State v. Ross

29 Mo. 32
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 29 Mo. 32 (State v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ross, 29 Mo. 32 (Mo. 1859).

Opinion

Ewing, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Among the exceptions to the ruling of the court below was excluding the record of the acquittal of Sullivan Phillips. It is conceded that the record was not conclusive evidence of defendant’s innocence, but that it conclusively negatives the hypothesis as against Sullivan Phillips that he committed any offence, and consequently that defendant and no one else can be guilty as his aider or abettor.

In the State v. Phillips and Ross, 24 Mo. 480, one of the points made was, that the acquittal of Sullivan Phillips, the principal in the first degree, operated in law the discharge of the defendants from the indictment, and the court ought to have discharged them on motion. On the trial the question was raised, first, by a motion for a discharge before any evidence was offered, and afterwards by offering the record of the acquittal of Sullivan Phillips as evidence in chief. It was held that as against the defendants in that case, Phillips and Ross, the question of the guilt or innocence of Sullivan Phillips was still open; that his acquittal did not operate their discharge, and that, though Sullivan Phillips was the actual perpetrator of the homicide, the record of his acquittal would be inadmissible in evidence in favor of Phillips and Ross, the defendants.

If it be true, as assumed by counsel, that, Sullivan Phillips having been acquitted, the defendant Ross can not be his aider and abettor, still, admitting the conclusion to be correct, it can not avail the defendant. To give him any benefit of such a hypothesis, it must also be true that he could not under the law be put upon his trial as a principal in the first degree. This the argument does not and could not [40]*40assume. The proposition is not thus broad, and does not embrace the conditions from which such a conclusion could possibly be drawn. Unless the proposition affirmed that, as between Sullivan Phillips and the defendant, the relation of principal in the first and second degree, or principal and aider and abettor was fixed, and that in their trial under the indictment this relation must be observed, as a matter of law, then and then only could the acquittal of Sullivan Phillips enure to the benefit of the defendant, and the record of acquittal be admitted as evidence in his favor.

The position of counsel assumes that Sullivan Phillips was the principal in the first degree because he is so charged ; and the assumption necessarily involves the conclusion sought, that of the dependent or accessorial guilt, if guilty at all, of the defendant. It is true he is so charged in the indictment, but he may have been tried as principal in the first or second degree, and his acquittal is equally conclusive in his favor as to both aspects of the charge. It is quite immaterial that on the trial the theory of the prosecution may have been that ho was guilty, if guilty at all, as principal in the first degree. The theory of the indictment under the law is, that the parties to it are all principals and all aiders and abettors. Though jointly charged so as to show nominally a dependent offence as to two of them, yet their relative positions in point .of law are wholly immaterial. The one charged as principal in the first degree may be convicted as principal in the second degree, and vice versa.

The case of the State v. Chilton, 2 Dev. 57, cited by counsel, is inapplicable. There the prisoner was indicted as an accessory before the fact to a murder of which the principal had been previously convicted. On the trial of the accessory, the record of the conviction of the principal was offered by the State and admitted against the objection of the prisoner. It was held to be admissible for the purpose of proving the conviction of the principal, of which it was conclusive, and was prima facie evidence of the guilt of the accessory. It was read for the purpose of establishing the fact that a [41]*41murder had been committed by the principal as a prerequisite to the trial of tbe accessory; for, without this proof of the murder, the prisoner could not have been tried as accessory. The offences were different; the principal was guilty of one offence and the accessory of another ; and the record of the conviction of the former was no proof of the guilt of the latter, and was not jead for 'that purpose. It is obvious there is no analogy between the two cases. In the one case, the record was admitted to prove a fact without the previous proof [of] which the accessory could not have been tried; in the other, it was offered as evidence of a fact which, if proved, could not have enured to the benefit of the defendant. There was no error, therefore, in excluding it.

Another question presented by the record is whether the appellant, after having been put upon his trial for murder and found guilty of murder in the second degree, and a new trial granted, could have been legally tried again for the higher grade of homicide.

For the appellant, it is maintained that the legal effect of such verdict is a bar to any further. prosecution for murder in the first degree, and that the reversal of the judgment upon that verdict in nowise impairs the validity of the acquittal of the higher offence. On the part of the State, it is urged that the constitutional provision, which exempts a party from being put twice in jeopardy, is a personal right or privilege, and that it has no application in the case of an erroneous judgment which the accused at his own instance causes to be set aside ; that, if the former verdict is still in force so far as it acquitted the appellant of murder in the first degree, still, the verdict in this case being for a lower grade of offence, he is not injured, and has no cause of complaint.

In this case the verdict is for murder in the second degree, and it expressly finds not guilty of murder in the first degree. But without any such express.finding this would have been the effect of the verdict. (State v. Ball, 28 Mo. 327.) In that case it was held that a verdict of murder in the se[42]*42cond degree, by necessary implication, finds not guilty of the higher offence, and that a conviction of murder in the second degree necessarily acquits of murder in the first degree. The only question therefore is whether, the appellant having obtained a new trial, the whole case should have been reopened and a retrial had upon the whole indictment.

Numerous authorities have been cited from various states, which, with two or three exceptions, concur in the doctrine that the effect of a new trial in such cases is only to subject the party to a trial for the offence of which he has been convicted ; and the verdict of acquittal remains unaffected. The same principle is also recognized by the English authorities to which we have been referred.

In Lithon v. The Commonwealth, 2 Virginia Cases, 311, the indictment contained five counts, the first four charging embezzlement, and the fifth larceny. The defendant was tried and convicted under the last count. Upon a petition for a writ of error to the general court, it was held that where there are several counts in an indictment, and on one of them the prisoner was convicted and acquitted of the rest, and on a writ ,of error obtained by him the judgment and verdict are set aside and a new trial awarded, he can only be tried again on the count on which he was convicted and not on the others of which he had been acquitted. In delivering the opinion of the court, the judge observes that the authorities, English and American, prove that, in an action against several in. form ex

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Bluebook (online)
29 Mo. 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ross-mo-1859.