Hudson and Walker v. Commonwealth

283 S.W. 1034, 214 Ky. 578, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 1034 (Hudson and Walker v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson and Walker v. Commonwealth, 283 S.W. 1034, 214 Ky. 578, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 404 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

*580 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The appellants, Chester Hudson and Charles Walker, were jointly indicted and together tried in the court below for the offense of unlawfully, within twelve months before the filing of the indictment, manufacturing spirituous and intoxicating liquor, not for sacramental, medicinal, scientific or mechanical purposes. The trial resulted in a verdict by the jury finding each of the appellants guilty as charged and fixing the punishment of each at a fine of $300.00 and imprisonment of ninety days in jail, and from the judgment entered by the trial court in pursuance of that verdict they have each appealed.

The grounds urged by the appellants’ counsel for the reversal of the judgment are, that error prejudicial to the substantial rights of each of them was committed by the trial court as follows: First, in overruling their joint and several demurrer to the indictment; second, in overruling the motion made by each of them at the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence, and renewed upon the conclusion of the evidence as a whole, for an instruction peremptorily directing the jury to return a verdict of not guilty in behalf of each of the appellants.

As the many offenses charged in the indictment rendered it duplicitous and constituted a misjoinder requiring correction, the filing of the demurrer thereto by the appellants was authorized as a means to that end. But upon the filing of the demurrer and before any action was, or could be, taken by the court thereon the Commonwealth’s attorney corrected the misjoinder by electing to prosecute the appellants for only one of the numerous offenses charged in the indictment, viz., that of unlawfully manufacturing intoxicating liquor. And this was the single offense for which they were tried and convicted. It is, however, insisted by counsel for the appellants that as the indictment charged more than one offense against each defendant and did not allege a conspiracy between them to commit them, it was the duty of the court, notwithstanding the correction of the misjoinder by the Commonwealth’s attorney’s voluntary election to confine the prosecution of the appellants to one of the several offenses charged, to sustain the demurrer; and that the “only way tHis could have been avoided would have been by the attorney for the Commonwealth’s dismissing the indictment as to one of the defendants and *581 dismissing all the charges except the one as against the ■other defendant.”

We are unable to discover any force in this argument. The appellants were jointly indicted as principals in the commission of the offense charged; and if they together, whether as joint undertakers, either as an employe, aider or abettor of the other, or both as employees of another, or others, unlawfully engaged in the manufacture of intoxicating liquor as charged in the indictment, nevertheless in the meaning of the law they were principals in the commission of that offense and each .amenable to the punishment prescribed by the statute therefor. • Rickman v. Commonwealth, 208 Ky. 655; Cummins v. Commonwealth, 208 Ky. 695. And this would be true whether their joint commission of the offense did, or did not, result from a conspiracy between them. Therefore, in order to convict the appellants of the offense ■charged it was not, as argued by their counsel, necessary for the indictment to allege, or the Commonwealth to prove, such conspiracy.

We cannot sustain the further contention of appellants’ counsel that the appellants were prejudiced in any .substantial right by the trial court’s refusal to sustain their demurrer because of the failure of the Commonwealth’s attorney to dismiss, by an order to that effect, the several offenses therein charged against the appellants, other than the one on which he elected to try them. We deem it sufficient to say that the entering of such an •order by that officer following his election of the offense upon which to try the appellants, would have been proper, for the authority to take such action is conferred on the Commonwealth’s attorney by section 168, Criminal Code, applicable to the correction of a misjoinder of offenses in an indictment, though the exercise by him of ■such authority is by its terms left to his discretion, with the proviso, however, that if exercised by him, a demurrer to the indictment because of the misjoinder of offenses shall not be sustained.

It should be said in this connection that though a formal exception was taken by the appellants to the ao' tion of the court in overruling their demurrer to the indictment, neither at the time of the Commonwealth attorney’s making the election by which their prosecution under the indictment was confined to the one offense therein charged for which they were tried, nor at any time during their trial, did they call to his or the court’s *582 attention the fact that he had not, by an order of record, dismissed the,several other offenses with which they were charged, or asked that snch an order be made. So in view of the facts that the election correcting the misjoinder of offenses contained in the indictment was made and that snch error, if any, as was committed by the trial court in overruling the demurrer to the indictment, was cured by its confining the evidence to the particular offense for which the Commonwealth elected to try the appellants; and also by its instructions to the jury which limited their consideration of the guilt or innocence of the appellants to that one offense, we are clearly of the opinion that they were not prejudiced in any of their substantial rights by the failure of the court to sustain the .demurrer to the indictment. And to hold otherwise would require us to ignore section 353, Criminal Code, which permits the reversal by this court of a judgment of conviction only for errors of law appearing on the record “when, upon consideration of the whole case, the court is. satisfied that the substantial rights of the defendant have been prejudiced thereby.” This conclusion is fully sustained by the following cases and others that might be cited, all decided by this court: Smith v. Commonwealth, 109 Ky. 685; Dotson v. Commonwealth, 204 Ky. 658; Vanover v. Commonwealth, 202 Ky. 813; Davis v. Commonwealth, 201 Ky. 300; Esterling v. Commonwealth, 201 Ky. 485; Bowling v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 642; Lovelace v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 425; Herbert v. Commonwealth, 207 Ky. 76; Burk v. Commonwealth, 207 Ky. 491; Little v. Commonwealth, 205 Ky. 55; Johnson v. Commonwealth, 205 Ky. 364; Combest v. Commonwealth, 206 Ky. 554.

Indeed, so frequently on appeal, especially in liquor-cases, has the action of trial courts in overruling demurrers to indictments under circumstances such as obtained in the instant case, been urged by the appellants as error requiring the reversal of judgments of conviction, that this court, as if to put the matter forever at rest, in giving its approval to a like ruling of the trial court, in Dotson v. Commonwealth, supra, declared: “This procedure has been repeatedly upheld by this court and is no longer an open question. Vanover v. Commonwealth, 202 Ky. 813.”

The appellants’ final contention that the trial court erred in overruling their motion for a directed verdict of *583 acquittal, is also without merit.

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 1034, 214 Ky. 578, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-and-walker-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1926.