Hurst v. State

86 Ala. 604
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 86 Ala. 604 (Hurst v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurst v. State, 86 Ala. 604 (Ala. 1888).

Opinions

SOMERVILLE, J.

The defendant was indicted, tried and convicted for conveying into the county jail a file, with the intent to facilitate the escape of one Hurst, who was confined under a charge of misdemeanor — the offense being made punishable by fine and imprisonment in the county jail, or sentence to hard labor for the county. — Code, 1886, § 4003. At the same term of the court, the defendant was also indicted, tried and convicted for the same act of conveying into the county jail the same file, with the intent to facilitate the escape of one Hughes, a prisoner confined in the same jail on a charge of felony — this offense being punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary. — Code, 1886, § 4002. The latter case is the one now before us on appeal.

The defendant, on the latter trial, set up as a defense the conviction in the former case, which plea of aid refois convict, on demurrer by the State, was held to be insufficient. It appears from the evidence, that the same act aided both prisoners to escape, and their escape was effected at the same [606]*606time. The question is, whether the defendant is guilty of two separate indictable offenses, each of which may be made the basis of an independent prosecution and conviction.

Our constitution, following the parallel principle of the common law, provides, that “no person shall, for the same offense, be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb,” — a safeguard of liberty which, under our Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, has always been regarded by our courts with a sanctity scarcely second to that accorded to the right of trial by jury. The purpose of the courts should be so to apply this constitutional guaranty as to protect the citizen from vexatious criminal prosecutions, and at the same time not to defeat the chief design of our penal laws, which, apart from their reformatory aspect, have in view the double aim of protecting society and preventing crime. .

If we hold this plea of former conviction to be bad, we can see no reason why a defendant could not be indicted and convicted one hundred times, in case he should, by a single act, effect the simultaneous escape of a hundred prisoners lawfully confined in a'county jail, or other prison. It is the familiar case of a single criminal act, producing several different results, each of which, standing alone, and dissociated'from the others, would have been an indictable crime. Is each result a separate and distinct crime, liable to be indicted as such, or is it a mere consequence of a single unlawful act done with criminal intent?

An analogous inquiry would be: If one should cast a stone into a crowd, and wound a dozen men at one blow, is he liable to one or a. dozen indictments? If he burns a hundred houses, by one act of arson, knowing the probable consequences of hjs unlawful act, would he be guilty of a hundred crimes? Or, should he blow up a hotel with dynamite, murdering a thousand guests, would he be separately triable for the perpetration of a thousand homicides?

The authorities are in direct conflict on this subject, and we shall make no effort to reconcile them. It is our judgment, that none of the legitimate purposes of punishing crime require the adoption of the policy of multiplying prosecutions in cases of this nature. Such in fact seems to be the policy of our legislation as to framing indictments, as declared by section 4384 of our Penal Code. It is there provided that, “when an act is criminal, if producing different results, such results may be charged in the same count, in the alternative.” — Code, 1886, § 4384; Code 1876, [607]*607§ 4797. It has often been'decided, that a single crime can not be split up, or subdivided into two or more indictable offenses. As said in Moore v. State, 71 Ala. 307, “a series of criminal charges can not, under our system of jurisprudence, be based on the same offense, or criminal act, at least, as concerns the dignity of the same sovereignty. If the State elects, through its authorized officers, to prosecute a crime in one of its phases, or aspects, it can not afterwards prosecute the same criminal act under color of another name.”

It is accordingly held by the great preponderance of authority, that the stealing of several articles at the same time and place, although they belong to different owners, constitutes but a single indictable crime, and can be prosecuted as such but once. “An indictment,” says Mr. Freeman, “could not be found for the larceny of one of the articles, and after the verdict another indictment sustained for the stealing of the remaining articles. Indeed, to put such a power in the hands of the prosecuting attorney would be to render the salutary doctrine of prior jeopardy in many instances practically nugatory.”—Roberts v. State, 58 Amer. Dec. 539, note, and cases cited; Quitzow v. State, 28 Amer. Rep. 396, and cases cited.

In Oleson v. State, 20 Wis. 58, a count of an indictment was held good, which charged the defendant with aiding the escape of two prisoners by a single act, although the prisoners were confined under charges of different grades,' and the act of aiding the escape of one of the prisoners was punishable more severely than that of aiding the escape of the other. This decision can rest only oh the theory, that the two escapes resulted from but one criminal act.

In Woodford v. People, 62 N. Y. 117; s. c., 20 Amer. Rep. 464, the indictment charged the burning of a number of houses, belonging to different owners, by a single act, at one time and place. It was held to charge but one offense, and not, therefore, bad for duplicity, the court observing as follows: “A conviction upon separate indictments could not be had for each separate house, although an indictment may have been good for any one of them, and a conviction or acquittal upon such an indictment would be a bar to an indictment for burning any other house burned by the same act. These consequences must follow from the position, that there was but one crime committed in respect to all the dwelling-houses, and that the respective counts charge but [608]*608one crime.” To the same effect precisely is the English case of Regina v. Trueman, 8 Car. & P. 727, where the burning of five houses, belonging to different persons, was held to be but one transaction, and indictable only as a single felony.

In Ben v. State, 22 Ala. 9; 58 Amer. Dec. 234, a count in an indictment charging the administering of poison to three different persons, by one act, was held to be good as charging but a single offense.

So, it.has been held, that a libel on two distinct persons, by one act, may be charged in the same count.—Rex v. Benfield, 2 Burr. 98; Whart. Cr. Pl. & Pr., sec. 254.

In Clem v. State, 42 Ind. 420: 13 Amer. Rep. 369, where the same act of unlawful shooting resulted in the death of two persons, it was held that acquittal or conviction on a trial for the murder of one would be a good defense on a second trial for the alleged murder of the other. The killing, it was said, constituted but one crime, and “the State can not divide that which constitutes but one crime, and make the different parts of it the bases of different prosecutions.”

In State v. Damon, Tyler, 387, it was held by the Supreme Court of Yermont, that, where one blow produces two separate assaults and batteries on different persons, a conviction of the one may be pleaded in bar to an indictment for the other.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Ala. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-v-state-ala-1888.