103 Ga. 397 | Ga. | 1898
This right of the judge of the county court to discontinue' the trial and exercise the powers of a committing court is
It was said by the court, in Ckmningham’s case, supra, that the “defendant made the waiver above alluded to with the knowledge and understanding that the law was, that if the county judge should determine from the evidence that it was a felony and not a misdemeanor, he would have the right to stop the trial and bind the defendant over for a felony.” In this case, it may be said that the defendant made the waiver with the knowledge and understanding that if the judge of the criminal court of Atlanta should determine that the offense was a felony and not a misdemeanor, he would have no right to stop the trial and bind him over for the greater offense. Without this knowledge and understanding, he might not have made the waiver. When, therefore, the accused was put upon trial in the criminal court of Atlanta, upon an accusation
If a man perpetrates the offense of assault and battery and by the same act commits the offense of assault with intent to commit a rape, the less offense is a part of the greater. The act involved in each case being the same, what would otherwise be but assault and battery, by reason of the felonious intent, becomes also assault with intent to commit a rape. The technical rule of the old common-law pleaders, that a misdemeanor is always merged into a felony when the two meet, and that therefore, upon an indictment for a misdemeanor the accused should be acquitted if the evidence shows the offense was a felony, and upon an indictment for a felony there should be an acquittal if the evidence shows the offense to have been only a misdemeanor, has long since been abolished in this State. Upon an indictment for assault with intent to commit a rape the accused can be convicted of assault and battery, or assault; and upon an indictment for assault and battery he may be convicted of a bare assault. Assault is an absolutely necessary element in and an essential part of each of the greater offenses. Without the commission of an assault, neither of the other offenses can be perpetrated. While the offense of assault and battery is not an absolutely essential part of the crime of assault with intent to commit a rape, yet it becomes a part of such greater offense if by the same act both offenses are committed. As a matter of fact, it is probably true that in a
The question now under consideration was not involved in the case of Blair v. State, supra. For while the offense of selling liquor without a license and the offense of selling liquor to á minor without the written consent of his parent or guardian may be committed by the same act, neither of them is a necessary element in and an essential part of the other. A person can commit either without perpetrating the other. When he is prosecuted for either, he is in no jeopardy of being convicted of the other, or of being convicted of an offense which is an essential part of the other. But it is legally impossible to commit the offense of assault with intent to commit a rape without committing the offense of assault. The greater offense always includes the less. And, as we have seen, where in the
Judgment reversed.