Republic of Hawaii v. Radin

11 Haw. 802
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Haw. 802 (Republic of Hawaii v. Radin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Republic of Hawaii v. Radin, 11 Haw. 802 (haw 1898).

Opinion

Decision on Plea in Bar, by

Circuit Judge Perry.

The defendant was charged in the District Court of Honolulu, on the 20th day of April, 1897, with “the unlawful possession of opium or preparation thereof in Honolulu, Island of Oahu, Hawaiian Islands^ on, to-wit, April 6, 1897.” To this charge a plea in bar was interposed which read as follows: “Now comes the defendant in the above entitled cause and says that he ought not to be required to plead to or answer the charge preTerr ed against him herein for that he was, on the 13th day of April, 1897, in the District Court of Honolulu, duly tried and ■convicted of an offense identical in law and fact with that herein charged against him.

“Reference is hereby made to the record in the case entitled Republic of Hawaii v. John Radin, tried in this honorable court ■on the 13th day of April, 1897.

“Wherefore defendant asks the court here whether he shall or ought to plead or answer to the charge herein preferred against him, and prays that he hence be discharged without Ray.”

[803]*803Tlie record in the former case referred to was put in evidence in support of the plea. The court below overruled the plea, the trial proceeded, and the defendant was convicted and sentenced.

From the ruling of the district magistrate the defendant appealed to this court on points of law which are stated in the certificate of appeal as follows: “1st. That the district magistrate, having found as a fact that the evidence offered by the prosecution in this case would have warranted a conviction in the pre^ vious case tried on April 13th, 1897, erred in overruling defendant’s plea of former conviction.

“2d. 'That the conviction was contrary to law, the evidence and the weight of the evidence.

“3d. That the defendant, having been proved to be a public hack driver, and no direct evidence being adduced of his knowledge of the contents of the parcel containing the opium, the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to discharge.”

Complete transcripts of the record in the first case (Criminal Division, No. 2389) as well as of the record in the case at bar, duly certified, were sent up with the appeal herein and as a part thereof. These records show that the defendant was, on the 13th of April, 1897, in the District Court of Honolulu, charged with' “the unlawful possession of opium or preparation thereof in Honolulu, Island of Oahu, on April 6th, 1897,” and that he was, on the same day, after trial, convicted and sentenced to pay a fine; that he appealed from said conviction and sentence to this court with a jury, and that such appeal was withdrawn on the 5th of May following,'and the fine paid.

The transaction out of which these two prosecutions arose was this: on the 6th of April, 1897, at about 2:30 o’clock p. m., defendant was detected in the act of delivering from his hack a number of tins of opium, wrapped up1 as one package in bags, at or near the Oceanic wharf in this city. He was arrested and charged with the unlawful possession of opium, and soon after released upon furnishing bail. Shortly thereafter on the same afternoon, a search warrant was issued and under its authority [804]*804defendant’s premises, situate on South street in this city, were searched with the result that another package of opium containing thirty tins was found therein under the bed of an employee of the defendant. Eor the possession of this opium defendant was again arrested, at about 4:30 p>. m., and again released on bail.

No evidence was offered for the defense at either of the two trials. At the tidal of the first case, the prosecution relied upon the possession by .the defendant of the thirty tins of opium found on his premises, and no evidence was adduced with reference to the possession of the opium found in the hack at the wharf. At the trial of the second case, the opposite course was followed, the evidence being confined to the possession of the opium found in the hack.

The undisputed evidence shows that as a matter of fact all of the opium upon the possession of which the two prosecutions were based, was in the possession of the defendant at about one o’clock on the afternoon of the 6th of April in the room in which the thirty tins were afterwards found, and that it remained there until some time later when the defendant took a portion of it in his hack (leaving the remainder in the room until the search and second arrest were made) for the purpose of delivering it to some one on the steamer “J. A. Cummins” at the wharf. It was while attempting to make such delivery that the defendant was first arrested.

It is contended by the prosecution that the plea in bar is improperly before the court, because at the time it was interposed the defendant’s appeal from the first conviction was still pending and because he might have been thereafter acquitted by 'a jury. To this the answer is that it is immaterial whether the appeal should finally end in an acquittal or in a conviction. In either event, if the proceedings are a bar at all, the verdict would bar the second prosecution. Moreover, the fact remains that the sentence in the first case has been satisfied and that the defendant has been punished for committing an offense, and if that offense is in reality the same offense for which the prosecu[805]*805tion now seeks to punish him, the court must see to it that the constitutional provision which applies is not violated.

The article of the constitution relied upon by the defense in support of its plea provides that “no person shall be required to answer for any offense identical both in law and fact with an offense of which he has been duly convicted or of which he has been duly acquitted.” This article is simply the enactment in perhaps a slightly modified form of a rule of law which is recognized in all civilized countries. The only question is whether the offense described in the charge in the second case is “identical both in law and in fact” with the offense of which defendant was convicted in the first case.

The statute under which the charge was entered in each of the two cases under consideration provides that “any person who shall have in his possession opium or a preparation thereof, which he shall not have received” in a certain legal manner specified, shall be punished. Thus it is the “having in possession”— a condition, not an act,—which is made an offense. For the prosecution it is contended that the record shows two separate and distinct offenses committed on the same day, that the opium in each case was a separate and distinct lot and that the possession proved was distinct in different localities and at different times. I cannot regard the matter in that light. In my opinion, the record discloses but one offense committed on that day. The opium was all in the possession of the defendant at the same time; the mere fact that at the moment when the first arrest 'was made, a part of the drug was in defendant’s hack at the wharf and the remainder at his stables, does not make it two offenses or authorize the bringing of two separate prosecutions.

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Related

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12 Haw. 174 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Haw. 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-of-hawaii-v-radin-haw-1898.