Commonwealth v. Foster

122 Mass. 317, 1877 Mass. LEXIS 128
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 122 Mass. 317 (Commonwealth v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Foster, 122 Mass. 317, 1877 Mass. LEXIS 128 (Mass. 1877).

Opinion

Gray, C. J.

At February term 1873 of the Superior Court in Suffolk, the defendant was indicted in four counts, appearing upon the face of the indictment to be for distinct offences, and each of which charged him with uttering and publishing as true a false, forged and counterfeit promissory note. The notes described in the first, second and fourth counts were payable to the order of the respective makers, and were not alleged to be indorsed by them. The note described in the third count was payable to the order of the defendant, and no objection is made to the sufficiency of that count. The defendant pleaded not guilty, and the jury returned a general verdict of guilty. Exceptions alleged by the defendant to the rulings at the trial, not affecting the validity of the indictment, were overruled by this' court in November, 1873. Commonwealth v. Foster, 114 Masa 811.

[318]*318At December term 1873 of the Superior Court, to which the indictment had been continued, the defendant was sentenced upon the first count to imprisonment in the state prison for five years, and upon the second count to a like imprisonment for five years,'to take effect after the expiration of his sentence upon the first count, and to stand committed until removed in pursuance of his sentence.

Upon that judgment and sentence the defendant, in June, 1876, sued out a writ of error, returnable at September term L876 of this court. The attorney general pleaded in nullo est yrratum, but now admits that that judgment is erroneous and must be reversed. See Commonwealth v. Dallinger, 118 Mass. 139.

At December term 1876 of the Superior Court, the indict-_>snt was brought forward by order of the court upon motion of «he district attorney, and was continued to January term 1877, when the defendant was brought by writ of habeas corpus from the state prison, and, being set at the bar to receive sentence upon the vhird count, moved in arrest of judgment that, it appearing by the record that judgment had been entered up on this indictment at December term 1873, and the defendant had been thereby sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison, and was now serving out such sentence therein, and the judgment had not been reversed, although a writ of error to reverse it was pending, the court could not enter up any new judgment on the same indictment. The court overruled this motion, and passed sentence on the defendant, upon the third count, of imprisonment in the state prison for six years and nine months, to take effect after the expiration of the sentence passed upon the first and second counts. To this ruling and sentence the defendant alleged exceptions.

The records of the Superior Court show no other order relating to this case. But the usual general order was made at the end of December term 1873, and of each succeeding term down to December term 1876, “ that all matters and things not acted upon stand continued, judgment is entered up and the court is adjourned without day.”

By our law, several offences of the same general nature, and punishable in the same manner, may be joined in one indict[319]*319ment; and, in case of a general verdict of guilty upon all the counts, the sentence may be either entire upon the whole indictment, or distinct upon each count, and to take effect upon the expiration of a previous sentence, and a defect in one count does not invalidate the sentence upon the others. Josslyn v. Commonwealth, 6 Met. 236. Kite v. Commonwealth, 11 Met. 581. Commonwealth v. Costello, 120 Mass. 358. Commonwealth v. Brown, 121 Mass. 69.

This case presents the question, whether a defendant, who has been found guilty generally upon an indictment containing several counts for distinct offences, and has been sentenced on some of the counts to imprisonment, and has been imprisoned under such sentence, can at a subsequent term be brought up and sentenced anew upon another count in the same indictment.

No precedent in support of this mode of proceeding in a criminal case has been produced. It was contended, in the learned argument for the Commonwealth, that there is no distinction in this respect between criminal and civil cases ; and that in a civil action, if the declaration contains two counts for distinct causes, judgment may be rendered upon one, and a writ of error sued out upon such judgment, and the matter of the other count be afterwards tried and determined and judgment rendered upon it. Reference was made to two early English cases, which, upon examination, do not appear to us to establish any such general rule.

In the first of those cases, in the 36th year of Henry VI., on a writ of entry sur disseisin in the Common Bench, to recover certain land and rent, the issue as to the land was tried and found for the demandant, and, while the rent yet depended in ylea, the demandant had judgment to recover the land and damages therefor, and prayed for a fieri facias returnable presently, and had it, and the sheriff returned fieri feci. “ Littleton prayed that the moneys might be delivered to the defendant; and that he might have a supersedeas to the sheriff until the plea be determined, for before that the plea be wholly determined he cannot have a writ of error, because it is one original.” Prisot, C. J., said: “ In debt against two by divers praecipes, if there be error in a judgment against the one, he shall have a writ of error, and yet the original is here; for in those originals in [320]*320which there are divers counts and there is error against the one, he shall have a writ of error and the record of his count, and the plea shall be severed from the original and removed into the King’s Bench, and yet the original remains here. But where there is one original and one count, he cannot have a writ of error; for the writ and the record cannot be in the King’s Bench and also here. But bring us a special writ of error, if you will, and we will advise, when we see the writ, whether it shall be allowed or no.” Fitz. Ab. Fieri Facias, pi. 3.

Of that case it is to be observed, 1st. The opinion of the court, upon the question whether the tenant should seek relief, from the judgment and execution for the land and damages, by a supersedeas of proceedings until the matter of the rent should be determined, or by suing out a writ of error immediately, was reserved until a special writ of error should be presented. 2d. The dictum as to “ debt against two by divers prsecipes ” had in view the case of several prsecipes against different persons for different claims, which, though apparently permitted by the practice of that time to be joined in one original writ, were really equivalent to two originals, and were so regarded; Reg. Brev. 139 a; Vin. Ab. Præcipe quad reddat, F. pl. 6, 7; Com. Dig. Pleader, 3 B. 7; as in the case in which our practice act allows parties having different liabilities upon one written contract to be joined in one action, with several counts and several judgments. Gen. Sts. c. 129, § 4. Hawkes v. Phillips, 7 Gray, 284. Wamesit Bank v. Buttrick, 11 Gray, 387. Colt v. Learned, 118 Mass. 380. 3d. In the same court, two years earlier, on a quare impedit against the bishop, the pretended patron and bis clerk, on which, before the plea of the bishop was determined, judgment was given against the others, and they undertook to sue out a writ of error, the opinion of the court is thus reported: “ Prisot et tota curia.

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Bluebook (online)
122 Mass. 317, 1877 Mass. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-foster-mass-1877.