Scutt v. Commonwealth
This text of 2 Va. 54 (Scutt v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This was an application for a Writ of Error to a judgment of the Superior Court of West-moreland county. The petitioner was Indicted for Malicious Stabbing, and was convicted, and sentenced to one year’s imprisonment in the Penitentiary. The offence [134]*134was charged in the Indictment to have been committed on the 29th March, 1817, and the Trial was had on the 17th April, 1817. The error assigned in the petition was, that the Act of Assembly by which Malicious Stabbing was punishable as Felony, and which was in force on the 29th March, ceased to be in existence on the 1st April, 1817, being expressly repealed from and after that day, by the Act passed on the 20th February, 1817 ; that, consequently, at the time of the Trial, there was no Raw by which he could be punished as for a Felony, the offence at Common Law being merely a Misdemeanor.-
To understand this Case, it is necessary to refer to, and recite the several Acts of Assembly on the subject. By *an Act passed in 1792, section 1, certain mayhems were declared to be Felony, and by the second section, the shooting, or stabbing, with intent to maim, disfigure, or kill, were also declared to be Felony,
The Court gave no written opinion, but the Authorities were examined, and duly weighed by them. According to Hale, if an offence be made Treason or Felony, by Act of Parliament, and then the Act be repealed, the of-fences committed before such repeal, and the proceedings thereupon are discharged by such repeal, and cannot be proceeded *upon after such repeal, unless a special clause in the Act of repeal be made, enabling such proceeding, after the repeal, for offences committed before,
The following entry was made, and' judgment rendered :
“ This day came the Attorney General, in proper person, and the Prisoner, by Richard E. Parker, Esq. his Attorney, and the Attorney General agreed to depense with the Execution, and Return of the Writ of Error awarded by the Court, on the second day of this Term, and to receive the Transcript of the Record certified by the Clerk of the Superior Court of ' Westmoreland, upon inspection whereof the Writ of Error had been awarded, as if it had been duly certified by the Judge on the return of the Writ; and he further agreed to receive the errors set forth in the Plaintiff’s petition, instead of a formal assignment of errors ; and thereto he pleaded, that there is no error in the said Record of the Proceedings, and judgment of the Superior Court of Law of the county of Westmoreland, and this he is ready to verify,” &c. To which the Plaintiff replied, that there is error in the said Record, in manner and form, as in his Assignment is set forth, and this he prays may be enquired of by the Court, and the Attorney General likewise.
And thereupon the Transcript of the Record'of the Judgment and Proceedings aforesaid, being seen and inspected, and due consideration had thereof: “ It seems to the Court, that there is error in the judgment in this, that the prisoner was Indicted, tried, convicted, and sentenced to punishment in the Penitentiary-house on the 17th April *last, for malicious stabbing, by virtue of the Act of 1803, when in truth there was then no such Act in force, the same having been wholly repealed by an Act passed on the 20th February, 1817, intituled, “ An Act, &c.” which took effect on the first day of the said month of April. , Wherefore it is considered, that the said judgment be reversed and annulled, and this Court proceeding to give such judgment as the said Superior Court of Westmoreland should have given, doth consider that the said Charles D. [135]*135Scutt be acquit of the matters alleged against him in the Indictment, and go thereof without day.
At the same Term there were two adjourned Cases, one from Goochland Superior Court, in the Case of The Commonwealth v. Henry Weldy, the other from Henrico, The Commonwealth v. Ben Winston, in which the same question, arising under the same Raw, was sent to this Court, for its advice and judgment. The Cases were all considered together, and the decision was the same.
1 Rev. Code of 1792, ch. 99, § 1 and 2.
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2 Va. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scutt-v-commonwealth-vagensess-1817.