State v. Mcclunq
Court | Supreme Court of West Virginia |
Citation | 35 W.Va. 280,13 S.E. 654 |
Parties | State v. McClunq. |
Decision Date | 10 September 1891 |
Burglary—Indictment—Charging Larceny and Burglary—Sentence.
1. A count of an indictment alleging a breaking and entering into a dwelling with intent to steal goods therein, and actual larceny therein, is not bad as a count for burglary, because that part charging larceny is not drawn with suffl cient precision to support a conviction of larceny. As the breaking and entering are charged to have been done with intent to commit larceny, a charge of actual larceny is not necessary, and may be rejected as surplusage.
2. To support a conviction of larceny, the charge of it in such count must be well laid, as in an indictment for larceny.
3. Upon a count properly alleging both burglary and larceny, there may be a conviction of either, but not of both.
4. Upon a general verdict of guilty on such a count, the sentence would be for burglary, not for both larceny and burglary, or for larceny.
5. Each count in an indictment must have the conclusion, "Against the peace and dignity of the state, " else it is fatally defective. Advantage of the defect may be taken for the first time in this court.
(Syllabus by the Court.)
Error to circuit court, Clay county; V. S. Armstrong, Judge.
Indictment of Frank McClung, alias Frank McAllister, alias Frank McClintock, for burglary. Verdict of guilty. Defendant brings error. Reversed.
E. R. Andrews, for plaintiff in error.
Alfred Caldwell, Atty. Gen., for the State.
The following indictment was found in the circuit court of Clay county: The defendant, having been convicted of burglary, and sentenced to the penitentiary for five years, has come to this court upon a writ of error. When application for this writ of error was made, I observed but one point of reversible error, nor do I now see any other; and perhaps that was inadvertently overlooked in the circuit court; and that is the want of the constitutional conclusion to the first count.
The first error assigned is the overruling of a demurrer to the indictment. That demurrer was not to each count, or to the indictment and each count, but was general to the indictment; and therefore, if either of its two counts be good, there is no error in overruling the demurrer; for where the indictment contains more than one count, and the demurrer is general, and one count is found good, the demurrer must be overruled. State v. Cartright. 20 W. Va. 32; Hendricks' Case, 75 Va. 934; Whart. Crim. PI. § 401; 1 Bish. Grim. Proc. § 449. For this purpose and generally, each count is regarded as a separata indictment, and as presenting a separate offense. State v. Smith, 24 W. Va. 814. Then let us see whether either of the counts of this indictment is good. Except for want of a conclusion, the first count is good for burglary. If counsel specifies any defect in this count, it is that the charge oi larceny is bad. I think that feature is bad, —that is, to support a verdict of guilty of larceny, —because it specifies only one article of the things stolen, the pantaloons, and alleges that "other goods and chattels" were stolen, without specifying them, and gives a value of $24 to all of them together. But the fact that the charge of larceny is bad, by no means vitiates the count regarded as a count for burglary, because, if we reject the larceny feature, there remains the charge of burglary. It is common and better practice to allege in one count both the burglary and the larceny, (1 Hale, P. C. 500; Speer's Case, 17 Grat. 572;) and under such count there may be a conviction of the one or the other of those offenses, .) In Vaughan's Case, 17 Grat.576, where there was a count charging both burglary and larceny,.Judge JoYNES said In Josslyn v. Coin., 6 Mete. (Mass.) 236, the countcharged the breaking and entering of the shop of Charles W. Fogg, " with intent the goods and chattels of said Fogg, then and there in said shop being found, feloniously to steal, take, and carry away." Chief Justice Shaw said: In Larned v. Com., 12 Mete. (Mass.) 240, to the objection that the charge of larceny was defective in an indictment for burglary, the court said that the charge of actual larceny was not necessary to constitute the burglary; that the mere intent to commit larceny was sufficient; and the allegation was only to be taken in aid of the charge of intent, and, if a conviction was had, the punishment would be for burglary, not a distinct sentence for larceny. The court held the specific charge of larceny surplusage, and that, if wholly defective, there would still remain sufficient to sustain a conviction. It might be supposed that, as on a count charging both burglary and larceny there may be a conviction of either, there could also, if both offenses were proven, be a conviction of both, followed by the separate penalty for each; but this is not so, for, if there be a general verdict of guilty on such...
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