§ 32.15 TRIAL AND JUDGMENTS.
   (A)   Postponement. Before a trial commences, either party, upon good cause shown, may obtain a reasonable postponement thereof.
   (B)   Defendant present at trial. The defendant must be present in person at the trial.
   (C)   Application of provisions. In all trials, as to matters not covered in this chapter, by the statutes relating to municipal courts or by rules duly promulgated by the State Supreme Court, the procedure applicable in trials of misdemeanors in the district courts shall apply to the extent that they can be made effective.
   (D)   Guilty plea or verdict; imposing sentence. If the defendant pleads guilty or is convicted after the trial, then the Court must render judgment thereon, fixing the penalty within the limits prescribed by the applicable ordinance and imposing sentence accordingly.
   (E)   Judgment rendered immediately. At the close of trial, judgment must be rendered immediately by the Judge, who shall cause it to be entered in his or her docket.
   (F)   Judgment of acquittal. If the judgment is of acquittal and the defendant is not to be detained for any other legal cause, then he or she must be discharged at once.
   (G)   Payment of fine. A judgment that the defendant pay a fine may also direct that he or she be imprisoned until the fine is satisfied at the rate of one day of imprisonment for each $25 of fine. If the defendant is without means to pay the fine or costs, then the Judge may direct the total amount due to be entered upon the court minutes and be certified to the County District Court, where it shall be entered upon the District Court’s judgment docket and shall have the full force and effect of a district court judgment. Thereupon, the same remedies shall be available for the enforcement of the judgment as are available to any other judgment.
(Prior Code, § 1-8-14)