65 Ala. 117 | Ala. | 1880
— The plea of the appellant Holman avers a former acquittal upon the verdict of a jury, followed by a judgment discharging and liberating him, rendered, not because of any insufficiency of the indictment, nor of any irregularity in the proceedings, nor because there was any want of correspondence between the allegations of the indictment and the evidence, but solely because the evidence required that the jury should pronounce him not guilty of the entire offense charged. The plea of the appellant Berry shows that, after a trial upon the facts, before a jury duly constituted, he was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and the punishment fixed by the jury; a punishment which could not have been imposed for any other offense comprehended in the indictment, than murder in the second degree. The replications to these pleas aver, in substance, that the former indictment, upon which these proceedings were had, was void, because found by a grand jury formed in a manner not authorized by law, and, in addition, that Berry prosecuted a writ of error to this court, and obtained a reversal of the judgment of conviction against him, because of that irregularity. The sufficiency of the replications is the matter of importance to be decided ; Holman relying on the former verdict and judgment of acquittal, as a complete bar to the present prosecution ; and Berry relying on it, so far as he is affected, as a bar to a prosecution for any higher offense than murder in the second degree.
The former indictment, like the present, upon its face was unobjectionable, charging in a single count, in the form prescribed by the statute, murder in the first degree, which includes all inferior degrees of criminal homicide, and would support a finding by the petit jury, of the higher or lesser offenses. It is settled in this State, that a verdict, whatever may be its form, rendered upon a trial on .the facts, by a jury, on such an indictment, which convicts but partially, is an acquittal of all of' which the defendant is not convicted. In Nancy v. The State, 6 Ala. 485, it was said: “ The omission to find the entire charge will not vitiate the verdict, if it is sufficiently certain in ascertaining the guilt of the pris
It is a fundamental principle, as we believe of equal force in all cases, civil or criminal, that a judgment rendered upon a particular controversy, by a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, is, while it remains unreversed by a superior tribunal of competent jurisdiction, final and conclusive as between the parties and privies; and that they are precluded, upon high grounds of public policy, from reopening or reviving the controversy. The record may abound with error or irregularity ; these do not affect its dignity, operation, or effect. It stands the conclusive and unimpeachable evidence of its own legality and regularity, until, before a proper tribunal, it is assailed on error. The parties, and all officers of the law, are protected and justified in executing it; and whatever would be the incidents and consequences of a judgment free from error, flows from it.
The Circuit Court is a court of record, of general jurisdiction, civil and criminal. It has full jurisdiction of all accusations of crime, whether of felony or misdemeanor, pre
It is an error, however, to suppose that the former indictment, or the proceedings had under it, are void, and the proceedings now to be regarded as if had without an indictment. Cross v. State, 63 Ala. 40; Berry v. State, Ib. 126; Weston v. State, Ib. 155. True, on the writ of error sued out by Berry, the judgment of conviction against him was reversed, and the indictment pronounced vicious, because of the irregular formation of the grand jury. This shows only erren', irregularity, not absolute invalidity in the proceedings; and it is not necessary to distinguish between the two — the line of distinction has been often drawn, and is palpable. It would scarcely be insisted, that if Berry, instead of prosecuting a writ of error for the reversal of the judgment, had sued out a writ of habeas corpus, to be relieved from imprisonment under it, any judge would have been bold enough to discharge him because of the irregularity, or would have inquired into it; and yet that would have been a duty, if the indictment was void — if there was illegality, as distinguished from irregularity • or, if the conviction was of an infamous crime, rendering him incompetent as a witness, that a court before whom the record was produced, could have repudiated it. Or, suppose Holman suing for a malicious prosecution; can it be doubted that the judgment would be evidence of an acquittal, and of the termination of the prosecution. All that can be asserted of the irregularity is, that it was an error, which, on motion to the Circuit Court, would have caused the arrest of the judgment of conviction, or, on error to this court, a reversal, leaving the judgment of full force until avoided in an appropriate mode.
But it is insisted for the State, that, as the acquittal was
The caption of an indictment, under the statute, contains the name of the State, county, court and term, in which it is preferred. — Code of 1876, § 4784. It is only thus far the
The principle invoked by the State is laid down, in terms-more or less general, by the elementary writers. We quote it as stated by Bussell: “ Whenever the indictment, whereon a man is acquitted, is so far erroneous (either for want of substance in setting out the crime, or the authority in the court before which it was taken, as where a session was held on a day to which they had not been adjourned); that no good judgment could have been given upon it against the prisoner, the acquittal is no bar to a subsequent indictment; because, in judgment of law, the prisoner was never in danger of his life upon it; for the law will presume, prima facie, that the judge would not have given a judgment, which would have been liable to be reversed.” — 2 Bussell Cr. (9th ed.) 59. It is stated by Bishop in these words: “ When the indictment is in form so defective that the defendant, if found guilty, will be entitled to have any judgment entered thereon against him reversed for error, he is not in jeopardy ; and, should he be acquitted, he will be liable to be tried on a new and valid indictment. And it is the same, where the indictment, though in form correct, is void, because of the illegal organization of the grand jury. But, if there is a verdict of guilty on such an indictment, and the court enters judgment upon it, the defendant will be protected, while the judgment remains unreversed; not because he has been in jeopardy, but because an erroneous final judgment, rendered by a competent tribunal having jurisdiction over the subjeet-fiaatter, is voidable only, and, while it stands, is of the same effect as a valid one.” — 1 Bish. Cr. Law, (6th ed.) § 1021. It is further stated by Bussell, that “if one, upon an insufficient indictment for felony, has judgment, this judgment is a bar to a new indictment, unless it be reversed on error.” The precise extent and operation of this principle, we have endeavored to ascertain by looking to its application in a large number of cases, English and American ; and, disregarding the dicta with which they may abound, we are of opinion, no one of them would authorize us in declaring the appellants are subject to a second prosecution, save so far as the plea of the appellant Berry admits that he is liable to answer. In no one of them, was there an irreversible judgment of acquittal rendered, upon a verdict of the jury founded on a hearing of the evidence, and upon the evidence alone : there being no inquiry into the mere regularity of the proceedings,
The Circuit Court erred in overruling the demurrers to the replications to the plea of the appellants. Eor the error, the judgment of conviction' of the appellant Holman must be reversed, and a judgment here rendered discharging him. The judgment convicting the appellant Berry of murder in