Edmond v. State

280 So. 2d 449
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 27, 1973
Docket71-596
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 280 So. 2d 449 (Edmond v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edmond v. State, 280 So. 2d 449 (Fla. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

280 So.2d 449 (1973)

Ellis EDMOND, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. 71-596.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.

June 27, 1973.

James R. Pierce, Director, Legal Aid and Defender Clinic, Gainesville, and Steven L. Sagrans and David A. Schmudde, Law Interns, for appellant.

Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Charles Corces, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Tampa, for appellee.

*450 MANN, Chief Judge.

We consider the rule to be that if all the counts are good, and such as on which judgment can be awarded, and the evidence warrants the conviction, to pass judgment on the count charging the highest grade of offence; ...

Cribb v. State, 1861, 9 Fla. 409, 416.

For more than a century the Supreme Court of Florida has adhered with constancy, with the single apparent exception of Steele v. Mayo, Fla. 1954, 72 So.2d 386, which we now understand more clearly and discuss herein, to the so-called single transaction rule, limiting punishment to the gravest of those several offenses into which a single criminal episode may be categorized. In a sense, it is like a game of scrabble, in which a player is dealt letters with which he may form words. He may arrange the letters in whatever form he chooses, but having determined their most effective configuration and counted the score accordingly, he cannot rearrange the letters and count them again. In this opinion we consider the extent to which prosecution is the same sort of a game.

Edmond and another broke into a McDonald's restaurant early one morning and were found there by police, surrounded by burglary tools and cash. Convicted of breaking and entering with intent to commit a felony, possession of burglary tools and grand larceny, Edmond was sentenced to consecutive maximum terms of 15, 10 and 5 years respectively. We hold that the sentences in excess of fifteen years are invalid, and consequently affirm the judgment and sentence entered on the gravest offense and reverse as to the others.

The crime of possession of tools adapted for burglary possessed with the intent of committing that crime is peculiarly of the type which illustrates the reason for the single transaction rule. Similarly, legislative proscription of possession as well as sale of narcotics indicates that there are frequent occasions when the provable facts do not add up to the offense contemplated by the criminal, and for some reason may not show an attempt, and it is desirable to establish a criminal category which permits punishment. Similarly, our law regarding attempts and conspiracies to commit crime shows a legislative intention to eradicate crime, and an effort to enlarge the catalogue of crime sufficiently to fit the particular case, so that a criminal does not go free because some element of proof is missing or because the police were efficient in making an arrest before the criminal episode reached its intended conclusion.

Because the legislative development of the law has been marked by multiplication of offenses, each describing different configurations of fact commonly found in criminal behavior, the single transaction rule makes sense. In essence, it is a rule presumptively declarative of legislative intent. Within the broad range allowed by the Constitutions, the Legislature is at liberty to prescribe more severe punishment for particular crimes or to provide that they be cumulatively punishable. The postulate we proceed from when we deal with crimes like possession of burglarious tools, possession of narcotics or of gambling paraphernalia is that the Legislature intended not to compound punishment but to be certain that some configuration of fact sufficient to denote criminal activity affords a basis for a single punishment. Thus we have avoided the rigidity of common law classification of crimes, where gaps were left open for criminals to escape.

The question whether burglary and larceny are cumulatively punishable is more complex, and we have extensively examined the history and present status of the question. Perkins, in his hornbook on criminal law, says that "At common law a burglar who breaks in to steal and is successful in his effort is not only guilty of both burglary and larceny but may be convicted *451 and punished for bosh."[1] He cites no authority. We have searched in vain for any case in which, under English common law, one has been punished for both burglary and larceny.

There is a leading case, Rex v. Vandercomb and Abbott,[2] in which the defendants were surprised in a house, whose owners were away, by a man to whom the key had been entrusted. He had discovered the removal of goods from the rooms to the passage, ready to be taken away. Recruiting ten or twelve others from the local public houses, the keeper of the keys returned while Vandercomb and Abbott were inside. The first prosecution failed because the charge of breaking and entering and stealing fell because of inadequate proof of asportavit, and a verdict of acquittal was directed. They were held in custody pending a new indictment, and the question arose at the second trial whether the first could be pleaded in bar. On the second occasion they were charged with breaking and entering with the intent to commit a felony, and pleaded autrefois acquit. All of the discussion about the distinction between burglary and larceny in the Vandercomb case is set against the background of the double jeopardy question. Prior cases, particularly Turner's case, Kelyng 30, 84 Eng.Rep. 1068 (K.B. 1664), were discussed as they bore on this issue. Too much is said in these cases to repeat at the expense of The Florida Bar, but the clear implication of the early English cases is that rigid forms of pleading in criminal cases forced courts to acknowledge distinctions which permitted successive prosecutions. Today, there is no barrier to pleading several counts in an information and proving one or more of them. The lesson of the common law as we read it is not what Perkins says. There is no early English case we can find in which cumulative punishment has been imposed for burglary and larceny. The imposition of capital punishment at that time in England makes it unlikely that we would encounter such a case of cumulative punishment. The present law of England would seem to merge burglary and larceny committed under the circumstances of this case by prescribing that:

"A person is guilty of burglary if —
(a) he enters any building or part of a building as a trespasser and with intent to commit any such offence as is mentioned in subsection (2) below; or
(b) having entered any building or part of a building as a trespasser he steals or attempts to steal anything in the building or that part of it or inflicts or attempts to inflict on any person therein any grievous bodily harm."[3]

What we must do, however, is separate the question of double jeopardy from that of cumulative punishment.[4] Unless there is explicit legislative direction to the contrary, as there is in Missouri, where burglary and larceny are specifically made cumulatively punishable,[5] we should assume that the Legislature has provided for each grade of offense the contemplated punishment of one who, in the commission of that offense may have — probably has — committed another. In short, today's criminal codes have eliminated the problems created by the common law in allowing loopholes through which the criminal might escape.

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Bluebook (online)
280 So. 2d 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmond-v-state-fladistctapp-1973.