State v. Posey

41 S.C.L. 484
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 41 S.C.L. 484 (State v. Posey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Posey, 41 S.C.L. 484 (S.C. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Withers, J.

By various counts in the same indictment the prisoner was charged with the felony of larceny, and also with receiving stolen goods, knowing them to be stolen, the latter offence being laid, in different counts, contra formam statuti, and also in the last as at Common Law. At a former term he had [489]*489appeared, was represented by counsel, and the cause was postponed to the late term of General Sessions. He claimed at the latter the right of traverse; it was denied, and error is assigned therein, before this Court.

The prisoner was arraigned upon the entire indictment, and felony being charged, he could not be entitled to traverse. Allowing this to be conceded, the argument then is — that, the indictment containing charges of felony and misdemeanor, and the conviction being for the latter, the prisoner has thus been denied the right of traverse as to the latter, which is urged as a strong reason to prove, likewise, that the distinct offences alleged ought not to have been united in the same record — and that the indictment ought to have been quashed, or that judgment ought now to be arrested. These are distinct and further questions in the case, and will be considered in order.

The right of traverse, as to the misdemeanor charged, was not necessarily excluded, on account of the joinder; for if, by an order that the prosecutor elect upon what count or counts the trial should proceed, or by other means, the issue had been reduced to the counts for misdemeanor, we are of opinion that the motion to traverse, at the late term, could not possibly have prevailed. Without exploring the etymology of traverse, and allowing it to import a denial of some matter of fact alleged in a pleading at law, in Equity, or in a criminal prosecution, the benefit of it to a defendant, in an indictment, is the postponement of a trial to the next term of the Court. This advantage the prisoner, Posey, had, and, therefore, in this respect, there can be no just ground of complaint. In 4 Com., 351, Blackstone says: “It is not customary, nor agreeable to the general course of proceedings (unless by consent of parties, or where the defendant is actually in jail) to try persons indicted of smaller misdemeanors, at the same Court in which they have pleaded not guilty, or traversed the indictment. But they usually give security to the Court to appear at the next assizes or session, and then and there to try the traverse, giving notice to the prosecutor of the same.” Whether this indulgence in favor [490]*490of smaller offences, arose from the circumstance that in such cases the accused had only the resort of common process to procure witnesses, whereas, in graver cases he had the means of recognizance, and the policy of bringing to speedy trial great offenders, it is needless to inquire. To show that notice of the indictment found, at a reasonable time before the trial is had, is of the essence of a traverse permitted in misdemeanors, it is only necessary to observe, that by statutes in England in the reigns of George the 3rd, and George the 4th, twenty days custody of the defendant, by the bailiff, or by bail, before the session at which the indictment is found, or notice, (where he has not been arrested,) twenty days before a subsequent session, that an indictment has been found, subjects the party to trial at such session, except in a single instance touching highways; Stephens’ Comm., 4 vol., p. 420. So much upon the third and fifth grounds for arrest of judgment.

The motion in arrest of judgment is urged further — because felony and misdemeanor have been joined, being several and distinct offences to which different punishments are appropriate, and so the indictment is multifarious, inconsistent, and contradictory ; and this position embraces the first, second and seventh grounds, stated in the brief.

It has already appeared that the counts joined were for larceny and receiving stolen goods. To vindicate this, as no ground for arresting the judgment, it is sufficient to refer to one case, the State vs. Boise and Stuke, 1 McM., 189. In that case it was said that it might properly be left “to the direction (discretion) of the presiding Judge, in all cases, so to regulate the trial that the party shall not be prejudiced by the trial.” It is obvious that this can be done by requiring the prosecutor to elect upon what count or counts the prisoner shall be tried. Although in England it has been adopted as a rule of practice (Rex vs. Galloway, et al., Rex vs. Madden, 1 Moody Crown Cases, 234 — 277,) that the clerk of the assizes should not join such offences as are contained in this indictment, yet the Court held in the King vs. Galloway, that it was not objectionable in point [491]*491of law, and divided on the question whether the prosecutor should be put to an election.

Whatever other difficulties, or inconveniences, may arise out of the joinder, it is not matter for arrest of judgment; vide State vs. Tidwell and Lawhorn, 5 Strob., 1.

The sixth ground for arrest of judgment is obviated by the report.

The fourth is — i! Because it does not appear from the verdict, upon which count the finding rests, as the indictment contains counts for receiving stolen goods, both under the statute and at Common Law.”

This position refers to the fifth and sixth counts of the indictment, which are in fact those only, among the whole, to which the verdict can refer, or to w^ich the evidence pertained, or on which the trial turned.

In the fifth, the charge was receiving certain bank-bills from a slave, Jenny, against the statute, &c. The sixth count charged the same offence as at Common Law, touching gloves, handkerchief, purse, &e. The verdict was, “we find the prisoner guilty of receiving stolen goods, knowing them to be stolen.”

Suppose it be allowed, that it is uncertain to which of the two counts this verdict refers, is that cause to arrest the judgment 1

Counts at Common Law, and under a statute, for the same offence, may be joined; and although one be good and the other bad, and there be a verdict equally applicable to both, yet the judgment need not be arrested therefor. A new trial may be granted, where that appears necessary to ascertain the sense of the jury — and this is equally true where both counts are good, but the punishments are different. That was done, but the judgment was not arrested in the case of the State vs. Anderson, 1 Strob., 455. Upon this question we may also refer to the case of the State vs. Tidwell & Lawhorn; where motions in arrest, and for a new trial were both refused, upon a verdict applicable to two counts, which imported different degrees of pun[492]*492ishment, though of the same nature. To arrest the judgment, the matter must appear on the record. Such matter does not appear on the face of the indictment, and if it arise from the inexactness or incompleteness of the verdict, as a guide to the measure of punishment, that would be cause only for new trial.

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Related

United States v. Moulton
27 F. Cas. 11 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1830)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.C.L. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-posey-scctapp-1854.