Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1983 CHAPTER 359--S.F.No. 708 An act relating to the court system; removing obsolete references to justice of the peace and magistrate; establishing a court study commission; amending Minnesota Statutes 1982, sections 72A.12, subdivision 5; 72A.30; 88.645; 97.50, subdivisions 1 and 7; 115.32, subdivision 3; 127.09; 127.17, subdivision 4; 144.12, subdivision 1; 168.46; 169.42, subdivision 5; 169.91; 169.95; 169.965, subdivision 3; 169.966, subdivision 3; 169.971, subdivision 4; 171.08; 171.16, subdivision 1; 181.09; 181.17; 219.32; 219.97, subdivision 13; 290.58; 297A.42, subdivision 2; 299F.40, subdivision 5; 340.85, subdivision 2; 340.91; 345.02; 345.03; 345.04; 345.05; 345.06; 345.14; 346.03; 346.04; 346.09, subdivision 1; 347.04; 347.05; 347.06; 357.12; 357.16; 357.22; 357.27; 357.29; 358.15; 359.061; 359.11; 361.27, subdivision 2; 365.52; 366.20; 367.11; 367.25, subdivision 1; 368.01, subdivision 20; 373.09; 375.24; 390.15; 390.20; 390.31, subdivision 2; 390.33, subdivisions 2 and 6; 395.23; 412.02, subdivision 1; 412.021, subdivision 2; 412.023, subdivision 5; 412.111; 412.861, subdivision 3; 473.608, subdivision 17; 485.07; 488A.021, subdivision 4; 488A.09, subdivision 7; 488A.19, subdivision 5; 490.18; 509.04; 514.29; 514.34; 542.05; 549.03; 550.17; 571.50; 571.58; 571.65; 574.20; 574.35; 588.01, subdivision 3; 588.02; 593.21; 609.27, subdivision 1; 609.415, subdivision 1; 609.66, subdivision 1; 611.07, subdivision 1; 611.17; 617.27; 624.62; 625.01; 625.02; 625.03; 625.04; 625.05; 625.06; 625.07; 625.08; 625.09; 625.10; 625.11; 625.12; 625.13; 625.14; 625.15; 625.17; 625.18; 626.04; 626.05, subdivision 1; 626.06; 626.09; 626.11; 626.14; 626.15; 626.17; 626.66; 629.03; 629.13; 629.14; 629.15; 629.16; 629.17; 629.18; 629.23, subdivision 3; 629.31; 629.36; 629.363; 629.364; 629.39; 629.401; 629.403; 629.41; 629.44; 629.45; 629.53; 629.54; 629.55; 629.60; 629.62; 630.17; 630.37; 631.04; 636.08; 641.07; 641.25; and 648.39, subdivision 3; repealing Minnesota Statutes 1982, sections 357.14; 357.15; 367.03, subdivision 4; 367.21; 388.02; 412.02, subdivision 5; 412.171; 487.01, subdivision 8; 488A.283; 488A.284; 492.02, subdivision 2; 542.15; 549.16; 599.21; 599.22; 599.23; 609.46; 629.56; 629.66; and 629.71. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA: Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 72A.12, subdivision 5, is amended to read: Subd. 5. [POLITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS PROHIBITED.] No insurance company or association, including fraternal beneficiary associations, doing business in this state, shall, directly or indirectly, pay or use, or offer, consent or agree to pay or use, any money or property for or in aid of any political party, committee or organization, or for or in aid of any corporation, joint stock or other association organized or maintained for political purposes, or for or in aid of any candidate for political office, or for nomination forsuchthe office, or for any other political purposewhatsoever, or for reimbursement or indemnification of any person for money or propertysoused for political purposes. Any officer, director, stockholder, attorney or agent of any corporation or association which violates any of the provisions of this section, who participates in, aids, abets, or advises or consents to anysuchviolation, and any person who solicits or knowingly receives any money or property in violation of this section,shall beis guilty of a gross misdemeanor, and. Any officer aiding or abetting in any contribution made in violation of this sectionshall beis liable to the company or association for the amountsocontributed. No person shall be excused from attending and testifying, or producing any books, papers or other documents before any courtor magistrate, upon any investigation, proceeding or trial, for a violation of any of the provisions of this section, upon the ground, or for the reason, that the testimony or evidence, documentary or otherwise, required of him may tend to incriminate or degrade him; but. No person shall be prosecuted or subjected to any penalty or forfeiture for or on account of any transaction, matter or thing concerning which he maysotestify or produce evidence, documentary or otherwise, and no testimonysogiven or produced shall be used against him upon any criminal investigation or proceeding. Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 72A.30, is amended to read: 72A.30 [EVIDENTIAL PRIVILEGE DENIED; IMMUNITY; WAIVER.]If anyA personshall askwho asks to be excused from attending and testifying or from producing any books, papers, records, correspondence, or other documents at any hearing on the ground that the testimony or evidence required of him may tend to incriminate him or subject him to a penalty or forfeiture,and shall notwithstanding bewho is nevertheless directed to givesuchthe testimony or producesuchthe evidence,he must nonethelessshall comply withsuchthe direction, but. However, he shall notthereaftersubsequently be prosecuted or subjected to any penalty or forfeiturefor oron accountbecause of any transaction, matter, or thingconcerningabout which hemay testify or producetestified or produced evidencepursuant thereto, and no testimonysogiven or evidence produced shall be received against him upon any criminal action, investigation, or proceeding; provided,however, that. Nosuch individual soperson testifyingshallbeis exempt from prosecution or punishment foranyperjury committed by him whilesotestifying, and the testimony or evidencesogiven or produced shall be admissible against him upon any criminal action, investigation, or proceeding concerningsuchthe perjury, nor shall he be. The person is not exempt from the refusal, revocation, or suspension of any license, permission, or authority conferred, or to be conferred, pursuant to the insurance law of this state.Any suchAn individual may execute, acknowledge, and file in the office of the commissioner a statement expressly waivingsuchimmunity or privilege in respect to any transaction, matter, or thing specified in the statement, andthereuponthe testimony of that person or any evidence in relation tothat transaction,matter, or thingit may be received or produced before any judgeor justice, court, tribunal, grand jury, or otherwise, and, ifso. When it is received or produced, that individualshallis notbeentitled to any immunity or privilege on account of any testimonyhe may so givegiven or evidencesoproduced by that individual. Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 88.645, is amended to read: 88.645 [ENFORCEMENT.] Subdivision 1. [SEARCH WARRANTS.] Any courtor magistratehaving authority to issue warrants in criminal cases may issue a search warrant, in the manner provided by law for issuing search warrants for stolen property, to search for and seize any trees alleged upon sufficient grounds to have been affected by or involved in any offense under sections 88.641 to 88.647. The warrant may be directed to and executed by any officer authorized to make arrests and seizures by sections 88.641 to 88.647. Subd. 2. [COMPLAINT.] Any officer having knowledge of any offense under sections 88.641 to 88.647 shall forthwith make complaint against the offender before a courtor magistratehaving jurisdiction of the offense and request the courtormagistrateto issue a warrant of arrest insuchthe case. Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 97.50, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [POWERS.] The commissioner, director, game refuge patrolmen, and conservation officers areherebyauthorizedand empoweredto: (1)toexecute and serve all warrants and processes issued by anyjustice of the peace or magistrate or by anycourt having jurisdiction under any law relating to wild animals, wild rice, use of water, conservation, protection or control of public waters, state-owned dams or other works affecting public waters or water pollution, in the same manner asanya constable or sheriffmay do so, and to; (2) arrest, without a warrant, any person detected in the actual violation of any provisions of chapters 84, 97 to 102, 105 and 106, and section 609.68, and acts amendatory thereof,; andto(3) takesuchthe person before any court in the county in which the offense was committed and make proper complaint. When a person who is arrested for any violation of the provisions ofthe above named chapterslaw listed in clause (2), which is punishable as a misdemeanor,andis not taken into custody and immediately taken before a courtor magistrate, the arresting officer shall prepare, in quadruplicate, written notice to appear before a courtor magistrate.This notice hasthe effect of, and serves as, a summons and complaint.The notice shall be in the form and has the effect of a summons and complaintand. It shall contain the name and address of the person arrested, the offense charged, and the time and the place he is to appear before the courtor magistrate. This place must be before a courtor magistrate whowhich has jurisdiction within the county in which the offensechargedis alleged to have been committed. In order to secure release, without being taken into custody and immediately taken before the courtor magistrate, the arrested person must give his written promisesoto appear before the courtor magistrateby signing, in quadruplicate, the written notice prepared by the arresting officer. The officer shall retain the original of the notice and deliver the copythereofmarked "SUMMONS" to the person arrested.ThereuponThe officer shall then release the person from custody. On or before the return day, the officer shallmake areturnthereofthe notice or summons to the courtor magistratebefore whomthe notice or summonsit is returnable. If the personsosummoned fails to appear on the return day, the courtor magistrateshall issue a warrant for his arrest, and. Upon his or her arrest, proceedings shall be had as in other cases. Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 97.50, subdivision 7, is amended to read: Subd. 7. [SEARCH WARRANT.] Upon complaint made to anymagistratejudge, who has authority to issue warrants in criminal cases, by any person that he knows or has good reason to believe that any wild animal taken, bought, sold, transported or possessed contrary to the provisions of chapters 97 to 102, or any article declared contraband therein, is concealed or illegally kept in anyhome, building or other receptacleplace, not otherwise authorized herein to be entered, inspected and searched,such magistratethe judge shall issue a search warrant and cause a search to be made ofsuchthe place, and may causeany such home, building or other receptacle to. He may direct that the place be entered, broken open, and examined. Property seized undersuchthe warrant shall be safely kept under the direction of the courtor magistrateso long as necessary for the purpose of being used as evidence on any trial, andthereaftersubsequently disposed of as otherwise provided. Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 115.32, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [ARREST; PROSECUTION.] Violations of district ordinances may be prosecuted before any courtor magistrate ofany related governmental subdivisionhaving jurisdiction of misdemeanors, and every such court or magistrate shall havejurisdiction of such violations. Any constable or other peace officerof any such governmental subdivisionmay make arrests forsuchviolations committed anywhere within the district inlikethe same mannerand with like effectas for violations ofstatutorycity ordinances or for statutory misdemeanors. All fines collectedin such casesshall be deposited in the treasury of the district. Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 127.09, is amended to read: 127.09 [REFUSING TO SERVE ON SCHOOL BOARD.] Any personaccepting anwho accepts election or appointmentuponto any school board andrefusingwho refuses orneglectingneglects to qualify or to serve or to perform any of the duties of the office, shallforfeitbe fined $10 for each offensethe sum of $10 to. The fine shall be collected in an action before ajustice of the peace, tocounty or municipal court. It may be prosecuted in the name of the district by any school board memberof the districtorby anyeligible voter, as defined in section 123.32, subdivision 1a, of the district. Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 127.17, subdivision 4, is amended to read: Subd. 4. ["RUSHING" OR SOLICITING FORBIDDEN.] It isherebymadea misdemeanor for any person, not a pupil ofsuchthe schools, to be upontheschool grounds, or to enter any school building, for the purpose of "rushing" or soliciting, whilethere,any pupil ofsuchthe schools to join any fraternity, society, or association organized outside of the schools.AllMunicipal and county courtsand justice courts in this stateshallhave jurisdiction ofalloffenses committed under this subdivisionand. All persons found guiltyof such offensesshall be fined not less than $2, nor more than $10, to be paid tothe city treasurer, when such schools are situated inside ofthe corporate limits of any city, and tothe county treasurer,when situated outside of the corporate limits of any city,or, upon failure to paysuchthe fine, to be imprisoned for not more than ten days. Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 144.12, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [RULES.] The commissioner may adopt, alter,and enforcereasonableregulations of permanent applicationthroughout the whole or any portion of the state, or forspecified periods in parts thereof,rules pursuant to chapter 14 for the preservation of the public health.Upon the approval ofthe attorney general and the due publication thereof, suchregulations shall have the force of law, except insofar as theymayThe rules shall not conflictwith a statute orwith the charter or ordinance of a city of the first class upon the same subject. The commissioner may control, byadoption ofregulationsrule, by requiring the taking out of licenses or permits, or by other appropriate means, any of the following matters: (1) The manufacture into articles of commerce, other than food, of diseased, tainted, or decayed animal or vegetable matter; (2) The business of scavengering and the disposal of sewage; (3) The location of mortuaries and cemeteries and the removal and burial of the dead; (4) The management oflying-in houses andboarding places for infants and the treatment of infantsthereinin them; (5) The pollution of streams and other waters and the distribution of water by persons for drinking or domestic use; (6) The construction and equipment, in respect to sanitary conditions, of schools, hospitals, almshouses, prisons, and other public institutions, and of lodging houses and other public sleeping places kept for gain; (7) The treatment, in hospitals and elsewhere, of persons suffering from communicable diseases, including all manner of venereal disease and infection, the disinfection and quarantine of persons and places in case ofsuch diseasethose diseases, and the reporting of sicknesses and deathstherefromfrom them;Provided, thatNeither the commissioner nor any local board of health nor director of public healthshall have authority tomake ormay adopt any rule or regulation for the treatment in any penal or correctional institution of any person suffering from anysuchcommunicable disease or venereal disease or infection, whichrule or regulationrequires the involuntary detentionthereinof any person after the expiration of his period of sentence tosuchthe penal or correctional institution, or after the expiration of the period to which the sentence may be reduced by good time allowance or by the lawful order of any judge ormagistrate, or of any parole boardthe department of corrections; (8) The prevention of infant blindness and infection of the eyes of the newly born by the designation, from time to time, of one or more prophylactics to be used insuchthose cases and insuchthe mannerasthat the commissionermay directdirects, unless specifically objected to bythe parents ora parent ofsuchthe infant; (9) The furnishing of vaccine matter; the assembling, during epidemics of smallpox, with other persons not vaccinated, but no rule of the board or of any public board or officer shall at any time compel the vaccination of a child, or exclude, except during epidemics of smallpox and when approved by the local board of education, a child from the public schools for the reason thatsuchthe child has not been vaccinated; any personthusrequired to be vaccinated may select for that purpose any licensed physician and no rule shall require the vaccination of any child whose physicianshall certifycertifies that by reason of his physical condition vaccination would be dangerous; (10) The accumulation of filthy and unwholesome matter to the injury of the public health andtheits removalthereof; (11) The collection, recording, and reporting of vital statistics by public officers and the furnishing of information tosuch officersthem by physicians, undertakers, and others of births, deaths, causes of death, and other pertinent facts; (12) The construction, equipment, and maintenance, in respect to sanitary conditions, of lumber camps, migratory or migrant labor camps, and other industrial camps; (13) The general sanitation of tourist camps, summer hotels, and resorts in respect to water supplies, disposal of sewage, garbage, and other wastes and the prevention and control of communicable diseases; and, to that end, may prescribe the respective duties of county and local health officers; and all county and local boards of health shall make such investigations and reports and obey such directions as the commissioner may require or give and, under the supervision of the commissioner, enforcesuchthe regulations; (14) Atmospheric pollution which may be injurious or detrimental to public health; (15) Sources of radiation, and the handling, storage, transportation, use and disposal of radioactive isotopes and fissionable materials; and (16) The establishment, operation and maintenance of all clinical laboratories not owned, or functioning as a component of a licensed hospital. These laboratories shall not include laboratories owned or operated by five or less licensed practitioners of the healing arts, unless otherwise provided by federal law or regulation, and in which these practitioners perform tests or procedures solely in connection with the treatment of their patients. Rules promulgated under the authority of this clause, which shall not take effect until federal legislation relating to the regulation and improvement of clinical laboratories has been enacted, may relate at least to minimum requirements for external and internal quality control, equipment, facility environment, personnel, administration and records. These rules may include the establishment of a fee schedule for clinical laboratory inspections. The provisions of this clause shall expire 30 days after the conclusion of any fiscal year in which the federal government pays for less than 45 percent of the cost of regulating clinical laboratories. Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 168.46, is amended to read: 168.46 [ARREST; BOND TO APPEAR.]In caseAny personshall betaken into custody because of any violation of any of the provisions of this chapter,heshallforthwithbe taken before anymagistrate or justice of the peacejudge in any city or county, andbeis entitled to an immediate hearing; and,. Ifsuchthe hearing cannot be had, the person shall be released on giving his personal undertaking to appear and answer forsuchthe violation atsucha time or placeasshallthenbe indicateddesignated, secured (1) by a deposit of a sum of money not exceeding $25, orin lieu thereof, in case(2)(a) if the person taken into custody is the owner, by leaving the motor vehicle,and in caseor (b) if the person taken into custody is not the owner, by leaving the motor vehicle, with a written consent given at the time by the owner, who must be present, withsuch judicial officerthe judge. Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 169.42, subdivision 5, is amended to read: Subd. 5. [PENALTY.] Any person violating the provisions of this sectionshall beis guilty of a misdemeanor. The record of any conviction of or plea of guilty under this section of a person operating a motor vehicle shall be immediately forwarded to the department of public safety for inclusion upon that offender's driving record. Any second or subsequent offenseoroffense thereafterunder this section shall require a minimum fine in the amount of $100. Any judgeor magistratemay, for any violation of this section, order the offender to pick up litter along any public highway or road for four to eight hours under the direction of the department of transportation, with the option of a jail sentence being imposed. Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 169.91, is amended to read: 169.91 [ARRESTS.] Subdivision 1. [PROCEDURE.] When any person is arrested for any violation ofthis chapter oranyotherlaw or ordinance relating to the operation or registration of vehicles punishable as a petty misdemeanor, misdemeanor, gross misdemeanor, or felony, the arrested person shall be taken into custody and immediately taken before amagistratejudge within the county in which the offense charged is alleged to have been committed and who has jurisdictionof suchover the offenses and is nearest or most accessible with reference to the place where the arrest is made, in any of the following cases: (1) When a person arrested demands an immediate appearance before amagistratejudge; (2) When a person is arrested and charged with an offense under this chapter causing or contributing to an accident resulting in injury or death to any person; (3) When the person is arrested upon a charge of negligent homicide; (4) When the person is arrested upon a charge of driving or operating or being in actual physical control of any motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs; (5) When the person is arrested upon a charge of failure to stop in the event of an accident causing death, personal injuries, or damage to property; (6) When there is reasonable cause for believing that the person arrested may leave the state, except as provided in subdivision 4; (7) In any other event when the person arrested refused to give his written promise to appear in court, ashereinafterprovided in subdivision 3. Subd. 3. [NOTICE TO APPEAR.] When a person is arrested for any violation ofthis chapter oranyotherlaw or ordinance relating to motor vehicles, their registration orthetheir operationthereof, or the use of the highways, the arresting officer shall prepare a written notice to appear in court. This place must be before amagistratejudge within the county in which the offense charged is alleged to have been committed who has jurisdiction and is nearest or most accessible with reference to the place of arrest. In order to secure release, if the arrested person is eligible for release, without being taken into custody and immediately taken before amagistratejudge, as provided in this section,and acts amendatory thereof,the arrested person must give his written promisesoto appear in court by signing the written notice prepared by the arresting officer. The officer shall retain the original of the notice and deliver the copythereofmarked "SUMMONS" to the person arrested.Thereupon,The officer shall then release the person arrested from custody. Subd. 4. [RECIPROCAL AGREEMENTS.] The commissioner of public safety isherebyempowered to enter into and carry out reciprocal agreements with duly authorized representatives of other states, districts, territories and possessions of the United States and provinces of foreign countries having laws or compacts authorizing the release of residents of party jurisdictions upon personal recognizance following arrest for violation of a law or ordinance relating to the operation of a motor vehicle. (a) When a reciprocal agreement is in effect, a law enforcement officer observing a violation ofthis chapter oranyothertraffic regulation by a resident of a party jurisdiction shall issue an appropriate citation and shall not, subject to the provisions of clause (b), require the nonresident to post bond or collateral to secure appearance for trial but shall accept the nonresident's personal recognizance, except the nonresident has the right upon request to post bond or collateral in a manner provided by law and in that case the provisions of this subdivision do not apply. (b) A nonresident shall not be entitled to be released on his personal recognizance if immediate appearance before amagistratejudge is required by subdivision 1 or the offense is: (1) One which, upon conviction, would result in the revocation of a person's drivers license under the laws of this state; or (2) A violation of a highway weight limitation; or (3) A violation of a law governing transportation of hazardous materials; or (4) Driving a motor vehicle without a valid driver's license. Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 169.95, is amended to read: 169.95 [COURTS TO KEEP SEPARATE RECORDS OF VIOLATIONS.] Everymagistrate or judge of a court not of record, andeveryclerk ofacourtof record,shall keep a full record of every case in which a person is charged withanya violationofthis chapter orof anyotherlaw,orcityordinance, regulating the operation of vehicles on highways. Within ten days after the conviction or forfeiture of bail of a person upon a charge of violating any provisions ofthischapter or otherany law,orcityordinance, regulating the operation of vehicles on highways,every magistrate ofthecourt, orclerk of the courtof recordin whichsuchthe conviction was had or bail was forfeited, shallprepare andimmediately forward to the department of public safety an abstract of the record of the court covering the case in which the person wassoconvicted or forfeited bail, which. The abstract must be certified by the personsorequired to preparethe sameit to be true and correct. The abstract must be made upon a form furnished by the department of public safety, and shall include the name and address of the party charged, the driver's license number of the person involved, the nature of the offense, the date of hearing, the plea, the judgment, or whether bail was forfeited, and the amount of the fine or forfeiture, as the case may be. Every courtof recordshall also forward alikereport to the department of public safetyuponreporting the conviction of any person of manslaughter or other felony in the commission of which a vehicle was used. The failure, refusal, or neglect of anysuchjudicial officer to comply with any of the requirements of this section shall constitute misconduct in the office and shall begroundgrounds for removaltherefrom. Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 169.965, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [PROSECUTION.] The prosecution may be before any county or municipal courtor justice of the peacehaving jurisdiction over the place where the violation occurs. Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 169.966, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [PROSECUTION.] The prosecution may be before any county or municipal courtor justice of the peacehaving jurisdiction over the place where the violation occurs. Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 169.971, subdivision 4, is amended to read: Subd. 4. [COURT.] "Court" means a municipal court,howeverorganized, and anydistrict court, or county courtor justicecourt. Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 171.08, is amended to read: 171.08 [LICENSEE TO HAVE LICENSE IN POSSESSION.] Every licensee shall have his license in his immediate possession at all times when operating a motor vehicle and shall displaythe same,it upon demand ofa justice of the peace,a peace officer, an authorized representative of the department, orbyan officer authorized by law to enforce the laws relating to the operation of motor vehicles on public streets and highways; however,. No person charged with violating the possession requirement shall be convicted if he produces in court or the office of the arresting officer a driver's licensetheretoforepreviously issued to him for the class of vehicle which he was drivingandwhich was valid at the time of his arrest or satisfactory proof that at the time of the arrest he was validly licensed for the class of vehicle which he was driving. The licensee shall also, upon request of anysuchofficer, write his name in the presence ofsuchthe officerinorder thatto determine the identity of the licenseemay bedetermined. Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 171.16, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [COURTS TO REPORT TO COMMISSIONER.] Every court, including district, municipal, and justice of the peacecourts,having jurisdiction over offenses committed under any law of this state or ordinance of a political subdivision regulating the operation of motor vehicles, shall forward to the department, within ten days, a record of the conviction of any person in the court for a violation of anysuchlaws or ordinances, except parking violations andexceptdefective vehicle equipment or vehicle size or weight violations, committed by a licensed chauffeur while driving a vehicle for which a chauffeur's license is required. Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 181.09, is amended to read: 181.09 [RECOVERY OF WAGES, COSTS.] When any public service corporation neglects or refuses to pay its employees, as prescribed by section 181.08, the wages may be recovered by action without further demand.ThereCosts of $10 shall be allowed to the plaintiff and included in his judgment, in addition to his disbursements allowed by law, $5costs if the judgment be recovered in a justice court or in amunicipal court where no statutory costs are now allowed in suchan action, and $10 in any other court or on appeal. Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 181.17, is amended to read: 181.17 [COSTS, PAID BY DEFENDANT.] In any action bysuchan employeeas is described inpursuant to sections 181.13 to 181.17 for the recovery of unpaid wages after the time whensuchthe wagesshall havebecome due,as provided therein, there shall be allowed to the plaintiff,and included in any judgment rendered in his favor, in additionto his disbursements allowed by law, if the judgment berecovered in a justice court, $5 costs, and a like sum if thejudgment be recovered in municipal court, and suchthe plaintiff shall be allowed double statutory costs inany such action inany court in which statutory costs are now allowed by law inordinary actionsaddition to disbursements allowed by law. Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 219.32, is amended to read: 219.32 [FAILURE TO FENCE; LIABILITY.] Any railroad company failing to comply with the requirements of section 219.31 shall be liable for all resulting damagesresulting therefrom,and for allincluding domestic animals killed or injured by its negligence; and,. If itfailfails to pay the actual damagesoccasionedcaused bysuchthe killing or injury within 30 days aftersuchthe damage occurs,then, in case of recovery therefor by action brought after such30 days, if in district court,the plaintiff shall recover double costs, and if in justice court, $10 costs.SuchThe company, before the commencement of an action, may make tender forsuchthe injury, and. If the amount recovered, exclusive of interest,shalldoes not exceed the tender, the plaintiff shall not recovernocostsnoror disbursements. Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 219.97, subdivision 13, is amended to read: Subd. 13. [CIVIL PENALTY.] Upon the complaint of any person, any company operating a railroad violating any of the provisions of section 219.93 shall forfeit not less than $20 nor more than $100 to be recovered in a civil action before anyjustice of the peacecounty or municipal judge of the county in whichsuchthe violation occursupon the complaint of any person;. One-half ofsuchthe forfeituretoshall go to the complainant and one-half to the schoolfund of the countydistrict where the violation occurs. Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 290.58, is amended to read: 290.58 [EXAMINERS, POWERS OF.]SuchThe income tax examiners, whether appointed by the commissioner or by the legislative auditor, shall have all the rights and powers with reference to the examining of books, records, papers, or memoranda,and with reference to thesubpoenaing of witnesses, administering of oaths and affirmations, and taking of testimony conferred upon the commissioner by this chapter. The clerk of any courtof record,or any justice of the peace, upon demand of anysuchexaminer, shall issue a subpoena for the attendance of any witness or the production of any books, papers, records, or memoranda beforesuchthe examiner. The commissioner may also issue subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses before him or beforesuchthe examiners. The commissioner may appointsuchrefereesas hedeems necessaryto review, singly or as a board of review, the reports of the income tax examiners and petitions or complaints of taxpayers, and reportthereonon them to the commissioner. Disobedience of subpoenas issued under this chapter shall be punished by the district court of the district in which the subpoena is issued in the same manner asfor acontempt of the district court. Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 297A.42, subdivision 2, is amended to read: Subd. 2. [POWERS.]SuchThe examiners shall have all the rights and powers conferred upon the commissioner by section 297A.41. The clerk of any courtof record, or any justice ofthe peace, upon demand of the commissioner or anysuchexaminer, shall issue a subpoena for the attendance of any witness or the production of any books, papers, records or memorandabeforesuch person. The commissioner may also issuesuchsubpoenas. Disobedience of subpoenas issued under this chapter shall be punished by the district court of the district in which the subpoena is issued in the same manner asfor acontempt of the district court. Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 299F.40, subdivision 5, is amended to read: Subd. 5. [VIOLATIONS, SEARCH WARRANTS.] Whenever any person, or the president, secretary, treasurer,orotherofficer of any corporation mentioned in this section, or his duly authorized agent who has personal knowledge of the facts,shallmakemakes an oath in writing before anyjustice of the peace orpolicejudge,or other magistrate,that the party making affidavit has reason tobelieveand does believe that any ofhis, her, itsthe person's ortheirthe corporation's liquefied petroleum or industrial gas containers marked with the name, initials, mark or other device of the owner, are in the possession of or being usedby or being, filledor, refilled, or transferred by any person whose name, initials, mark or other device does not appear on the containers, and who is in the possession of, filling or refilling, or usingany suchthe containers without the written consent of the owner of the name, initials or trade mark, themagistratejudge may, when satisfied that there is reasonable cause, issue a search warrant and cause the premises designated to be searched for the purpose of discovering and obtainingthe same, andthe containers. The judge may alsocause to be brought before himorder the person in whose possession the containersmay beare found to appear, andshall theninquire into the circumstances of the possession;and. If themagistratejudge finds that the person has been guilty of a violation of this section, he shall impose the punishmenthereinprescribed, andhe shall alsoaward thepossession ofproperty taken upon the search warrant totheits ownerthereof. Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 340.85, subdivision 2, is amended to read: Subd. 2. [NOTIFICATION.] When any municipal liquor store or licensed dealer in intoxicating liquor or nonintoxicating fermented malt beverages, his agent or employee is convicted of (1) a violation of any provision ofthis chapter orany law or ordinance regulating the sale of alcoholic beverages or (2) any violation of law or ordinance in the operation of the licensed premises, the clerk ofthecourtor the justice of the peaceshall, within ten days after the conviction, mail a written notice of conviction to the clerk of the municipality or the county auditor of the county having jurisdiction to issue alcoholic beverage licenses for the premises. A copy of the notice shall also be mailed to the office of the commissioner of public safety. Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 340.91, is amended to read: 340.91 [CONDUCTORS TO ARREST.] The conductor of any railway train or street car shall summarily arrest, with or without a warrant, any person violating any of the provisions of sections 340.88 to 340.93;and,. Forsuchthis purpose, the conductor has the same power and authority as any peace officer, including the power to summon assistance, andsuch conductor has powerto deliveranysuchthe person arrested to anypoliceman, constable or otherpublic officer of the county in whichsuchthe offense was committed, and. It shall be the duty ofsuchthe officer to bring the person charged withsuchthe offense before the nearestjustice of the peacecounty or municipal court of the county where the offense was committed and to make a complaint againstsuchthe person, and such. A complaint made upon information and belief of the officer,is sufficient. Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 345.02, is amended to read: 345.02 [UNCLAIMED PROPERTY MAY BE SOLD UPON NOTICE; SUMMARY SALE.] If anysuchpropertybeis not claimed or taken away within one year after its reception, it may be sold upon 60 days' notice; and,. If it is perishable or subject to decay by keeping, it may be sold, if not taken away within 30 days, upon ten days' notice; and,. If itbeis in a state of decay, or manifestly liable to decay, it may be summarily sold by order ofa justice of the peace orany judge of the county or municipal court,after inspection,and without notice. When not sold summarily, notice shall be given to the owner personally or by mail; but. If the name of the ownerbeis not known, and cannot be ascertained with reasonable diligencebe ascertained, published notice for the prescribed periodsaforesaidshall be given. Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 345.03, is amended to read: 345.03 [PROCEEDINGS IF PROPERTY NOT CLAIMED.] If the owner or person entitled tosuchthe propertyshalldoes not takethe sameit away and pay the chargesthereon,on it after noticeas aforesaid shall havehas been given, the person having possessionthereof,of it or his agentorattorney,shall make and deliverto a justice of the peace ofthe same or an adjoining town, orto the judge of any county or municipal court, an affidavit setting forth a description of the property, the date of its reception, the giving of the notice, and whether the owner is known or unknown. Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 345.04, is amended to read: 345.04 [INVENTORY; ORDER OF SALE.] Upon the deliveryto himofsuchthe affidavit, thejusticeorjudge shall cause the property to be opened and examined in his presence and a true inventorythereofmade, andof it. He shall annex tosuchthe inventory an order, under his hand,that the propertythereindescribed be sold,at public auction,by any constable orpolicepeace officer of the municipality or town wherethe same shall beit is located. Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 345.05, is amended to read: 345.05 [NOTICE AND RETURN OF SALE.] The constable or police officer receivingsuchthe inventory and order shall sell the property,at public auction,to the highest bidder, in the manner provided by law for constables' sales under execution, upon ten days' posted notice. When the sale is completed, he shall endorse upon the orderaforesaida return of his proceedingsthereonon it, and returnthe sameit to thejustice orclerk ofthe municipalcourt, together with the inventory and the proceeds of the sale, less his fees. Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 345.06, is amended to read: 345.06 [DISPOSITION OF PROCEEDS.] From the proceeds ofsuchthe sale thejustice orclerk ofthe municipalcourt shall pay all legal charges incurred in relation to the property;or, if the proceeds are not sufficient to pay all the charges, a ratable proportion of each, and. The balance, if any,heshallimmediately paybe paid to the treasurer of the county wheresuchthe sale took placeanddeliver. The clerk shall provide the treasurer with a statementtherewith,containing a description of the property sold, the gross amount of the sale, and the amount of costs, charges, and expenses paid to each person. The treasurer shall filesuchthe statement in his office, and make an entry of the amount received by him and the time when received. Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 345.14, is amended to read: 345.14 [FEES OFJUSTICESCLERKS AND CONSTABLES.] For services performed under the provisions of this chapter,justices of the peace orclerks of county or municipal courts shall be allowed $1 for each day, and constables the same fees as are allowed by law for sales upon execution, and ten cents per folio for making an inventory of the property. Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 346.03, is amended to read: 346.03 [APPRAISEMENT.] Every finder of an estray of the value of $10 or more at the time of taking up shallalso, within one monththereafter,cause the same to behave it appraised by ajustice of the peaceof such town, andcounty or municipal judge. The certificate ofsuchappraisement shall be filed with the town clerk. The finder shall paythe justice50 cents forsuchthe certificate,and six cents per mile for each mile necessarily traveled to make thesameappraisal. Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 346.04, is amended to read: 346.04 [CHARGES FOR KEEPING.] The person entitled to the possession of anysuchestray, at any time within one year aftersuchnotice is filed with the town clerk, may havethe sameit restored to him upon proving his righttheretoto it and paying all lawful charges that occur in relation tothe sameit. Ifsuchthe person and the finder cannot agree as to the amount ofsuchthe charges, or upon what should be allowed for the use ofsuchthe estray, either party, on notice to the other, may apply to ajustice of the peace ofsuch towncounty or municipal court judge to settle thesame,who for that purposedisagreement. The judge may examine witnesses on oath. If any amountshall be found dueis owed to the finder, over the value of the use ofsuchthe estray, thesamemoney, with costs, shall be a lien uponsuchthe estray,and. The costs ofsuchthe adjudication shallabide thedecision of the justicebe allocated by the judge. Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 346.09, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [NOTICE,; APPRAISERS.] The person distraining shall give notice to the owner ofsuchthe beast, if known to him, within 24 hours if he resides in the same town, and within 48 hours if he resides in another town in the same county, Sundays excepted; specifying in. The notice shall specify the time when and the place where distrained, the number of beasts, and the place of their detention, and that at a time and place stated therein, which shall not be less than 12 hours after the service of the notice, nor more than three days aftersuchthe distress, he will apply to a designatedjustice of thepeacecounty or municipal judge of the county for the appointment of appraisers to appraise the damages. If the ownerbeis unknown,or does not reside in the county, the distraining person shall apply for the appointment ofsuchappraisers within 24 hours aftersuchthe distress without notice.Upon suchAfter the application, thejusticejudge shall appointinwritingthree disinterestedfreeholdersresidents ofsuchthe town to appraise the damages, for which the justice shallreceive a fee of 50 cents. Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 347.04, is amended to read: 347.04 [PUBLIC NUISANCE.] Any dog that habitually worries, chases, or molests teams or persons traveling peaceably on the public road,is a public nuisance. Upon complaint,in writing, made to a justice of thepeace,to a county or municipal judge containing a description ofsuchthe dog,and giving hisincluding the nameand that ofhisof the dog and its owner,ifor stating that the name or names are not known, and, if not, so stating, and alleging thatsuchthe dog is a public nuisance, thejusticejudge shall issue a summons, ifsuchthe owner is known, commanding him to appear before thejustice at his officejudge at a specified timetherein stated, not less than six,nor more than ten,days from the datethereofof the summons, to answersuchthe complaint. The summons shall be served not less than six days before the day of the hearingthereon,in the same manner as otherjusticecounty or municipal court summonses. Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 347.05, is amended to read: 347.05 [OWNER NOT KNOWN.] If it appears from the complaint that the owner is not known, ten days' posted notice, containing a description of the dog as given in the complaint, and stating thatsucha complaint has been made, and the time and place of hearingthereonon it, shall be given in the town wheresuch justice residesthe judge presides. Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 347.06, is amended to read: 347.06 [HEARING; JUDGMENT; EXECUTION.]On the day of hearingThejusticejudge shall hear the evidence in the case, and,. If heshall find therefromfinds thatsuchthe dog is a public nuisance, he shall enter judgment accordingly, andthereuponshall order the constable to kill andburydispose of the dog, which order the constable shallforthwith execute. Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 357.12, is amended to read: 357.12 [CONSTABLES.] The fees to be chargedand collectedby a constable shall be as follows, and no other or greater fees shall be charged: (1) for serving a warrant or other writ, nothereinotherwise provided for, 25 cents for each person namedthereinin it and served; (2) for a copy of each summons delivered on request or left at the residence of defendant, 25 cents; (3) serving a subpoena or summons, 50 cents for each person namedthereinin it and served; provided, that anysuchsummons or subpoena may be served by any person not a party to the action, but if served by any person other than an officer, no fees or mileage shall be allowedtherefor,and service shall be proved by affidavit; (4) serving an attachment, 50 cents; (5) each copy of an attachment, 15 cents; (6) each copy of an inventory of property seized on attachment, 15 cents; (7) serving summons on garnishee, 50 cents; (8) copy of any affidavit or other paper nothereinotherwise provided for, ten cents per folio; (9) posting each notice, 15 cents;(10) Attending on justice court, when required by thejustice, $1 per day;(11)(10) for travel to and from the place of service, when necessary in serving any process or paper authorized to be served by them, ten cents per mile;(12)(11) committing to prison, 50 cents;(13)(12) summoning a jury, $1;(14)(13) writing a list of jurors, 15 cents;(15)(14) attending on a jury, 50 cents;(16)(15) on all sums collected on execution and paid over, charged upon the judgment debtor, five percent;(17)(16) serving a writ of replevin, 50 cents;(18)(17) summoning and swearing appraisers and taking appraisement, 50 cents;(19)(18) taking and approving security in any case, 25 cents. A constable shall be allowed all reasonable and necessary expenses actually paid out for food and lodging furnished by him for any prisoner,atnot to exceed $1 per day while havingsuchthe prisoner in custody pending trial and while conductingsuchthe prisoner to jail, together with the transportation charges for the prisoner paid to a common carrier.WhereIf adjournment is for longer than three days, the prisoner shall be committed to the county jail. Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 357.16, is amended to read: 357.16 [COMMISSIONERS TO TAKE TESTIMONY.] A person commissioned to take testimony shall receive thesamefees asare allowed to justices of the peace for likeservicesprescribed by the court. Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 357.22, is amended to read: 357.22 [WITNESSES.] The fees to be paid to witnesses shall be as follows: (1) For attending in any action or proceeding in any courtof record, in any justice court,or before any officer, person, or board authorized to take the examination of witnesses, $10 for each day; (2) For travelin goingto andreturningfrom the place of attendance, to be estimated from his residence, if within the state, or from the boundary line of the state where he crossedthe sameit, if without the state, 12 cents per mile. No person is obliged to attend as a witness in any civil case unless one day's attendance and travel fees are paid or tendered him in advance. Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 357.27, is amended to read: 357.27 [CORONERAND JUSTICEJURORS.] Each juror sworn before a coroner at an inquesttaken byhimshall receive $3 for each day's attendance and ten cents for each mile traveled in going to and returning from theplacesite ofholdingthesame,inquest. The distancetoshall be computed by the usually traveled route and paid out of the county treasury. The coroner shall deliver to each juror a certificate for the number of days' attendance and miles traveled for which he is entitled to compensation. Each juror sworn in any action pendingin a justice court, orbefore any sheriff on a writ of inquiry, shall receive $3, to be paid, in the first instance in all civil actions, by the party calling forsuchthe jurors. The certificate of the coroner for services rendered as a juror before him shall be filed with the county auditor, who shall draw his warrant upon the county treasurer for the amount, and such. The certificate shall be sufficient voucher for the issuance ofsuchthe warrant. Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 357.29, is amended to read: 357.29 [SERVICES NOT RENDERED; ILLEGAL FEES.] No judge,justice,sheriff, or other officer, or any other person to whom any fee or compensation is allowed by law for any service, shall take or receive any other or greater fee or reward forsuchthe service thanhe isallowed by law, and. No fee or compensation shall be demanded or received by any officer or person for any service unlessthe sameit was actually rendered, except in the case of prospective costs, ashereinafter specified. Any person violating either oftheforegoingthese provisionsshall beis liable to the party aggrieved for treble the damages sustained by him. Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 358.15, is amended to read: 358.15 [BY WHOM TAKEN IN THIS STATE.] The following named officers shall have power to take and certify acknowledgments within the state: (1) every member of the legislature,so long as he shallremain such and continue to residewhile still a resident in the district from which he was elected; but he shall receive no fee or compensation for so doing. The form of his official signature in such cases shall be: "A.B., Representative (or Senator), ....................................... District, Minnesota. My term expires January 1, 19.....;" (2) the judges and clerks and deputy clerks of all courtsof record, residing within the state, including those of the circuit and district courts of the United States, and resident United States commissioners; (3) notaries public, justices of the peace,and the clerks or recorders of towns, and cities; and (4) court commissioners, county recorders, and county auditors, and their several deputies, and county commissioners, all within their respective counties. Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 359.061, is amended to read: 359.061 [RECORD OF COMMISSION; CERTIFICATE.] The commission of every notary shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the district court of the county for which he is appointed, in abookrecord kept for that purpose;and thereafter. The clerk, when requested, shall certify to his official acts in thesamemanner and for thesamefeesallowedby law for similar certificates to authenticate acts of justicesof the peaceprescribed by statute or court rule. Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 359.11, is amended to read: 359.11 [TAKING DEPOSITIONS.] In taking depositions, the notary shall have thesamepower to compel the attendance of and to punish witnesses for refusing to testify asmay be vested by law in justices of the peace, andprovided by statute or court rule. All sheriffs and constables shall serve and return all process issued by any notary in taking depositions. Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 361.27, subdivision 2, is amended to read: Subd. 2. [DISPOSITION.] All fines, installment payments, and forfeited bail money, from violations under sections 361.01to 361.28collected from personsapprehended or arrestedconvicted of violations of sections 361.01 to 361.28 shall be paid to the county treasurer of the county where the violation occurred by thejustice of the peace, municipalclerk of court,or other personor officercollectingsuch fines, forfeited bailmoney or installments thereof,the moneys within 15 days after the last day of the month in whichsuch moneysthey were collected, to the county treasurer of the county where theviolation occurred. One-half ofsuchthe receipts shall be credited to the general revenue fund of the county. The other one-half ofsuchthe receipts shall be transmitted by the county treasurer to state treasurer to be depositedto the credit ofin the general fund in the state treasury for the purpose of boat and water safety. Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 365.52, is amended to read: 365.52 [SPECIAL TOWN MEETINGS; PRECINCT; POLLING PLACES.] A special town meeting may be held for the purpose of election to fill a vacancy when the town board has failed to fill the vacancy by appointment, or for transacting any other lawful business whenever the supervisors, town clerk,andjustices of the peace,or any two of them, together with at least 12 other freeholders of the town, file in the office of the town clerk a written statement setting forth the reasons and necessity forsuchthe meeting and the particular business to be transactedthereatat it and that the interests of the town require thatsuchthe meeting be held. A town meeting may also be called upon a petition of 20 percent of the eligible voters of the town, based upon the number of voters at the last general election. The town board may, with respect to an election by ballot at a special town meeting for the purpose of selecting town officers or of determining any matter of town business, provide for the casting of ballots in precincts and at polling places. The precincts and polling places shall be designated by the town board in the manner prescribed by sections 204B.14 and 204B.16. Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 366.20, is amended to read: 366.20 [MEETINGS.] The town board shall constitute a board of audit,and shall meet each year, on the Tuesdaynextpreceding the annual town meeting, for the purpose of auditing and settling all charges against the town, and. All unpaid accounts of town officers for services rendered since the last annual meeting of the board shall be presented atsuchthe meeting. It may also meet atsuchany other timesas it deems necessaryfor the purpose of auditing and settling charges against the town; but. No allowance of any account shall be made which does not specificallystate each item ofitemize thesameaccount. If any supervisor fails to attend,a justice of the peace shall becalled in to fill the vacancy. If there is no justice of thepeace,the remaining supervisors shall fill the vacancy by appointmentor. If they are unable to agree, the senior county or municipal court judge having jurisdiction over the town shall fill the vacancy by appointment; however, in either event,. The person appointed must be a resident of the town. Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 367.11, is amended to read: 367.11 [DUTIES.] It shall be the duty of the town clerk: (1) to act as clerk of the town board, and to keep in his office a true record of all of its proceedings; (2) unless otherwise provided by law, to have the custody of the records, books, and papers of the town,when no otherprovision is made by law,and to file and safely keep all papers required by law to be filed in his office; (3) to record minutes of the proceedings of every town meeting in the book of town recordsminutes of the proceedingsof every town meeting, and to enterthereinin them at length every order or direction and all rules and regulations made by the town meeting; (4) to file and preserve all accounts audited by the town board or allowed at a town meeting, and to enter a statementthereofof them in the book of records; (5) to transmit to the clerk of the district court, immediately after the election of anyjustice of the peace ofhistown constable, a written notice statingthereinthe name of the person elected, and; the term for which he was electedand,; if elected to fill a vacancy, the name of the last incumbent of the office,; andthe name of every constable,afterhe shallhavea constable is qualified, and, upon the resignation of ajustice orconstable, to immediatelytransmit to suchnotify the clerknotice thereof; (6) to record every request for any special vote or special town meeting, and properly post the requisite noticesthereofof them; (7) to post, as required by law, fair copies of all bylaws made by the town, and enter, over his signature, in the town records,in connection with such bylaws,the time when and the places wherethe samethey were posted; (8) to furnish to the annual meeting of the town board of audit, at its annual meeting,every statement from the county treasurer of money paid to the town treasurer, and all other informationrespectingabout fiscal affairs of the town in his possession, and all accounts, claims, and demands against the town filed with him; and (9) to performsuchany other dutiesas arerequiredof himby law. Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 367.25, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [REQUIREMENT, FEE.] Every person elected or appointed to a town office, within ten days after receiving a certificate or notice ofhiselection or appointment, shall take and subscribe the oath required by law. If taken before the town clerkor a justice of the peace, such, the oath shall be administered and certified without fee. Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 368.01, subdivision 20, is amended to read: Subd. 20. [DEPARTMENTS; BOARDS.] The town board of supervisors may createsuchdepartments and advisory boards and appointsuchofficers, employees, and agents for the town asmaybedeemed necessary for the proper management and operation of town affairs. The town board may prescribe the duties and fix the compensation of all officers, both appointive and elective, employees, and agents, when not otherwise prescribed by law. The town board may require any officer or employee to furnish a bond conditioned for the faithful exercise of his duties and the proper application of, and payment upon demand of, all moneysbyhimofficially received by him. Unless otherwise prescribed by law, the amount ofsuchthe bonds shall be fixed by the town board. The bonds furnished by the clerk,and treasurer, andjustices of the peaceshall be corporate surety bonds. The town board may provide for the payment from town funds of the premium on the official bond ofthe justices of the peace andany officer or employee of the town. The town board may, except as otherwise provided, remove any appointive officer or employee when in its judgment the public welfare will be promoted by the removal; but. This provision does not modify the laws relating to veterans preference or to members of a town police or fire civil service commission or public utilities commission. Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 373.09, is amended to read: 373.09 [CLAIMS AGAINST COUNTY; APPEAL.] When any claim against a county is disallowed in whole or part by the county board,in whole or in part,a claimant may appeal from its decisions to the district court bycausing(1) filing a written notice ofsuchappealto be filedin the office of the auditor within 15 days after written notice mailed to the claimant by the county auditor showing the disallowance of the claim and (2) giving security for costs, to be approved by the auditor, who. The auditor shallforthwithnotify the county attorneythereofof the appeal. When any claim against a countyshall beis allowed,in whole or in part,bysuchthe board, no order shall be issuedinpayment of the sameto pay it or any partthereofof it, untilafterthree daysfromafter the date of the decision;and. The county attorney may, on behalf and in the name ofsuchthe county, appeal fromsuchthe decision to the district court, bycausingfiling a written notice ofsuchappealto be filedin the office of the auditor within three days after the date of the decision appealed from; or. Any seven taxpayers of the county may, in their own names,appeal in their own names fromsuchthe decision to the district court bycausing(1) filing a written notice of appeal,stating the groundsthereof, to befiledfor it in the office of the auditor within three days after the date of the decision appealed from, and (2) givingtothe claimantsecurity to the claimant for his costs and disbursements, to. The security shall be approved by a judge of the district court; and. Thereafter no order shall be issued in payment ofany suchthe claim until a certified copy of the judgment of the courtshall beis filed in the office of the auditor. Upon filing ofsucha notice of appeal, the courtshall acquirehas jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter, and may compel a return to be madeas in the case of anappeal from a judgment of a justice of the peace. In any countysubject to the provisions of Laws 1941, Chapter 118, in which aclaim has been audited and certified by the county auditor asrequired by Laws 1941, Chapter 118, Section 5, or whosepopulation now or hereafter exceeds 250,000 but is less than450,000 and in Hennepin county such claim may be paid notearlier than the third day after allowance by the county board. Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 375.24, is amended to read: 375.24 [APPOINTMENT OFJUSTICES OF THE PEACE ANDCONSTABLES IN CERTAIN UNORGANIZED TERRITORY.] In any countyof this statehaving no organized townships or in whichthe distance from anya full and fractional unorganized township is more than 20 miles from the nearest town or municipality orcounty-seat,county seat andwhich full andfractional unorganized townshipis entirely separated from the town or municipality orcounty-seatcounty seat by water, the county board ofsuchthe county may appointone or more justicesof the peace andone or more constables forsuchthe unorganized township, who. The constables shall have the same powers and duties aslike officersconstables in towns in the county. Before entering upon their dutiessuch officers, the constables shall give bond to the county insucha penal sum as the county boardshall determine, whichdetermines. The bonds shall be otherwise conditioned as bonds for such officers in towns in the county.SuchThe bonds shall be approved by the county board and filed with the clerk ofthedistrict court. Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 390.15, is amended to read: 390.15 [WITNESSES; FEES.] The coroner may issue subpoenas for witnesses, returnableforthwithimmediately or atsucha specified time and placeashe shall direct. The persons served withsuchthe subpoenas shall be allowed thesamefees, their attendance shall be enforced in thesamemanner by the coroner, and they shall be subject to thesamepenalties asif they has been served with asubpoena in behalf of the state in a criminal case before ajustice of the peaceprovided by statute or the rules of criminal procedure. Sec. 57. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 390.20, is amended to read: 390.20 [PERSON CHARGED ARRESTED.] If any person charged by the inquest with having committedsuchthe offense is not in custody, the coroner shall have the same power as ajustice of the peacecounty or municipal judge to issue process for his apprehension; and such. The warrant shall be made returnable before anyjustice of the peace orother magistrate orcourt having jurisdiction in the case, whoand the court shall proceedthereinin the same manner as inother likesimilar cases. Sec. 58. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 390.31, subdivision 2, is amended to read: Subd. 2. [JURY FEES.] Each juror sworn in any action pendingin a justice court, orbefore any sheriff on a writ of inquiry, shall receive $3, to be paid, in the first instance in all civil actions, by the party calling forsuchthe jurors. Sec. 59. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 390.33, subdivision 2, is amended to read: Subd. 2. [SUBPOENA POWER.] The probate judge may issue subpoenas for witnesses, returnable forthwith or atsucha time and place ashe shall directthe judge directs. The persons served withsuchsubpoenas shall be allowed the same fees, their attendance shall be enforced in the same manner by the sheriff, and they shall be subject to the same penalties as if they had been served with a subpoena in behalf of the state in a criminal case before ajustice of the peacecounty or municipal judge. Sec. 60. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 390.33, subdivision 6, is amended to read: Subd. 6. [WARRANTS.] If any person charged by the inquest with having committedsuchthe offense is not in custody, theprobatejudgeshall havehas thesamepoweras a justice ofthe peaceto issue process for his apprehension; and such. The warrant shall be made returnable before anyjustice of the peaceor other magistrate orcourt having jurisdiction in the case,who. The court shall proceedthereinin the same manner as inother likesimilar cases. Sec. 61. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 395.23, is amended to read: 395.23 [DUTIES OF POLICE OFFICERS.] It shall be the duty of the constable and town clerk ofsucha town and the members of the county board, sheriff, and county attorneys of any county furnishing seed or feed, having any knowledge of the violation of the provisions of sections 395.14 to 395.24, tomakefile a complaintthereof towith ajustice of the peace, and such justicecounty or municipal court. The court shallthereuponissue a warrant for the arrest of the offender, and proceed to hear and determine the matter or to bind the offender over to appear before the grand jury, as the case may be. Sec. 62. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 412.02, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [OFFICERS ELECTED.] The following officers shall be elected for the terms and in the years shown and in the cities described in the table. Number of Years in City Officer Term Year Elected Elected Mayor Two Every two years Every statutory or four except where city four years is otherwise provided pursuant to statute Clerk Four Every four years Every statutory in year when standard plan city treasurer is not in which there is elected no clerk-treasurer Treasurer Four Every four years Every statutory in year in which standard plan city clerk is not in which there is elected no clerk-treasurer Clerk- Four Every four years Every statutory Treasurer in year in which standard plan city one councilman where such office is elected exists pursuant to subdivision 3 Three Four Two every four Every statutory Councilmen years and one in standard plan city alternative election Four Four Two each Every statutory Councilmen election optional plan cityOne JusticeTwoAt eachEvery statutoryof the Peaceelectioncity in whichthe office ispermitted by lawand has not beenabolishedpursuant tosubdivision 5Sec. 63. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 412.021, subdivision 2, is amended to read: Subd. 2. [OFFICERS TO BE ELECTED.] There shall be elected atsuchthe election a mayorand, where otherwise permitted bylaw, a justice of the peace, eachfor a term expiring the first business day of January of the next odd-numbered year;and four councilmen, for terms so arranged that two expire the first business day of January of the next odd-numbered year and two the first business day of January of the second odd-numbered year. No candidate for councilman shall run for a particular term but the number of years in the term of each successful candidate shall be determined by his relative standing among the candidates for office, the longest terms going to the two candidates receiving the highest number of votes. If the election occurs in the last four months of the even-numbered year, no election shall be held in the city on the annual city election day that year, and the next following year shall be disregarded in fixing the expiration of terms of officers chosen under this subdivision at the initial election. Sec. 64. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 412.023, subdivision 5, is amended to read: Subd. 5. [OTHER OFFICERS.] Any statutory city previously operating as a city or borough under a general or special lawwhich did not require the election of a justice of the peace orin which such office did not exist, is not required by Laws1973, Chapter 123 to elect such officer. Any such citywhich has established the office of city administrator by ordinance may continuesuchthe office in existence notwithstanding the provisions of Laws 1973, chapter 123. Sec. 65. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 412.111, is amended to read: 412.111 [DEPARTMENTS, BOARDS.] The council may createsuchdepartments and advisory boards and appointsuchofficers, employees, and agents for the city asmay bedeemed necessary for the proper management and operation of city affairs. The council may prescribe the duties and fix the compensation of all officers, both appointive and elective, employees, and agents, when not otherwise prescribed by law. The council may require any officer or employee to furnish a bond conditioned for the faithful exercise of his duties and the proper application of, and payment upon demand of, all moneysbyhimofficially received by him. Unless otherwise prescribed by law, the amount ofsuchthe bonds shall be fixed by the council. The bonds furnished by the clerk,and treasurer, and justices ofthe peaceshall be corporate surety bonds. The council may provide for the payment from city funds of the premium on the official bond ofthe justices of the peace andany officer or employee of the city. The council may, except as otherwise provided, remove any appointive officer or employee when in its judgment the public welfare will be promoted by the removal; but. This provision does not modify the laws relating to veterans preference or to members of a city police or fire civil service commission or public utilities commission. Sec. 66. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 412.861, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [APPEAL TO DISTRICT COURT.] Appeals may be taken to the district court in thesamemanneras from judgments ofjustices of the peace in civil actions; but,prescribed by court rule. Iftaken bythe defendant appeals, he shall give bond to the city, to be approved by the court, conditioned that, if the judgment be affirmed in whole or in part, he will pay the judgment, and all costs and damages awarded against him on the appeal. In case of affirmance, execution may issue against both defendant and his sureties. Upon perfection of the appeal, defendant shall be discharged from custody. Sec. 67. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 473.608, subdivision 17, is amended to read: Subd. 17. [ORDINANCES.] (1) It mayfrom time to time make,adopt and enforce rules, regulations, and ordinancesasitmayfind expedient ordeems necessary forcarrying into effectthe purposes of sections 473.601 to 473.679, including those relating to the internal operation of the corporation and to the management and operation of airports owned or operated by it, subject tothe conditions and limitations set forth insections 473.601 to 473.679. Any person violating anysuchrule, regulation or ordinanceshall beis guilty of a misdemeanor. (2) The prosecution may bein any municipal court sittingwithin either the city of Minneapolis or St. Paul, orbefore a county or municipal courtor justice of the peacehaving jurisdiction over the place where the violation occurs. Every sheriff, constable, policeman, and other peace officer shallseethat all rules, regulations, and ordinances are obeyed, andshallarrestand prosecuteoffenders. The fines collected shall be paid into the treasury of the corporation. Thecorporationshall pay and there shall be first deducted and paid over to theoffice of the clerk of any municipal court processing andprosecuting violations aportion of the fines necessary to cover all costs and disbursements incurred inthe matter of theprocessing and prosecutingofthe violations in the court shall be transferred to the clerk of court. All persons committed shall be received into any penal institution in the county in which the offense was committed. All persons shall take notice of the rules, regulations, and ordinances without pleading or proof. (3) A public hearing need not be held on rules, regulations and ordinances relating to the internal operation of the commission or to the management or operation of airports owned or operated by it unless the rule, regulation or ordinance affects substantial rights. (4) When necessary, the corporation may adopt andput intoeffectenforce without a public hearing all other rules, regulations or ordinanceswhere deemed immediately necessary bythe corporation, but it shall hold a public hearing within 30 daysthereafter hold a public hearing thereon,aftergivingtheir adoption. Prior to the hearing, the corporation shall give at least 15 days notice by publication in appropriate legal newspapers of general circulation in the metropolitan area andby mailingmail a copythereofof them to all interested parties who have registered their names with the corporation for that purpose. If the rules, regulations, or ordinances are not deemed immediately necessary, the corporation shall hold a public hearingthereon,on them after giving the required noticeas aforesaid, and. The rules, regulations, or ordinances shall not be adopted andput into effectenforced until after the hearing. (5) Notice of the adoption of rules, regulations and ordinances shall, as soon as possible after adoption, be published in appropriate legal newspapers of general circulation in the metropolitan area. Proof of publication and a copy of the rule, regulation, or ordinance shall be filed with the secretary of state, together with a copy of the rule,regulation, or ordinance, which. They shallthenceforththen be in full force and effect. (6) Any person substantially interested or affected in his rights as to person or property by a rule, regulation or ordinance adopted by the corporation, may petition the corporation for reconsideration, amendment, modification, or waiver ofthe rule, regulation or ordinanceit. The petition shall set forth a clear statement of the facts and grounds upon whichreconsideration, amendment, modification or waiver issoughtit is based. The corporation shall grant the petitioner a public hearing within 30 days after the filing of the petition. Sec. 68. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 485.07, is amended to read: 485.07 [RECORDS TO BE KEPT.] Every clerk shall procure, at the expense of his county,and keep,the following records at the expense of his county: (1) a register of actions, in which he shall enter the title of each action, whether originally commenced in the clerk's court, or brought there by appeal or transcript of judgment fromjustice court or from anyanother courtof recordof the state or the United States, and a minute of each paper filed in the cause, and all proceedingsthereinin them; (2) a judgment roll,in which everyfor each judgmentshallbe enteredrendered; (3) a docket, in which heshall enterenters alphabetically the name of each judgment debtor, the amount of the judgment, and the precise time of its entry; (4) indexes, as described in section 485.08, and any other records as the court, in its discretion,may direct. Sec. 69. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 488A.021, subdivision 4, is amended to read: Subd. 4. [POWERS.] The judges have the general powers of judges of courts of record and all powers necessary to effectuate the purposes of sections 488A.01 to 488A.17. Each judge may administer oaths and take and certify acknowledgments. Each judge is a conservator of the peace and has all powers and authority vested injustices of the peace ormagistratesit by statute or court rule. Sec. 70. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 488A.09, subdivision 7, is amended to read: Subd. 7. [LIEN OF JUDGMENT; FILING OF TRANSCRIPT.] (a) No judgment of the municipal court shall attach as a lien upon real estateunless anduntil a transcriptthereofof it is filed and docketed in district court. (b) Any person who holds a judgment for an amount exceeding $10, exclusive of interest and costs, may obtain from the clerk a certified transcript ofsuchthe judgment and may file the transcript in the office of the clerk of the district court of Hennepin county, who shall file and docket it asin case oftranscripts of judgments from the courts of justices of thepeaceprescribed by law or court rules; (c) Upon the filing and docketing of the certified transcript, the judgment becomes a lien upon the real estate of the debtor to the same extent as a judgment of the district court and the judgment thereafter is exclusively under the control of the district court and may be enforced by its process as though originally rendered by the district court. (d) The clerk of municipal court shall not issuesucha certified transcript while a writ of execution is outstanding on the judgment. He shall note on the record ofsuchthe judgment the fact thatsuchthe transcript has been given and shall not thereafter issue any writ of execution on the same judgment. Sec. 71. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 488A.19, subdivision 5, is amended to read: Subd. 5. [POWERS.] The judges have the general powers of judges of courts of record and all powers necessary to effectuate the purposes ofthis actsections 488A.18 to 488A.34. Each judge may administer oaths and take and certify acknowledgments. Each judge is a conservator of the peace and has all powers and authority vested injustices of the peace ormagistratesit by statute or court rule. Sec. 72. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 490.18, is amended to read: 490.18 [PERSONS AFFECTED.] The provisions of sections 490.15 and 490.16 apply to all judges, judicial officers, and refereesand justices of thepeace. Sec. 73. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 509.04, is amended to read: 509.04 [RECOVERY OF RECEPTACLES; SEARCH WARRANT.] When any person who has filed for record anysuchname, mark, or device or who has acquired fromsuch personthe owner in writing the ownership ofsuchthe name, mark, or device or the right to the exclusive usethereofof it, or anyone representingsuchthe person,shall make oathswears before anymagistratejudge that he has reason to believe and does believe that any receptacle bearingsuchthe name, mark, or device is being unlawfully used or filled orhad in possessionpossessed by any personsuch magistrate, the judge shallthereuponissue a search warrant to discover and obtainsuchthe receptacle; and. The judge may also cause the personin whose possession suchpossessing the receptacleshall be foundto be brought before himand; he shall then inquire into the circumstances ofsuchpossession, and. Ifit shall be found that suchthe person is found guilty ofviolation ofviolating any provisions of sections 509.01 to 509.06, he shall be punished ashereinprescribed and the possession of the property taken uponsuchthe warrant shall be awarded totheits ownerthereof; but. The remedygivenprovided by this sectionshallis notbe heldto beexclusive, andoffenders againstviolators of any provision of those sections may also be prosecuted as in case of other misdemeanors. Sec. 74. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 514.29, is amended to read: 514.29 [ACTION TO ENFORCE; NOTICE.] Within six months after the date of filing the lien statement, the person havingsucha lien shall, within sixmonths from and after the date of filing such lien statement,commence suit for the recovery ofsuchthe charges by summons, in the usual form, beforeany justice of the peace of the townin which he resides, or in anythe appropriate court, as thecase may require,against the person liable for the paymentthereof. Before anysuchlien claimantshall commencecommences any action to foreclosesuch lienit, he shall give the person against whom he proposes to bringsuchthe action at least 20 days' notice in writing of his intention to foreclosesuch lienit. Sec. 75. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 514.34, is amended to read: 514.34 [FINDINGS; JUDGMENT.] In all suits or attachments prosecuted under the provisions of sections 514.23 to 514.34, the court,or jury, or justice ofthe peace who shall try the same,which tries it ormakemakes an assessment of damagestherein,shall, in addition to findingthe sum due the plaintiff, also find that the same isalso determine whether or not the amount due for the cost of shoeing thehorse, mule, ox, or otheranimal described in plaintiff's declaration, andis a lien upon thesame; provided, thatanimal. If the court,or jury, or justice of the peace shallfindfinds that the amount due the plaintiff is not a lien upon the property described in the plaintiff's declaration, the plaintiff shall be nonsuitedthereby, but shall be entitled to judgment, as in other civil actions, but in such case theplaintiffand shallnotrecover or taxanyonly those costsother than thoseallowed and taxable insuchthe other case; andin those cases where the amount due is found to be a lien uponthe property mentioned in plaintiff's declaration, the findingor verdict may be in the following form: (The court, jurors, orjustice, as the case may be) say that there is due the sum of..... dollars from the defendant, and that the same is due forplaintiff's reasonable charges for shoeing the animal mentionedin plaintiff's declaration (giving a description sufficient foridentification of the animal), and that the plaintiff has a lienupon the animal for the amount. Sec. 76. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 542.05, is amended to read: 542.05 [COST BOND; RECOGNIZANCES; NONRESIDENTS.] Actions upon bonds for costs given in any civil action or proceeding by a nonresident plaintiff, as provided by law, and upon any recognizance by a party or witness in any criminal prosecution, or on any security for costs given in justicecourt,shall be tried in the county wheresuchthe bond or security is filed, unless the court, for cause other than the residence of the defendant,shall changechanges the venue. An action against a nonresident defendant proceeded against by attachment may be brought in any countywherein suchin which the defendant has property liable to attachment. Sec. 77. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 549.03, is amended to read: 549.03 [ACTIONS FOR SERVICES; DOUBLE COSTS.] When any personhavingwho employed another to perform any labor or service, shall neglectneglects orrefuserefuses to pay the agreed price, or the reasonable value if there is no agreement, for 30 days afterthe sameit is due and payment is demandedto pay the agreed price, or the reasonable value ifthere be no agreement, andthe same shall bethe payment is recovered by action, there shall be allowed to the plaintiff, and included in his judgment,in addition toall of his disbursements allowed by law, $5 costs if the judgment berecovered in a justice court and a like sum if the judgment berecovered in a municipal court where no statutory costs are nowallowed in such municipal court in such action,and double his costsin all other actions wherein costs are recoverable or onappeal. Sec. 78. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 550.17, is amended to read: 550.17 [LEVY ON GROWING CROPS.] A levy may be made upongrowing grain or grass, and uponanyotherunharvested crops;, but no sale shall be madethereunderuntilthe same isthey are ripe or fit to be harvested; and. Any levythereonunder an execution issued by ajustice of the peace or anycourtof recordshall be continued beyondtheits return daythereof,if necessary,and its execution may be completed at any time within 30 days afterthesame isthe crops are ripe or fit to be harvested. Sec. 79. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 571.50, is amended to read: 571.50 [EFFECT OF DISCLOSURE.] Subject to the provisions of sections 571.51 and 571.52, the disclosure shall be conclusive against the judgment creditor as to all property of the judgment debtor. If the garnishee denies that he is indebted to the judgment debtor or has any property of the judgment debtor in his possession, the filing in court of a copythereofof the denial shall operate as a full discharge of the garnishee at the end of 20 days from the date of service ofsuchthe disclosure, in the absence of further proceedings as provided for in sections 571.51 and 571.52. The filing of objections to the disclosure or the filing of any motion or other proceedings shall operate as a stay ofsuchthe discharge. The court may, upon proper showing, relieve the judgment creditor from the operation ofsuchthe discharge after the expiration of 20 days.The garnishee may be dischargedwhere the value of the property of judgment debtor held orindebtedness owing to judgment debtor does not exceed $25, ifthe action is in district court, or where the value of theproperty of judgment debtor held or indebtedness owing tojudgment debtor does not exceed $10, if the action is in justicecourt, andThe garnishee may apply to the court to be discharged as to any property or indebtedness in excess of the amount which may be required to satisfy judgment creditor's judgment. Sec. 80. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 571.58, is amended to read: 571.58 [MINIMUM JUDGMENT.] No judgment shall be rendered against a garnishee in ajusticecounty or municipal court where the judgment against the judgment debtor is less than $10, exclusive of costs, or in the district court where the judgment against the judgment debtor is less than $25, exclusive of costs, and, in all such cases, thegarnishee shall be discharged. Sec. 81. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 571.65, is amended to read: 571.65 [IMPLIED REPEALS.] The purpose of this chapter is to provide a uniform system of garnishment disclosure in alldistrictsdistrict, municipal andjusticecounty courts, and allstatutes or parts thereoflaws inconsistentherewithwith this chapter arehereby amendedto conform to this chaptersuperseded. Sec. 82. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 574.20, is amended to read: 574.20 [BONDS, BY WHOM APPROVED.] Except as otherwise provided by law in particular cases, bonds shall be approved as follows: (1) The official bonds of all state officers, including those of the treasurers, superintendents, and other officials, and employees of the several public educational, charitable, penal, and reformatory institutions belonging to the state, shall be approved, as to form, by the attorney general, and in all other respects by the governor and the legislative auditor, or one of them; (2) The official bonds of county, town, city, and school district officers and employees by the governing body of themunicipalitypolitical subdivision for whose security they are, respectively, given; and (3) Those required or permitted by law to be given in any court, by the judge or justice of the court in which the proceeding is begun or pending.(4) In the case of justices of the peace in cities andincorporated statutory cities all bonds shall be surety bonds ofa surety company duly authorized to transact business withinthis state. The premium for such bond may be paid by themunicipality or other political subdivision out of its generalrevenue fund.No officer, official, or employee required to give bond shall enter upon his duties until his bond is duly approved and filed. Sec. 83. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 574.35, is amended to read: 574.35 [PROSECUTION FOR FINES; COURT; COMMITMENT.] All fines and forfeitures imposed as a punishment for any offense or for the violation of any duty imposed by statute may be prosecuted for and recovered by indictment in the district court, or, when the amount or valuethereofdoes not exceed $100, before ajustice of the peacejudge of county or municipal court, who shall have jurisdictionthereforconcurrently with the district court; and. In all cases of the imposition of a fine pursuant to statute, as punishment for any offense, the offender may be committed untilthe sameit is paid or he is otherwise discharged according to law. Sec. 84. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 588.01, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [CONSTRUCTIVE.] Constructive contempts are those not committed in the immediate presence of the court, and of which it has no personal knowledge, and may arise from any of the following acts or omissions: (1) misbehavior in office, or otherwilfulwillful neglect or violation of duty, by an attorney, clerk, sheriff, coroner, or other person appointed or elected to perform a judicial or ministerial service; (2) deceit or abuse of the process or proceedings of the court by a party to an action or special proceeding; (3) disobedience of any lawful judgment, order, or process of the court; (4) assuming to be an attorney or other officer of the court, and acting as such without authority; (5) rescuing any person or property in the custody of an officer by virtue of an order or process ofsuchthe court; (6) unlawfully detaining a witness or party to an action while going to, remaining at, or returning from the court where the action is to be tried; (7) any other unlawful interference with the process or proceedings of a court; (8) disobedience of a subpoena duly served, or refusing to be sworn or to answer as a witness; (9) when summoned as a juror in a court, neglecting to attend or serveas such, improperly conversing with a party to an action to be tried atsuchthe court or with any person relative to the merits ofsuchthe action, or receiving a communication from a party or other person in referencetheretoto it, and failing to immediately disclose the same to the court; (10) disobedience, by an inferior tribunal, magistrate,or officer, of the lawful judgment, order, or process of a superior court, proceeding in an action or special proceeding in any court contrary to law afterthe sameit has been removed from its jurisdiction, or disobedience of any lawful order or process of a judicial officer; (11) failure or refusal to pay a penalty assessment levied pursuant to section 626.861. Sec. 85. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 588.02, is amended to read: 588.02 [POWER TO PUNISH; LIMITATION.] Every courtof justiceandeveryjudicial officer may punish a contempt by fine or imprisonment, or both; and. In additionthereto, when the contempt involves thewilfulwillful disobedience of an order of the court requiring the payment of money for the support or maintenance of a minor child, the court may require the payment of the costs and a reasonable attorney's fee, incurred in the prosecution ofsuchthe contempt, to be paid by the guilty party; but,. When it is a constructive contempt, it must appear that the right,or remedy of a party to an action or special proceeding was defeated or prejudicedthereby,by it before the contempt can be punished by imprisonment or by a fine exceeding $50. Sec. 86. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 593.21, is amended to read: 593.21 [MISCONDUCT OF OFFICER IN CHARGE OF JURY.] Every officer to whose charge a juryshall beis committed by a courtor magistrate, who negligently orwilfullywillfully, and without leave ofsuchthe courtor magistrate, permits them, or any one of them, to receive any communication from any person, to make any communication to any person, to obtain or receive any book, paper, or refreshment, or to leave the jury room,shall beis guilty of a misdemeanor. Sec. 87. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 609.27, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [ACTS CONSTITUTING.] Whoever orally or in writing makes any of the following threats and thereby causes another against his will to do any act or forebear doing a lawful act is guilty of coercion and may be sentenced as provided in subdivision 2: (1) A threat to unlawfully inflict bodily harm upon, or hold in confinement, the person threatened or another, when robbery or attempt to rob is not committed thereby; or (2) A threat to unlawfully inflict damage to the property of the person threatened or another; or (3) A threat to unlawfully injure a trade, business, profession, or calling; or (4) A threat to expose a secret or deformity, publish a defamatory statement, or otherwise to expose any person to disgrace or ridicule; or (5) A threat to make or cause to be made a criminal charge, whether true or false; provided, that a warning of the consequences of a future violation of law given in good faith by amagistrate,peace officer,or prosecuting attorney to any person shall not be deemed a threat for the purposes of this section. Sec. 88. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 609.415, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [DEFINITIONS.] As used in sections 609.415 to 609.465, and 609.515, (1) "Public officer" means: (a) an executive or administrative officer of the state or of a county, municipality or other subdivision or agency of the state.; (b) a member of the legislature or of a governing board of a county, municipality, or other subdivision of the state, or other governmental instrumentality within the state.; (c) a judicial officer.; (d) a hearing officer.; (e) a law enforcement officer.; or (f) any other person exercising the functions of a public officer. (2)A"Public employee"ismeans a person employed by or acting for the state orby or fora county, municipality, or other subdivision or governmental instrumentality of the state for the purpose of exercising their respective powers and performing their respective duties, and who is not a "public officer." (3)A"Judicial officer"includesmeans a judge,justice ofthe peace or other magistrate, juror,court commissioner, referee, or any other person appointed by a judge or court to hear or determine a cause or controversy. (4)A"Hearing officer"includesmeans any person authorized by law or private agreement to hear or determine a cause or controversyandwho is not a judicial officer. Sec. 89. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 609.66, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [ACTS PROHIBITED.] Whoever does any of the following is guilty of a misdemeanor: (1) recklessly handles or uses a gun or other dangerous weapon or explosive so as to endanger the safety of another; or (2) intentionally points a gun of any kind, capable of injuring or killing a human being and whether loaded or unloaded, at or toward another; or (3) manufactures or sells for any unlawful purpose any weapon known as a slung-shot or sand club; or (4) manufactures, transfers, or possesses metal knuckles or a switch blade knife opening automatically; or (5) possesses any other dangerous article or substance for the purpose of being used unlawfully as a weapon against another; or (6) sells or has in his possession any device designed to silence or muffle the discharge of a firearm; or (7) without the parent's or guardian's consent, furnishes a child under 14 years of age, or as a parent or guardian permitssuchthe child to handle or use, outside of the parent's or guardian's presence, a firearm or airgun of any kind, or any ammunition or explosive; or (8) in any municipality of this state, furnishes a minor under 18 years of age with a firearm, airgun, ammunition, or explosive without the written consent of his parent or guardian or of the police departmentor magistrateofsuchthe municipality. Sec. 90. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 611.07, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [APPOINTMENT.] When a defendantshall beis charged upon indictment or information or complaint for any felony or gross misdemeanor andshall request the magistrateasks to have counsel appointed to assist in his defense,andsatisfied such magistrate by his own oath or other requiredproof that he is unable, by reason of poverty, to procurecounsel, the county attorney shall immediately certify to thejudge of the district court of the county wherein thepreliminary examination is had that the defendant is withoutcounsel and that he has sworn, under oath, that he isfinancially unable to procure counsel. The district court shallthen appoint counsel, not exceeding two, for such defendant,prior to his preliminary examination by a magistrate, to bepaid, upon his order, by the county in which the indictment wasfound, or complaint issued or information filed. If no counselis appointed prior to the preliminary hearing the court shallappoint such counsel, not exceeding two, at any time thereafterwhen the defendant is withoutcounseland has sworn under oaththat by reason of poverty he is unable to afford counsel.Compensation for counsel for preparation and appearing in court,together with all necessary and reasonable costs and expensesincurred or paid in said defense,shall befixed by the court ineach caseappointed and compensated as provided for by law and court rule. Sec. 91. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 611.17, is amended to read: 611.17 [FINANCIAL INQUIRY; STATEMENTS.] Upon a request for the appointment of counsel, the courtormagistrateshallproceed tomake appropriate inquiry into the financial circumstances of the applicant, who shall submit, unless waived in whole or in part by the court, a financial statement under oath or affirmation setting forth his assets and liabilities, source or sources of income, andsuchany other informationas may berequired by the courtor magistrate. The state public defender shall furnish appropriate forms forsuchthe financial statements. The information contained insuch athe statement shall be confidential and for the exclusive use of the courtor magistrate, except for any prosecution under section 609.48. A refusal to executeathe financial statementas provided herein shall constituteconstitutes a waiver of the right to the appointment of a public defender. Sec. 92. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 617.27, is amended to read: 617.27 [SEARCH WARRANT; DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY.]EveryA county or municipal courtand justice of the peace, upon complaint under oath that any person has in his possession or under his control any of the obscene books, papers, or other matter specified in sections 617.241 to 617.26, shall issue a warrant directed to the sheriff or any constable of the county,thereindirecting him to search for, seize, and take possession ofsuchthe obscene matter; and,. Upon conviction of the person in whose possession thesame shall beobscene matter was found, the judge shall causesuch matterit to be destroyed, and the fact to be entered upon the records of the court. Sec. 93. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 624.62, is amended to read: 624.62 [BOARDING MOVING ENGINES OR CARS.] It shall be unlawful for any person, other than a passenger or employee, to get on or off, or attempt to get on or off, or to swing on, or hang on from the outside of, any engine or car or any electric motor or street car upon any railway or track, whilesuchthe engine, car, motor, or street car is in motion, or switching or being switched. Every person whoshall violateany of the foregoing provisionsviolates this section shall be punished by a fine of not more than $10, and any sheriff, constable, or police officer finding any person in the act of violatingany such provisionthis section shall arrest, take before a proper courtor magistrate, and make a verified complaint against him forsuchthe violation. Sec. 94. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.01, is amended to read: 625.01 [CONSERVATORS OF THE PEACE.] The judges of theseveraldistrict, county, and municipal courtsof record, in vacation, within their respective districts, as well as in open court, and all justices of thepeace, within their respective counties,shallhave power tocause allenforce laws made for the preservation of the public peaceto be kept and,. In the execution of that power, they may require persons to give security to keep the peace, or for their good behavior, or both, in the manner provided in this chapter. Sec. 95. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.02, is amended to read: 625.02 [COMPLAINT TOMAGISTRATEJUDGE.] When complaintshall beis made to anysuch magistratejudge that any person has threatened to commit an offense against the person or property of another, themagistratejudge shall (1) examine the complainant, and any witness who may be produced, on oath,and(2) reducesuchthe complaint to writing, and (3) causethe sameit to be subscribed by the complainant. Sec. 96. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.03, is amended to read: 625.03 [WARRANT SHALL ISSUE, WHEN.] If, upon examination, itshall appearappears that there is just cause to fear thatany suchthe offense may be committed, themagistratejudge shall issue a warrant under his hand, reciting the substance of the complaint, and requiring the officer to whom it is directedforthwithto apprehend the person complained of and bring him beforesuch magistratethe judge, orsomeothermagistrate orcourt having jurisdiction of the cause. Sec. 97. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.04, is amended to read: 625.04 [EXAMINATION.] Themagistratejudge before whom any personshall beis brought upon charge of having made threats,as aforesaid,shall,as soon as may be,immediately examine the complainant and witnesses in support of the prosecution, on oath, in the presence of the party charged, in relation to any mattersconnected with suchpertinent to the chargewhich are deemedpertinent, after which. Witnesses for the prisoner, if he has any, shall be subsequently sworn and examined, and he. The prisoner may be assisted by counsel insuch examination, andalso inthe proceedingcross examination of the witnesses insupport of the prosecution. Sec. 98. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.05, is amended to read: 625.05 [RECOGNIZANCE TO KEEP THE PEACE.] If, upon examination, itshall appearappears that there is just cause to fear thatany suchthe offenseshallwill be committed by the party complained of, he shall be required to enter into a recognizance, with sufficient sureties, in such sum as themagistratejudge directs, to keep the peace toward all the people of this state, and especially toward the persons requiringsuchthe security, for such term as themagistratejudge orders, not exceeding six months. He shall not be ordered to recognize for his appearance at the district court, unless he is charged with some offense for which he ought to be held to answer to the court. Upon complying with the order of themagistratejudge, the party complained of shall be discharged. Sec. 99. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.06, is amended to read: 625.06 [PARTY COMMITTED, WHEN.] If the personsoordered to recognize refuses or neglects to comply withsuchthe order, themagistratejudge shall commit him to the county jail during the period for which he was required to give security, or until hesorecognizes, stating in the warrant the cause of commitment, with the sum and time for which security was required. Sec. 100. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.07, is amended to read: 625.07 [DISCHARGE; COMPLAINANT LIABLE FOR COSTS, WHEN.] If, upon examination, itshalldoes not appear that there is just cause to fear thatany suchthe offense will be committed by the party complained of, he shall beforthwithimmediately discharged. If themagistratejudge deems the complaint malicious, or without probable cause, he shall order the complainant to pay the costs of prosecution, who. The complainant shallthereuponthen be answerable to themagistratejudge and the officer for their feesas for his own debt. Sec. 101. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.08, is amended to read: 625.08 [COSTS.] When no order respecting the costs is made by themagistratejudge, they shall be allowed and paid in the same manner as costsbefore justicesin criminal prosecutions. In all cases where a personshall beis required to give security to keep the peace, or for his good behavior, themagistratejudge may further order the costs of prosecution, or any partthereofof them, to be paid bysuchthe person, who shall stand committed untilsuchthe costs are paid or he is otherwise legally discharged. Sec. 102. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.09, is amended to read: 625.09 [APPEAL.] Any person aggrieved by the order of anyjustice of thepeacecounty or municipal judge requiring him to recognizeasaforesaidmay, on giving the security required, appeal to the district courtnext to beholdenin the same county,orthatin another countyto which such county is attached forin the same judicialpurposesdistrict. Sec. 103. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.10, is amended to read: 625.10 [WITNESSES TO RECOGNIZE.] Themagistratejudge from whose order an appeal issotaken shall requiresuchany witnessesashemay thinkdeems necessary to support the complaint to recognize for their appearance at the court to which appeal is made. Sec. 104. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.11, is amended to read: 625.11 [PROCEEDINGS ON APPEAL.] The court before whichsuchthe appeal is prosecuted may affirm the order of thejusticejudge, or discharge the appellant, or may require the appellant to enter into a new recognizance, with sufficient sureties, in such sum and for such time as the courtthinksdeems proper, and. The district court may also makesuchan orderin relationrelating to the costs of prosecution as it deems just and reasonable. Sec. 105. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.12, is amended to read: 625.12 [FAILURE TO PROSECUTE APPEAL.] If any party appealingshall failfails to prosecute his appeal, his recognizance shall remain in full force and effect as to any breach of the condition, without an affirmation of the judgment or order of themagistratejudge, and shall also stand as a security for any costs which shall be ordered by the court appealed to, to be paid by the appellant. Sec. 106. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.13, is amended to read: 625.13 [DISCHARGE ON GIVING SECURITY.] Any person committed for not finding sureties, or refusing to recognize as required by the courtor magistrate, may be discharged by any judgeor justice of the peace,on givingsuchthe required securityas was required. Sec. 107. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.14, is amended to read: 625.14 [RECOGNIZANCE TRANSMITTED TO DISTRICT COURT.] Every recognizance taken in pursuance of section 625.13 shall be transmitted by themagistratejudge to the district court for the county on or before the first day of the next term, and shall betherefiled and recorded by the clerk. Sec. 108. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.15, is amended to read: 625.15 [RECOGNIZANCE WITHOUT PROCESS, WHEN.] Every person who, in the presence of any courtormagistrate,shall makemakes an affray, orthreatenthreatens to kill or beat another, or to commit any violence or outrage against his person or property, or who, in the presence ofsuchthe courtor magistrate,shall contendcontends with hot and angry words, to the disturbance of the peace, may be ordered, without process or any other proof, to recognize for keeping the peace, and being of good behavior for a term not exceeding six months, and, in case of a refusal, may be committed as before directed. Sec. 109. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.17, is amended to read: 625.17 [JUDGMENT ON RECOGNIZANCE REMITTED, WHEN.] When, upon an action brought on anysuchrecognizance, the penalty thereofshall beis adjudged forfeited, the court may remitsucha portion of the penalty, on the petition ofanythe defendant, asthe circumstances of the case renderedis just and reasonable. Sec. 110. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 625.18, is amended to read: 625.18 [SURRENDER OF PRINCIPAL; NEW RECOGNIZANCE.] Any surety in a recognizance to keep the peace, or for good behavior, or both, shall have authority and right to take and surrender his principal and, uponsuchthe surrender, shall be discharged and exempted from all liability for any act of the principal, subsequent tosuchthe surrender, which would be a breach of the condition of the recognizance. The person so surrendered may recognize anew, with sufficient sureties, before anyjustice of the peacejudge, for the residue of the term, andthereuponshall then be discharged. Sec. 111. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.04, is amended to read: 626.04 [PROPERTY; SEIZURE, KEEPING, AND DISPOSAL.] When any officershall seizeseizes, with or without warrant, any property or thing,the sameit shall be safely kept by direction of the courtor magistrate, soas long asmay benecessary for the purpose of being produced as evidence on any trial, and then. After the trial the property orthingsthing shall, unless otherwise subject to lawful detention, be returned totheits ownerthereof,orto suchany other personas maybeentitled tothe possession of the same andpossess it.Theother things soAny property or thing seized may be destroyed or otherwise disposed of under the direction of the courtorjustice of the peace. Any money found in gambling devices when seized shall be paid into the county treasury, or,. Ifsuchthe gambling devices are seized by a police officer of a municipality,suchthe money shall be paid into the treasury ofsuchthe municipality. Sec. 112. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.05, subdivision 1, is amended to read: Subdivision 1. [SEARCH WARRANT.] A search warrant is an order in writing, in the name of the state, signed by a courtofrecord or by a justice of the peace in any county having nomunicipal courtother than a probate court, directed to a peace officer, commanding him to makesucha search asmay beauthorized by law andtohold any item seized, subject to the order of a court. Sec. 113. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.06, is amended to read: 626.06 [JURISDICTION TO ISSUE.] Search warrants may be issued by any courtof record or bya justice of the peace in any county having no municipal court, other than a probate court, having jurisdiction in the areawhereinwhere the place to be searched is located. Sec. 114. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.09, is amended to read: 626.09 [EXAMINATION OF PARTIES MAKING REQUEST.] The courtor justice of the peacemay, before issuing the warrant, examine on oath the person seeking the warrant and any witnesses he may produce, and must. It shall takehis affidavitor theirthe affidavits in writing, and causesamethem to be subscribed to by the party or parties makingsamethem. Sec. 115. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.11, is amended to read: 626.11 [ISSUANCE OF WARRANT.] If thecourt or justice of the peacecourt isthereuponsatisfied of the existence of the grounds of the application, or that there is probable cause to believe their existence, he must issue a search warrant, signed by him with his name of office, to a peace officer in his county or to an agent of the bureau of criminal apprehension, commanding him forthwith. The warrant shall direct the officer or agent to search the person or place named,for the property or things specified, and to retainsuchthe property or things in his custody subject to order of the courtor justice of the peaceissuing the warrant. Sec. 116. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.14, is amended to read: 626.14 [TIME OF SERVICE.] A search warrant may be served only in the daytime unless the courtor justice of the peacedetermines on the basis of facts stated in the affidavits that a nighttime search is necessary to prevent the loss, destruction, or removal of the objects of the search. The search warrant shall state that it may be served only in the daytime unless a nighttime search issoauthorized. Sec. 117. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.15, is amended to read: 626.15 [EXECUTION AND RETURN OF WARRANT, TIME.] A search warrant must be executed and returned to the courtor justice of the peace whowhich issued it within ten days after its date;. After the expiration of this time, the warrant, unless executed,is void unless previously executed. Sec. 118. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.17, is amended to read: 626.17 [RETURN AND INVENTORY.] The officer mustforthwithimmediately return the warrant to the courtor justice of the peace,and deliver tohimit a written inventory of the property or things taken, verified by the certificate of the officer at the foot of the inventory. Sec. 119. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 626.66, is amended to read: 626.66 [ARREST; HEARING.] If an arrest is made in this state by an officer of another state in accordance with the provisions of section 626.65, he shall, without unnecessary delay, take the person arrested before amagistratejudge of the county in which the arrest was made, who. The judge shall conduct a hearing for the purpose of determining the lawfulness of the arrest. If themagistratejudge determines that the arrest was lawful, he shall commit the person arrested to await for a reasonable time the issuance of an extradition warrant by the governor of this state, or admit him to bail for such purpose. If themagistratejudge determines that the arrest was unlawful, he shall discharge the person arrested. Sec. 120. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.03, is amended to read: 629.03 [DEMAND IN WRITING.] No demand for the extradition of a person charged with crime in another state shall be recognized by the governor unless it alleges in writingalleging, except in cases arising under section 629.06, that the accused was present in the demanding state at the time of the commission of the alleged crime, and thatthereafterhe subsequently fled from the state,and. The demand shall be accompanied by a copy of an indictment found or by information supported by affidavit in the state having jurisdiction of the crime, or by a copy of an affidavit made before amagistratecourt there, together with a copy of any warrant which was issuedthereuponon it; or by a copy of a judgment of conviction or of a sentence imposed in executionthereofof it, together with a statement by the executive authority of the demanding state that the person claimed has escaped from confinement or has broken the terms of his bail, probation, or parole. The indictment, information, or affidavit made before themagistratecourt must substantially charge the person demanded with having committed a crime under the law of that state; and. The copy of the indictment, information, affidavit, judgment of conviction or sentence must be authenticated by the executive authority making the demand. Sec. 121. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.13, is amended to read: 629.13 [WHO MAY BE APPREHENDED.] When any person within this stateshall beis charged on the oath of any credible person before any judgeor magistrateof this state with the commission of any crime in any other state and, except in cases arising under section 629.06, with having fled from justice, with having been convicted of a crime in that state and having escaped from confinement, or having broken the terms of his bail, probation, or parole, or when complaintshall havehas been made before any judgeormagistratein this state setting forth on the affidavit of any credible person in another state that a crime has been committed insuchthe other state and that the accused has been charged insuchthat state with the commission of the crime and, except in cases arising under section 629.06, has fled from justice, or with having been convicted of a crime in that state and having escaped from confinement, or having broken the terms of his bail, probation, or parole, and is believed to be in this state, the judgeor magistrateshall issue a warrant directed to any peace officer commanding him to apprehend the person namedthereinin it, wherever he may be found in this state, and to bring him before the same or any other judge, magistrate,or court who or which may be available in or convenient of access to the place where the arrest may be made, to answer the charge or complaint and affidavit, and. A certified copy of the sworn charge or complaint and affidavit upon which the warrant is issued shall be attached to the warrant. Sec. 122. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.14, is amended to read: 629.14 [ARREST WITHOUT WARRANT.] The arrest of a person may be lawfully made also by any peace officer or a private person, without a warrant upon reasonable information that the accused stands charged in the courts of a state with a crime punishable by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding one year, but. Whensoarrested the accused must be taken before a judgeor magistratewith all practicable speed and complaint must be made against him under oath setting forth the ground for the arrest as in section 629.13; and. Thereafter his answer shall be heard as if he had been arrested on a warrant. Sec. 123. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.15, is amended to read: 629.15 [COURT MAY COMMIT TO JAIL.] If from the examination before the judgeor magistrateit appears that the person held is the person charged with having committed the crime alleged and, except in cases arising under section 629.06, that he has fled from justice, the judgeormagistratemust, by a warrant reciting the accusation, commit him to the county jail forsucha time, not exceeding 30 days and specified in the warrant, as will enable the arrest of the accused to be made under a warrant of the governor on a requisition of the executive authority of the state having jurisdiction of the offense, unless the accusedgivegives bail as provided in section 629.16, or until heshall beis legally discharged. Sec. 124. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.16, is amended to read: 629.16 [ADMIT TO BAIL.] Unless the offense with which the prisoner is charged is shown to be an offense punishable by death or life imprisonment under the laws of the state in which it was committed, a judgeor magistratein this state may admit the person arrested to bail by bond, with sufficient sureties, and in such sum as he deems proper, conditioned for his appearance before him at a time specified insuchthe bond, and for his surrender, to be arrested upon the warrant of the governor of this state. Sec. 125. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.17, is amended to read: 629.17 [DISCHARGE.] If the accused is not arrested under warrant of the governor by the expiration of the time specified in the warrant or bond, a judgeor magistratemay discharge him or may recommit him for a further period not to exceed 60 days, or. A judgeormagistratemay again take bail for his appearance and surrender, as provided in section 629.16, but within a period not to exceed 60 days after the date ofsuchthe new bond. Sec. 126. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.18, is amended to read: 629.18 [BOND FORFEITED.] If the prisoner is admitted to bail, and fails to appear and surrender himself according to the conditions of his bond, the judge, or magistrateby proper order,shall declare the bond forfeited and order his immediate arrest without warrant if hebeis within this state. Recovery may be had onsuchthe bond in the name of the state as in the case of other bonds given by the accused in criminal proceedings within this state. Sec. 127. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.23, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS.] The application shall be verified by affidavit, shall be executed in duplicate, and shall be accompanied by two certified copies of the indictment returned, or information and affidavit filed, or of the complaint made to the judgeor magistrate, stating the offense with which the accused is charged, or of the judgment of conviction or of the sentence. The prosecuting officer, parole board, chief executive officer, or sheriff may also attachsuchany further affidavits and other documents in duplicate asheshall deemdeemed proper to be submitted withsuchthe application. One copy of the application, with the action of the governor indicated by endorsementthereonon it, and one of the certified copies of the indictment, complaint, information, and affidavits, or of the judgment of conviction or of the sentence shall be filed in the office of the secretary of state to remain of record in that office. The other copies of all papers shall be forwarded with the governor's requisition. Sec. 128. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.31, is amended to read: 629.31 [TIME OF ARREST.] If the offense chargedbeis a felony, arrest may be made on any day and at any time of the day or night; if itbeis a misdemeanor, arrest shall not be made on Sunday or between the hours of 9:00o'clockp.m. and 9:00o'clocka.m. on any other day unless upon the direction of themagistratejudge endorsed upon the warrant. Sec. 129. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.36, is amended to read: 629.36 [ARREST BY BYSTANDER.]SuchA peace officer may take before amagistratejudge a person who, being engaged in a breach of the peace,shall beis arrested by a bystander and delivered to him; and,. When a public offenseshall beis committed in the presence of amagistratejudge, he may, by written or verbal order, command any person to arrest the offender, andthereuponthen proceed as if the offender had been brought before him on a warrant of arrest. Sec. 130. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.363, is amended to read: 629.363 [CONDUCTOR; AUTHORITY TO ARREST.] Every conductor of a railway train, with or without warrant, may arrest any person committing any act uponsuchthe train specified in sections 609.605 and 609.72, and take him before amagistratejudge or to the next railway station, and deliver him to the proper officer, or to the station agent, who shall takesuchthe person before the propermagistratejudge or deliver him tosuchthe officer. Everysuchconductor and station agent shall in such case possess all the powers of a sheriff with a warrant. Sec. 131. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.364, is amended to read: 629.364 [ARRESTS.] Every person may, and every conductor or other employee on any railway car or train, captain, clerk, or other employee on any boat, station agent at any depot, officer of any fair or fairground, proprietor or employee of any place of public resort, with or without warrant, shall, arrest any person found in the act of committing any of the offensesmentioneddescribed in section 609.52, subdivision 2, clause (4), or any person who, he has good reason to believe, has been guilty ofany suchthe offense, and take him before amagistrate orcourt having jurisdiction, and make written complaint under oath against him. Every personsomakingsuchan arrest shall have the same power and authority in all respects as an officer with a warrant, including the power to summon assistance, and. The person shall also arrest the person injured by reason ofsuchthe offense, and take him beforesuch magistrate ora court,whowhich shall require him to give security for his appearance as a witness on trial of the case; and he. The person shall receive forsuchhis services the same compensation as is provided for sheriffs. Sec. 132. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.39, is amended to read: 629.39 [PRIVATE PERSON MAKING ARREST, PROCEEDINGS.] Every private person whoshall have arrestedarrests another for the commission of a public offense shall, without unnecessary delay, take him before amagistratejudge or deliver him to a peace officer. If a person arrestedshall escape or berescuedescapes, the person from whose custody he has escaped may immediately pursue and retake him, at any time and in any place in the state, and. For that purpose, after notice of his intention and refusal of admittance, he may break open anyouteror innerdoor or window of a dwelling house. Sec. 133. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.401, is amended to read: 629.401 [DELAYING TO TAKE PRISONER BEFOREMAGISTRATEJUDGE.] Every public officer or other person having arrested any person upon a criminal charge, who shallwilfullywillfully and wrongfully delay to take him before amagistratejudge having jurisdiction to take his examination,shall beis guilty of a gross misdemeanor. Sec. 134. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.403, is amended to read: 629.403 [REFUSING TO MAKE ARREST OR TO AID OFFICER.] Every person who, after having been lawfully commanded by anymagistratejudge to arrest another person,shall wilfullyneglectwillfully neglects orrefuse sorefuses to do so, and every person who, after having been lawfully commanded to aid an officer in arresting any person, or in retaking any person who has escaped from lawful custody, or in executing any legal process,shall wilfully neglectwillfully neglects orrefuserefuses to aidsuchthe officer,shall beis guilty of a misdemeanor. Sec. 135. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.41, is amended to read: 629.41 [PROCESS, ISSUANCE.]TheJudgesof the several courts of record, in vacation as well as in term time,court commissioners, and all justices ofthe peace,are authorized to issue process to carry into effect the provisions of law for the apprehension of persons charged with offenses. Sec. 136. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.44, is amended to read: 629.44 [RECOGNIZANCE BY OFFENDER, DUTY OFMAGISTRATEJUDGE.] In every case where the offense charged in the warrantshallis notbepunishable by imprisonment in the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater, upon request of the person arrested, the officer making the arrest shall take him before amagistratejudge of the county in which the arrestshall beis made, for the purpose of entering into a recognizance without trial or examination, and such magistrate. The judge may take from him a recognizance with sufficient sureties for his appearance before the court havingcognizancejurisdiction of the offenseand next holdeninsuchthe county, andthereuponhe shall then be liberated. Themagistratejudge taking bail shall certify that fact upon the warrant, and deliverthe sameit, with the recognizanceso taken, to the person making the arrest, who shallcause the same to be delivereddeliver it, without unnecessary delay, to the clerk of the court before which the accused was recognized to appear; and,. On application of the complainant, themagistratejudge who issued the warrant, or the county attorney, shallcause suchsummon any witnessesto besummonedas he deems necessary. Sec. 137. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.45, is amended to read: 629.45 [BAIL REFUSED; PROCEEDINGS.] If themagistratejudge in the county where the arrest was madeshall refuserefuses to bail the personsoarrested and brought before him, or if no sufficient bailshall beis offered, the person having him in charge shall take him before themagistratejudge who issued the warrant, or, in his absence, before some othermagistratejudge of the county in which the warrant was issued, to be proceeded with as directed. Sec. 138. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.53, is amended to read: 629.53 [BAIL; COMMITMENT.] When at the close of an examination itshall appearappears that an offense has been committed, and that there is probable cause to believe the prisoner to be guilty, if the offense be bailable by themagistratejudge, and the prisonershall offeroffers sufficient bail or money in lieu thereof, it shall be taken, and he shall be discharged; but. If no sufficient bailbeis offered, or the offenseshallis notbebailable by themagistratejudge, he shall be committed for trial. When cash bailshall beis deposited in lieu of other bail,suchthe cash shall be the property of the accused, whether deposited by him personally or by any third person in his behalf. When cash bailshall beis accepted by a judgeof a court of record, he shall orderthe sameit to be deposited with the clerk, there toremainwho shall retain it until the final disposition of the case and the further order of the court relativetheretoto it. Upon release, in whole or in part, the amountsoreleased shall be paid to the accused personally or upon his written order. In case of conviction, themagistratejudge may ordersuchthe deposit to be applied upon any fine imposed and, ifsuchthe finebeis less than the deposit, the balance shall be paid to the defendant. If the fine exceeds the deposit, the deposit shall be appliedthereonto it and the defendant committed until the balance is paid, but such. The commitment shall not exceed one day's time for each dollar ofsuchthe unpaid balance. Cash bail in the hands of the court or any officerthereofof it shall be exempt from garnishment or levy under attachment or execution. Sec. 139. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.54, is amended to read: 629.54 [WITNESSES TO RECOGNIZE, WHEN; COMMITMENT.] When a prisonershall beis admitted to bail, or committed by themagistratejudge, he shall also bind by recognizancesuchany witnesses against the prisoner as heshall deemdeems material, to appear and testify at the court to which the prisoner is held to answer. If themagistrate shall bejudge is satisfied that there is good reason to believe that any witness will not perform the conditions of his recognizance unless other security shall be given, he may order him to enter into a recognizance for his appearance, withsuchsureties as heshalldeemdeems necessary; but,. Except in case of murder in the first degree, arson where human life is destroyed, and cruel abuse of children, he shall not commit any witness whoshallofferoffers to recognize, without sureties, for his appearance. Sec. 140. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.55, is amended to read: 629.55 [REFUSAL TO RECOGNIZE.] A witness required to recognize, with or without sureties, who refuses so to do, shall be committed by themagistratejudge until the witness complies with the order, or is otherwise discharged according to law. Every person held as a witness during confinement shall receive the compensation the court before whom the case is pending directs, not exceeding regular witness fees. Whenaa minorshall beis a material witness, any other person may recognize for the appearance of the witness, or themagistratejudge may take recognizance of the witness in a sum of not more than $50, which shall be valid and binding in law notwithstanding the disability. Sec. 141. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.60, is amended to read: 629.60 [RECOGNIZANCE; WHEN ACTION NOT BARRED.] No action brought on any recognizance shall be barred or defeated, nor judgmentthereonon it arrested, by reason of any neglect or omission to note or record the default of any principal or surety at the term when it occurs, or by reason of any defect in the form of the recognizance, if it shall sufficiently appear from the tenor thereof at what court the party or witness was bound to appear, and that the courtormagistratebefore whom it was taken was authorized by law to require and take it; and. When upon action brought upon any recognizance to prosecute an appeal the penalty thereofshall beis adjudged to be forfeited, or when by leave of courtsuchthe penalty has been paid to the county treasurer or clerk of court without suit or before judgment in a manner provided by law, if by law any forfeiture accrues to any person by reason of the offense of which appellant was convicted, the court may award himsuchthe sumashemay beis entitled to out ofsuchthe forfeiture. Sec. 142. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 629.62, is amended to read: 629.62 [APPLICATION FOR BAIL, JUSTIFICATION.] When a party in custodyshall desiredesires to give bail, the offense being bailable, and the district courtshallis notbein session in the county, he may apply to a judgethereofof district court, or a judge of the supreme court, upon his affidavit showing the nature of the application and the names of the persons to be offered as bail, with a copy of the mittimus or papers upon which he is held in custody.SuchThe judge maythereuponthen, by order, direct the sheriff to bring upsuchthe party, at a time and place named, for the purpose of giving bail. Notice of the application shall be given to the county attorney, if within the county, and no matters shall be inquired into exceptsuch asthose which relate to the amount of bail and the sufficiency of the sureties. Sureties shall in all cases justify by affidavit, or upon oral examination before the court,judge, or magistrate, as the case may be. Sec. 143. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 630.17, is amended to read: 630.17 [FINE, HOW COLLECTED.] If the corporationshall beis found guilty and a fine imposed, it shall be entered and docketed by the clerk,justiceof the peace,county judge, or municipal judge, as the case maybe,as a judgment against the corporation, and. It shall beofthe same force and effect, and beenforced against the corporation in the same manner,as if the judgment had been recovered against it in a civil action. Sec. 144. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 630.37, is amended to read: 630.37 [REGISTER.] The clerk shall keep a register of all criminal actions, in which he shall enter: (1)All cases returned to the court by a magistrate,whether the defendant is discharged or held to answer;(2)all indictments found in the court, or sent or removedtheretoto it for trial, with the time of finding the indictment, or when it was sent or removed; and(3)(2) the time of arraignment, of the demurrer or plea, and of the trial, conviction, or acquittal of the defendant, together with a brief note of all the other proceedings in the action. Sec. 145. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 631.04, is amended to read: 631.04 [EXCLUDING MINORS; DUTY OF OFFICER; PENALTY.] No person under the age of 17 years, not a party to, witness in, or directly interested in a criminal prosecution or trial being heard before any district, county, or municipal,police, or justicecourt, shall attend or be present atsuchthe trial; and. Every police officer, constable, sheriff, or other officer in charge ofany sucha court and attending upon the trial of anysuchcriminal case inany suchthe court, shall exclude every minor from the room in whichsuchthe trial is beinghad every such minorheld, except whenhethe minor is permitted to attend by order of the court before which the trialshall be had; and everyis being held. Any police officer, constable, sheriff, or deputy sheriff whoshallknowinglyneglectneglects orrefuserefuses to carry out the provisions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and punished by a fine of not less than $10 nor more than $25. Sec. 146. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 636.08, is amended to read: 636.08 [TRIAL OF MINORS.] At the hearing or trial of a minor under the age of 18, charged with any crime, the trial judgeor magistrate, prior to his being brought into the courtroom, shall clear thesamecourtroom of all persons except officers of the court, including attorneys, witnesses, relatives, and friends. Sec. 147. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 641.07, is amended to read: 641.07 [PRISONERS, LABOR.] Every able bodied male prisoner over 16 years of age confined in any county jail or statutory city lockup under judgment of any courtof record, justice court,or other tribunal authorized to imprison for the violation of any law, ordinance, bylaw, or police regulation, may be required tolaborduring the whole or some part of the time of his sentence, butwork for not more than ten hours per day.SuchThe court or tribunal, when passing judgment of imprisonment for nonpayment of fine or otherwise, shall determine and specify whethersuchor not the imprisonment shall be at hard laboror not.SuchThe labor may be in the jail or jail yard, upon public roads and streets, public buildings, grounds, or elsewhere in the county. Upon request, persons awaiting trial may be allowed, uponrequest,to performsuchlabor. Each prisoner performing labor may be paid a reasonable compensation by the county if imprisoned in violation of state law or awaiting trial upon a charge thereof, and by the city if confined for the violation of any ordinance, bylaw, or police regulation;. The compensationtoshall be paid to the wife, family, or dependents ofsuchthe prisoner, orsuchany other personasthe court sentencing himmay direct, anddirects. It shall be insuchan amountassuchthat the courtshall determine upon application of theperson or official under whose superintendence the work shall beperformed, anddetermines. It shall be allowed by the board of county commissionersofor the governing body of the city uponsuchorder of the court. Sec. 148. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 641.25, is amended to read: 641.25 [DISTRICT JAILS; HOW DESIGNATED.] The commissioner of corrections, with the consent of the county board, may designate any suitable jail in the state as a district jail, to be used for the detention of prisoners from other counties in addition to those of its own, and, when such. If the jail or its management becomes unfit forsuchthat purpose, he may rescind its designation. Whenever there is no sufficient jail in any county, the examiningmagistratecounty or municipal judge, upon his own motion, or the judge of the district court, upon application of the sheriff, may order any person charged with a criminal offense committed to a sufficient jail in some other county. If therebeis a district jail in the judicial district, he shall be senttheretoto it, or to any other nearer district jail designated by themagistrate orjudge,and. The sherifforof the county containingsuchthe district jail, on presentation ofsuchthe order, shall receive, keep in custody, and deliver him up upon the order ofsuchthe court,or a judgethereof. Sec. 149. Minnesota Statutes 1982, section 648.39, subdivision 3, is amended to read: Subd. 3. [CITY AND TOWN OFFICERS.] Each city and town shall purchase from the revisor of statutes, for the use ofeachjustice of the peace, judge of the municipal court, clerk ofthemunicipal court, andclerk of the city or town,as the case maybe,the number of copies the city or town determines is needed. Sec. 150. [COURT STUDY COMMISSION.] Subdivision 1. [CREATION.] There is created a court study commission whose purpose shall be to study the structure of the state court system to determine the desirability of unifying the current county, municipal, and district courts into a single trial court. Subd. 2. [MEMBERSHIP; CHAIRMAN.] The commission shall consist of 16 members as follows: four members of the senate appointed by the subcommittee on committees of the committee on rules and administration; four members of the house of representatives appointed by the speaker of the house; two district court judges and two county or municipal court judges appointed by the chief justice; the chief justice of the supreme court or his designee; and three members appointed by the governor. The commission shall elect a chairman from its membership. Subd. 3. [REPORT TO THE LEGISLATURE.] On or before January 1, 1984, the commission shall submit to the chairmen of the judiciary committees in the house of representatives and the senate its recommendations whether to unify the current county, municipal, and district courts into a single trial court. Subd. 4. [STAFF.] The judicial planning committee shall provide staff for the commission. Members shall receive travel and other expenses in the same manner as state employees. Sec. 151. [REPEALER.] Minnesota Statutes 1982, sections 357.14; 357.15; 367.03, subdivision 4; 367.21; 388.02; 412.02, subdivision 5; 412.171; 487.01, subdivision 8; 488A.283; 488A.284; 492.02, subdivision 2; 542.15; 549.16; 599.21; 599.22; 599.23; 609.46; 629.56; 629.66; and 629.71; are repealed. Sec. 152. [EFFECTIVE DATE.] Section 150 is effective the day following final enactment. Approved June 14, 1983
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes