Court Opinion

ID: 6578524
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:36:24.819714+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:11.465222
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Steele, J.
I. The indictment contains but one count and charges that on the 9th of September, 1866, the respondent feloniously did steel one horse of the 1 value of three hundred dollars, one buggy wagon of the value of one hundred and fifty dollars and one harness of the value of fifty dollars, the proper goods and chattels of a person named. The jury returned a general verdict of guilty. The respondent moves in arrest upon the ground that two distinct offences are joined in one count.
It is well settled that a single count charging more than a single offense is bad for duplicity and this is true even though the offenses are of the same grade and might without misjoinder be embraced in separate counts in one indictment. Arch. Cr. Pr. and PI. 313 and cases cited. It is not, however, necessarily duplicity to charge different crimes in one count if they grow out of a single offense and the denomination of the crime and consequent severity of the punishment depend upon the extent to which that offense may be proved to have been carried. Thus, in Commonwealth v. Tuck, 20 Pick. 356, a single count charging that the respondent broke and entered a shop with intent to commit a larceny and did then and there commit a larceny, was held not to be double. In this State in the case State v. Brady, 14 Vt. 355, it was even held that a single count, charging a burglary -with intent to steal the goods of one person and an actual larceny then and there of the goods of another person, was good. The case came up, as this does, upon a motion in arrest, but Royce, J. put the decision of the court upon the ground t-hat the pleading is correct and not upon the ground that duplicity could not be objected to upon motion in arrest. This case has been cited with approval in other States and has never been questioned here. It is, then, quite clear that while one count can charge but one offense, it may, with proper limitations, charge that offense or transaction in such a way as to allege different crimes. The conviction *562under such a count may be for the greater or the lesser crime according to the proof, but if the burglary and larceny both should be proved, the punishment provided for by the two crimes cannot be added together and inflicted upon the prisoner. The highest punishment which can be inflicted is that provided for the higher crime which the offense is alleged to have constituted.
Now, in this case, does the count allege more than one offense? The indictment charges but one taking on one day of several articles of property belonging to one man. It, in fact, charges but one larceny consisting of the felonious taking of three articles, namely, a horse, wagon and harness. If they had been taken at different times, they would have been several larcenies, and might have been the .subject of different indictments. Taken at one time they constitute but one theft, and cannot be the subject of different indictments. It is to be borne in mind that horse stealing has ceased in this State to be a distinct crime. It is larceny and nothing more. The whole transaction set out in the indictment was but one offense and that offense constituted the crime of larceny. It being a single theft, the person was liable to but one sentence for it, and the indictment does not come within the rule that one count charging more than one offense is bad for duplicity. The statute, while it treats the stealing of a horse as no crime but larceny, provides that it may be punished with more severity, than stealing a wagon or harness. It is, therefore, urged that on a general verdict of guilty the court would be unable to say whether the jury found the prisoner guilty of stealing more than one of the three articles and would be unable to determine what sentence to pronounce. This objection is precisely what was urged against the now well settled rule we have referred to in cases where the same count alleged a burglary with intent to commit a larceny and a larceny, It could be urged even more forcibly in those cases than in this, for the difference in penalty provided for burglary and larceny is far wider than the difference provided for larceny of a horse and a common larceny. The difference in the latter is only in the matter of fine. It does not extend to a difference in-imprisonment. If, then, it is permissible for one count to charge an offense so as to constitute crimes of different denominations as larceny and *563burglary, still more should it be to so charge it as to constitute a crime of but one denomination, and only differing in enormity and penalty according to the proof, and differing in these respects less widely than burglary and larceny.
It is true that this is not one of those cases where guilt of the higher grade involves necessarily guilt of the lesser, as assault with intent to kill, involves assault. The larceny of a horse does not necessarily involve the larceny of a harness though it may lead to it. But it involves it quite as much as burglary with intent to steal a harness involves larceny of a harness. In neither case would it be necessary to prove the larceny of the harness to subject the offender to the higher punishment, and in either case proof of the larceny of the harness alone would warrant conviction. All possible difficulty in pronouncing sentence is avoided by a special verdict. The case People v. Wright, 9 Wend. 196, cited on behalf of the respondent does not conflict with these views. In that case a single count charged two forgeries in the alteration of two distinct instruments, one a mortgage, the other a receipt upon the mortgage. In this case the count charges but one larceny. That case called the following language from Nelson, J., “It” (the first count) “charges the prisoner with forging two distinct instruments, a mortgage and a receipt, and if forging either is an offense, the count is probabaly defective for duplicity.” The case State v. Nelson, 8 N. H. 163, seems to be in point for the respondent, and were it not for'that case we should not have felt warranted in indulging in so long a discussion of this question. In that case a count precisely like this was held bad upon motion in arrest. It is perhaps worthy of notice that the court in that case lay stress upon the fact that the larceny of the horse demanded a punishment differing not only in amount but in kind from the larceny of the other property, which was found to be worth nineteen dollars. In that case it is said that the count is to be interpreted as charging distinct larcenies, and that “ it is very clear that two distinct larcenies may be committed by the same person at one and the same time.” This proposition is asserted upon the authority of the following dictum from 2 East’s Crim. Law, 521, “ If one steal at one and the same time the goods of A. and also the goods *564of B. there are two distinct larcenies.” Now, even if we should concede the correctness of this dictum it would not follow that there would be two distinct larcenies if all the goods were A’s. We only add upon this subject that upon full argument of the question in a similar case, State v. Nutting, 16 Vt. 264, while the case was decided upon other grounds, Williams, Ch. J. remarked, “ this information contained one count only. Our present statute making horse stealing larceny, the question which arose under our former statute relating to joining in one indictment horse stealing and simple larceny probably does not now arise.”
The respondent’s exceptions upon this branch of the case cannot prevail.
II. Several points of exception were also reserved upon the trial.
1. We think that under the rule established in this State, the prosecution made out a prima fade case before resting, and the court properly refused to direct a verdict for the respondent.
2. The respondent’! witness, George Comeron, having testified that the team which the respondent had was bought by John II. Cameron at Lake George, it was competent to show that Johh H. was on the jail limits for debt, having failed in business and having no visible means of support, as all this tended to show the improbability of the story of his purchase. It is no objection to the admissibility of testimony that it is not conclusive. We see no error in the admission of this evidence nor in the manner of its Submission to the j ury.
3. The instructions of the court upon the law of reasonable doubt were correct. It was no part of the duty of the court to put this familiar proposition into all the varieties of form of which it is susceptible or which parties might regard desirable. The court told the jury if the alibi was proved, to acquit the'prisoner, but did not, on request, tell them to acquit him unless they found beyond a reasonable doubt that the prisoner was not at Stony Creek (the place of the alibi) on the day in question. The charge of the court was broader, that the prosecution must establish their whole case beyond reasonable doubt. This would require the jury to find with certainty not only that the respondent was not at Stony Creek but that he was *565at Rutland. If they found the latter proved beyond a reasonable doubt, it would follow they found the former by the same measure of proof.
4. We see no error of law in the charge of the court upon the subject of the respondent’s omission to testify on his.own behalf. The court was bound to tell the jury they were not to consider this against the prisoner, and this was done. The court did not, as requested, tell the jury they were not to think of it. Such instructions would not be sensible. The jury could not think of the charge without thinking of the subjects of the charge, and one of the subjects of the charge was the respondent’s omission to testify. Such a charge would be violated by the jurors’ bearing it in mind to follow it. It was the duty of the jury to think on this subject enough to see they did not allow it to prejudice the respondent. The remark of the court in reply to this request, that he could not control the thoughts of the jury was unfortunate as unintentionally it may have given some countenance to the idea suggested by the prosecuting counsel, that whatever the law was, he knew they would consider this omission against the respondent.
5. The only remaining question is, whether the failure of the court, on request, to prevent the prosecuting counsel from arguing to the jury at length, and as stated in the exceptions, that the omission of respondent to testify was evidence against him, constitute such error and irregularity as to require the verdict to be set aside and a new trial awarded. We think it does. It is no question of law whether this matter is to be considered by the jury. By the express terms of the statute as well as the fair interpretation of the constitution it is forbidden. The respondent’s omission to testify, not only by law creates no presumption against him, but it permits no such presumption in fact. The statute permitting a prisoner to testify for himself is a mere statute of privilege. The courts in this State not having usually followed the old English-practice of calling upon the prisoner to make his statement to the jury, and there being a certain class of cases in which a prisoner might be benefitted by testifying, the statute has awarded him this privilege with a view to its being used in such exceptional cases. In the great body of cases no wise practi*566tioner would permit his client, whether he believed him guilty or innocent, to testify when upon trial on a criminal charge. The very fact that he testifies as if with a halter about his neck, that he is under such inducement to make a fair story for himself, his character and his liberty if not his fortune and his life being at stake, is enough to usually deprive his testimony of all weight in his favor, whether it be true or false. This is the case even when his manner upon the stand is unexceptionable, while his critical condition often creates such apprehension and excitement that his manner is open to great criticism, and if he does make a mis-step after voluntarily assuming the responsibility of testifying, it will naturally be construed strongly against him. In short, his testimony is far more likely to injure him seriously than to help him a little. It is true that a clear intellect and perfect self-possession may enable an unscrupulous rogue to run the gauntlet of a cross-examination and make something out of this privilege, and the same qualities will be still more likely to help an innocent man to some advantage from it, but the true application of the statute is only to those rare cases, when a word from the prisoner, and him only, will manifestly dispose of what otherwise seems conclusive against him. One great objection to the statute is its liability without suggestion to just the abuse, which, according to the bill of exceptions, counsel claimed and argued for it in this case. It appears that the court did check this irregular mode of argument in the opening, but in defiance of the court it was repeated at length in the close. The law provides ample means by which the court could have enforced their order and we do not think we ought to pronounce judgment and sentence upon a verdict so obtained. It is urged that this is not a proper subject of exception, but there would seem to be no practical distinction between an irregularity, suffered as this was, and one in terms permitted.
For this cause a new trial is awarded.