought may, by summary process, compel a more complete record to be furnished and such original papers to be forwarded.

SEC. 570. "An act to provide for the parole of prisoners to place the power therefor in the governor of the state and defining the duties of the governor and of officers in connection therewith." Laws 1893, Chap. 36. Took effect Aug. 1, 1893.

CHAP. LIII. An act to provide for reviewing on error all criminal eases before county judges, police judges, Justices of the peace, police magistrates, and all other courts inferior to the district court, wherein the accused shall be convicted and adjudged to pay a fine or to be imprisoned, or both." [Laws 1883, Chap. LXXXV.]

SEC. 575. [Summons in error.]--When such petition and precipe are filed in any court, a summons in error, returnable in thirty days, shall be issued by the clerk, unless the judge of such court prescribe another day for the return, which summons shall be directed to the sheriff of the county in which the district attorney resides, containing such description of the judgment as to identify it, reciting the fact that a petition in error has been filed, and command such sheriff to notify the district attorney of the time it will be for hearing; and if original papers are required, it shall command the sheriff to notify the officer in whose possession they are to forward them to such clerk. In case the district attorney should reside in some county other than the one in which such proceedings in error are to be had, the clerk may send the summons in error by mail to the proper sheriff, who may return the same by mail to the clerk of the court from which it was issued.

SEC. 576. [Judgment.]—Upon the hearing of a petition in error, the court may affirm the judgment or reverse it in whole or in part, and order the accused to be discharged.

SEC. 577. [Recognizance.]-No sentence or judgment shall be suspended or execution stayed until the defendant shall enter into a recognizance before the clerk of the district court, where his petition in error is filed, conditioned that the defendant will prosecute his petition in error to effect, and surrender himself to the custody of the proper officer of the county in which the conviction was had, in case the judgment against him be not reversed or a new trial ordered.

CHAPTER LIV.-PROSECUTION OF OFFENSES BY INFORMATION.

SEC. 588. [Jurisdiction.]—That the several courts of this state shall possess and may exercise the same power and jurisdiction to hear, try, and determine prosecutions upon information, for crimes, misdemeanors, and offenses, to issue writs and process, and do all other acts therein, as they possess and may exercise in cases of like prosecutions upon indictments. [1885, chap. 108.]

SEC. 579. [Information.]-All informations shall be filed during term, in the court having jurisdiction of the offense specified therein, by the prosecuting attorney of the proper county as informant; he shall subscribe his name thereto, and indorse thereon the names of the witnesses known to him at the time of filing the same; and at such time before the trial of any case as the court may, by rule or otherwise prescribe, he shall endorse thereon the names of such other witnesses as shall then be known to him.

SEC. 580. [Same-Verification-Statement of offense.]-All information shall be verified by the oath of the prosecuting attorney, complainant, or some other person, and the offenses charged therein shall be stated with the same fullness and precision in matters of substance, as is required in indictments in like cases. Different offenses and different degrees of the same offense may be joined in one information, in all cases where the same might by different counts in one indictment; and in all cases a defendant or defendants shall have the same rights, as to proceedings therein, as he or they would have if prosecuted for the same offense upon indictment.

CHAP. LIV. "An act to provide for prosecuting offenses on information and to dispense with the calling of grand juries except by order of the district judges." Took effect June 5, 1885. Construction of statute. 18 Id.. 402. Indorsement of names of witnesses. 19 Neb., 648. 20 Id., 516. 23 Id., 310. Names of witnesses should be endorsed before day set for trial. 24 Neb., 723. Information cannot be made against one whose case has been examined by a grand jury, who report "no cause of action," and accused thereon discharged. 22 Neb., 147. Prosecutor cannot delegate authority to another to file information. Id., 150. Information must be sworn to before a magistrate and not before notary public. Id., 150. In order to authorize information, except against fugitive from justice, there must have been previous examination based on accusation under o. th, charging the party with the commission of a crime. Id.. 149. Charging larceny without alleging that crime was committed within the jurisdiction of the court in which the information was fled, Held, Insufficient. 22 Neb., 420. On motion to quash, court will not inquire into the form and validity of complaint upon which the preliminary exami nation before magistrate was had, the crime alleged being the same. 24 Neb., 99. Indictment defective; prosecutor may withdraw same and file information charging same offense. Id. Prosecution in name of "State of Nebraska" sutficient. Id., 101. Act constitutional. 29 Neb., 437. Information verified before magistrate, not notary. 31 Id.. 247. Magistrate taking examination must have jurisdiction. 28 Neb., 341. Names of witnesses endorsed on information. 29 Neb., 437. Verification before notary waived after trial. 54 N. W. R., 85.

SEC. 581.

[Acts Applicable.]—That the provisions of chapters XL, XLI, XLII, XLIII, XLIV, XLV, of the Criminal Code, in relation to indictments, and all other provisions of law applying to prosecutions upon indictments to writs, and process therein, and the issuing and service thereof, to motions, pleadings, trials, and punishments, or the execution of any sentence and to all other proceedings in cases of indictment, whether in the court of original or appellate jurisdiction, shall in the same manner and to the same extent, as near as may be, apply to information, and all prosecutions and proceedings thereon.

SEC. 582. [Imprisonment---Recognizance.]-Any person who may, according to law, be committed to jail, or become recognized or held to bail with sureties for his appearance in court to answer to any indictment, may, in like manner, so be committed to jail or become recognized and held to bail for his appearance, to answer to any information or indictment; as the case may be.

SEC. 583. [Duty of-Prosecutor.]-It shall be the duty of the prosecuting attorney of the proper county to inquire into and make full examination of all the facts and circumstances connected with any case of preliminary examination, as provided by law, touching the commission of any offense wherein the offender shall be committed to jail, or become recognized or held to bail, and if the prosecuting attorney shall determine in any such case that an information ought not to be filed, he shall make subscribe, and file with the clerk of the court a statement in writing, containing his reasons, in fact and in law, for not filing an information in such case, and that such statement shall be filed at and during the term of court at which the offender shall be held for his appearance; Provided, That in such case such court may examine said statement together with the evidence filed in the case, and if, upon such examination, the court shall not be satisfied with said statement, the prosecuting attorney shall be directed by the court to file the proper information, and bring the case to trial.

SEC. 584. [Grand juries.]—Grand juries shall not hereafter be drawn, summoned, or required to attend at the sittings of any court within this state, as provided by law, unless the judge thereof shall so direct by writing, under his hand, and filed with the clerk of said court.

SEC. 585. [Preliminary examination.]—No information shall be filed against any person for any offense until such person shall have had a preliminary examination therefor as provided by law, before a justice of the peace or other examining magistrate or officer, unless such person shall waive his right to such examination; Provided, however, That information may be filed without such examination against fugitives from justice, and any fugitive from justice against whom an information shall be filed may be demanded by the governor of this state of the executive authority of any other state or territory, or of any foreign government, in the same manner, and the same proceedings may be had thereon, as provided by law in like cases of demand upon indictment filed.

INDEX.

ABANDONMENT.

ground for divorce, 446.

sick and disabled animals, 1010.
ABATEMENT.

actions by or against corporations, 297.
actions do not abate by death, marriage,
other disability, or by transfer of inter-
est, 858.

general provisions, 913.

plea in, 1077.

ABDUCTION, 1002.

ABETTORS OF CRIME. See Accessories.

felony, 999.

duelling, 1000.

child stealing, 1002.
ABORTION, 1005.

ABSENT AND ABSCONDING DEBTORS.
action accrues against, when, 855.
attachment of property of, 877, 969.
service upon by publication, 862.
ABSENT DEFENDANT. See Non-Resident.
ABSTRACTS.

of votes cast, 458, 460.
assessment rolls, 686, 687.
saline lands, 623.

educational lands, 772, 773.

of title; compiling; evidence, etc., 653, 654.
ABUSE.

female child, 1001.

after breaking into dwelling, 1007.
ACADEMIES.

how incorporated, 288.

lands attached to, 288.

increase of capital stock, 289, 290.

liability of stockholders, 290.

endowment fund; application; trustees, 290.

ACCESSORIES. See Abettors.

before and after the fact, 999.
before fact, not bailed, 1067.
treason, 1002.
ACCOUNTS. See Auditor.

officers of executive department, 28.
state board of agriculture, 50.
auditor with county treasurer, 777.
with counties; settlement, 352, 369.
with townships, 379.

county clerk with treasurer, 360.

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interest on, 537.

mechanics and laborers, 568, 569, 572.
state printing, 617.

collectors of taxes, 692, 693.
books of, evidence, 900, 901.
copy filed with pleading, 870.
matters of, referred, 893.

costs in criminal cases, 1092.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT.

taken by county clerk and deputy, 360.
deputy clerks district and county, 444.
notaries public, 597, 645.

of deeds before judge or clerk of court or jus-
tice of peace, 645.
commissioner of deeds, 649, 650.
secretary of state, 792.
register of deeds, 358.

mayor, clerk, and police judge, 258.

not necessary to chattel mortgage, 490.
how taken and proved, 645, 647.
private writing, evidence, 901.
revives cause of action, when, 855.

on back of summons, equivalent to service,
862, 967.

assignment for benefit of creditors, 80.
plats, 157, 247.

articles of R. R. incorporation, 298.
certificate of limited partnership, 609.
appointment of real estate agent, 865.
agreement to submit to arbitration, 962
ACQUITTANCE.

judgment of, operates how, 910,
ACTIONS.

abatement, 858, 913.

agreed case, 932.

1101

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