State v. Lindsay
Decision Date | 31 January 1868 |
Citation | 61 N.C. 468 |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | STATE v. REID LINDSAY. |
Where one was indicted for an assault and battery, and it was proved that, in a former indictment against him and others for a riot, the assault charged had been given in evidence, with other acts of like character, his conviction of the riot is a bar to the second prosecution.
( State v. Stanly, 4 Jon., 290; S. v. Ingles, 2 Hay., 148; and S. v. Com. Fayetteville, 2 Mur. 371, cited and approved.)
ASSAULT AND BATTERY, tried before Buxton J., at Spring Term 1867 of the Superior Court of CALDWELL.
The defendant was charged with committing an assault upon one R. B. Dula in the town of Lenoir, and at the trial relied upon the plea of former conviction. In support of his plea he introduced the record of his conviction at the same term under an indictment for a riot and proved that, on that trial, the State had given in evidence, among other acts of the defendant and his associates calculated to disturb the public peace, the assault on R. B. Dula for which he is now indicted. The defendant asked the court to charge that the former conviction was a bar to this indictment. The court refused so to charge, and the defendant excepted.
Verdict for the State; Rule for a New Trial; Rule discharged; Judgment, and Appeal.
Folk, for the appellant .
The following propositions are sustained by the authort??es entitled to most respect:
1. When the acts alleged in both indictments are so blended together, that the charge in the second must have been considered by the court in passing on the first, a conviction on the first indictment is a bar to the second prosecution. If a man be convicted of an assault he is protected thereby from prosecution for the battery. So a conviction of a riot in a meeting house during public worship, is a bar to a subsequent indictment for disturbing the religious assembly. State v. Townsend, 2 Har., 543; see also S. v. Cooper, 1 Green., 31; S. v. Fayetteville, 2 Mur. 371; Fidler v. the State, 7 Humph., 508.
*2 2. If the acts alleged in the second indictment are embraced in the charge contained in the first, and have been given in evidence to procure the first conviction, and increase the punishment, the first conviction is a bar to any second prosecution for those acts. Commonwealth v. Kinney, 2 Va. Cases, 139; Bish. on Cr. Law, vol. 1, p. 890; State v. Ingolds, 2 Hay., 148. For upon the first indictment the court receives evidence of all the concomitant facts and will apportion the punishment to the nature of the offence as enhanced by all these circumstances. Hence the rule, laid down by a recent writer on criminal law, “a prosecutor may carve as large an offence out of the transaction as he can, but he shall not cut but once.” Bish. Cr. Law, vol. 1, p, 892.
Atto. Gen., contra .
BATTLE J.
In the case of the State v. Stanly, 4 Jon., 290, it is said that “The plea of antrefois convict, like that of antrefois acquit, is founded upon the principle that no man shall be placed in peril of legal penalties more than once upon the same...
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