State v. Jarrell

85 S.E. 525, 76 W. Va. 263, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 111
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 525 (State v. Jarrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jarrell, 85 S.E. 525, 76 W. Va. 263, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 111 (W. Va. 1915).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge:

Sufficiency of the indictment on which the plaintiff in error was convicted of the carrying of a pistol, in violation of the statute, is denied, on the theory that it charges several offenses in a single count; the averment being that the prisoner unlawfully carried ‘ ‘ certain revolvers and other pistols, dirks, bowie knives, slungshots, billies, metalic and other false knuckles and other dangerous and deadly weapons of like kind and character,” without a state license therefor as required by law.

Though the practice illustrated here may be a departure from that anciently required and observed, it is sustained by the overwhelmning weight of modern authority. The decisions cited in support of the text in 22 Cyc. p. 308, show it to have been recognized in thirty-two of the American states. The rule or principle enunciated by them is stated as follows in Cyc.: “So where a penal statute mentions several acts disjunctively and prescribes that each shall constitute the same offense and be subject to the same punishment, an indictment may charge any or all of such acts conjunctively as constituting a single offense.” In conformity therewith, indictments under statutes regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors, charging sales of all the various kinds of liquors, sales of which without a license were inhibited, have been sustained, although the sale of any one of them and every separate sale of each kind, constituted an offense. Teft v. Com., 8 Leigh 721; State v. Swift, 35 W. Va. 342; State v. Boggess, 36 W. Va. 713.

Intimations of disinclination on the part of this court to extend the practice beyond indictments under such statutes must be taken subject to a test of the principle, if any, on [265]*265which it-rests. Considerations^of convenience and expedition in prosecutions for offenses, on the one hand, and undue burdens upon the accused or exposure of his liberty or rights to peril, on the other, are to be noted and observed in the inquiry. If the practice simplifies and expedites prosecutions, without substantial detriment to the accused, it is justifiable, though violative of ancient strictness in pleading; for the purpose of all procedure in criminal cases as in others, ought to be achievement of correct legal results in the shortest and easiest manner. That the adoption of this simple method is not substantially prejudicial to the rights of the accused is the clear concensus of opinion among American jurists.

The inclusion of more than one felony of the same general nature in a single indictment is not ground of demurrer at common law. State v. Blakeney, 96 Md. 711; State v. McNally, 55 Md. 559; Strahern v. State, 37 Miss. 422; U. S. v. West, 7 Utah 437; Pointer v. U. S., 151 U. S. 396. Such a joinder is improper, but the remedy for the defect is a motion to require an election by the state, not a demurrer or motion to quash or arrest of judgment. If the offenses are of the same nature, they may be joined, though they differ in degree. Lazier v. Com., 10 Gratt. 708; Arch. Crim. Proced. 310. At common law, several misdemenors may be joined by the use of different counts, if they are of the same nature and subject to similar punishments, and perhaps whether similar in nature or not. Arch. Crim. Procecl. 311, note; Young v. Rex, T. R. 98. In view of this rule, the argument ah incon-venienti wholly fails. As the accused may be charged with two or more offenses in one indictment, by the use of several counts, he must prepare to meet all of them, when he is so charged.

Joinder of two or more offenses in the same count has always been condemned, because violative of the technical rule forbidding duplicity. But that rule is not designed for the protection of the accused. Its purpose is to require observance of mere matter of form, for avoidance of prolixity and confusion and in the interest of convenience and good form. Sweeney v. Baker, 13 W. Va. 158, 200; Coyle v. B. & O. R. Co., 11 W. Va. 94; Bouv. L. Dict. It was always more objectionable in pleas than in declarations or indict[266]*266ments, because, at common law, several defenses nould not be interposed at the same time. They had to be put in separately and successively. Our statute permitting a defendant to plead as many several matters of law or fact, as he shall think necessary, renders it less obnoxious in pleas that it formerly was and reduces it to a defect of form only, except in the cases of dilatory pleas. Being such in an indictment, as well as in a declaration or an ordinary plea, another statute renders it there innocuous on demurrer. Sec. 10, ch. 158, Code, serial sec. 5559, after specifically relieving from numerous formal defects, declares no indictment or other accusation shall be quashed or deemed invalid “for the omission or insertion of any other words of mere form or surplusage.” Though the opinion filed in Left v. Com., 8 Leigh 721; State v. Hall, 26 W. Va. 236, and other cases do not state at length the principle upon which the decisions are based, the text writers and annotators refer them to the one here stated, namely, statutory relief from defects in matters of form, and it applies to this indictment as fairly and logically as to those made under the statute regulating sales of liquors. Considerations of mere convenience and orderly appearance in the administration of justice are rapidly losing their weight in the opinions of courts, lawyers, laymen and legislators.

Rebuttal testimony of the prosecuting witness to the effect that he had given the grand jury the names of two others, as witnesses for the state, who had testified on the trial that they had been present on the occasion of the alleged offense and had not seen any pistol in the possession of the accused, was admitted over his objection. This fact was a self-serving act of the witness, put in for the purpose of strengthening his credibility. It bears no relation to any question of time or circumstance dependent upon the recollection of witnesses, as did the declarations admitted in Roane Lumber Co. v. Lovett, 72 W. Va. 328, and no principle justifying its admission is recalled or has been brought to our notice in the argument. "Whether its admission was reversible error, it is unnecessary to inquire, since the judgment must be reversed for another error.

On the argument of the case, the prosecuting attorney was [267]*267permitted, over the objection of the accused, to produce to the jury a number of capiases and the returns thereon, for the purpose of showing, as incriminating conduct on the part of the latter an evasion of process, and, after having ■permitted this to be done, the court refused to allow him to prove he had voluntarily surrendered himself to the officer. The prosecuting attorney’s position was upheld by the trial court upon the erroneous assumption that the capiases are parts of the record. They are not. In an action at law in which the defendant has appeared, the writ is no part of the record, unless made so on oyer. Lambert v. Ensign Mfg. Co., 42 W. Va. 813, 816. Not being parts of the record, nor having been introduced in evidence, they could not properly be considered by the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 525, 76 W. Va. 263, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jarrell-wva-1915.