65 So. 205 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
The defendant was charged with and convicted of petit larceny. It developed during the course of the trial that the value of the property (a syrup pan) alleged to have been stolen from the prosecutor, Sam Adams, was $25; and the bill of exceptions shows that the defendant excepted to the following portion of the oral charge of the court: “If you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, in Lee county, within 12 months before the commencement of the prosecution, feloniously took and carried away the syrup pan of Mr. Sam Adams, then you are authorized to find the defendant guilty as charged, notwithstanding the evidence may show that the value of the syrup pan was $25.”
No brief has been filed by defendant’s counsel, pointing out how or wherein the quoted charge is erroneous or objectionable; but we shall assume for purposes of present disposition that he sought by his exception to raise the point that a defendant charged, as the one here, with petit larceny, which is only a misdemeanor under the statute (Code, § 7325), could not be convicted thereof in the event the evidence showed and the jury believed that the property stolen by him was of value sufficient to make the offense committed by him grand larceny, which is a felony under the statute. — Code, § 7324.
If the conviction or acquittal of petit larceny, with which defendant was charged, would bar the state from subsequently proceeding against him for grand larceny based on the same act, then clearly there was no error, and certainly no injury to the defendant, in the part of the oral charge of the court excepted to and hereinbefore quoted. Our own Supreme Court have expressly held that such a conviction or acquittal would have such effect. — Storrs v. State, 129 Ala. 103, 29 South. 778. “The state,” it says, “cannot elect to prosecute and try a person for a lower grade and then put him on trial for a higher grade of the same offense.”- — State v. Blevins, 134 Ala. 216, 32 South. 637, 92 Am. St. Rep. 22; Moore v. State, 71 Ala. 307; Gunter v. State, 111 Ala. 23, 20 South. 632, 56 Am. St. Rep. 17; Turk v. State, 140 Ala. 110, 37 South. 234. It (the state) had the right to proceed against the offender as it, through its duly constituted authorities, saw fit, either for the
These are the only points raised by the record, and it follows that the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Affirmed.