State v. Boughner

Citation7 S.D. 103,63 N.W. 542
PartiesSTATE v. BOUGHNER.
Decision Date22 May 1895
CourtSupreme Court of South Dakota
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Syllabus by the Court.

Where, for the purpose of proving the charge in an indictment charging the defendant with committing the offense of selling intoxicating liquors contrary to the statute, evidence is introduced tending to prove the commission of two or more separate and distinct offenses, it is the duty of the court, before the defendant is put upon his defense, if requested so to do, to require the prosecution to elect upon which transaction the state will rely for a conviction. State v. Valentine (S. D.) 63 N. W. 541, followed.

On rehearing. For former report, see 59 N. W. 736. Reversed.

CORSON, P. J.

This case comes before us on rehearing, the opinion being reported in 59 N. W. 736. At the conclusion of the evidence for the state, which it was claimed tended to prove several distinct sales, the plaintiff in error moved the court to compel the state to elect upon which sale it would rely for a conviction. The motion was denied, and the counsel for the plaintiff in error duly excepted. In our opinion we arrived at the conclusion, from the evidence assumed to be before us, that there was really but one sale proven, upon which the jury would have been warranted in finding the defendant guilty, and that this court would presume that it was for such a sale the jury found the defendant guilty, and therefore no reversible error was committed by the court in denying the motion. In the petition for a rehearing our attention was called to an amended abstract that had been inadvertently overlooked in preparing the opinion, and which supplies the evidence necessary to show two or more sales, upon any one of which the jury would have been justified in finding the defendant guilty. This being so, the ground upon which the ruling of the court below was sustained no longer exists, and the question must be decided upon the facts as they appear from the two abstracts. The case of State v. Valentine (in which this court hands down an opinion at this time), 63 N. W. 541, presents identically the same question. The court has fully considered and discussed the question in that case, and arrived at the conclusion that when evidence is given in such a case tending to prove two or more sales, upon any one of which a jury might find the defendant guilty, the court should compel the state to elect upon which sale it will rely, before the defendant can be required to...

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