83 Miss. 290 | Miss. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 20th day of October, 1900, in the county of Coahoma, appellant shot his wife, Ella Coleman, under circumstances not necessary to be detailed here, as the decision turns upon another point. On the 21st of October, 1900, in the county of Quit-man, said Ella Coleman, as the result of such shot, died. On the Ith of March, 1901, in the county of Quitman, appellant, by the grand jury of that county, was indicted for manslaughter on account of the killing of said Ella Coleman; and as to this indictment, at the September term of the circuit court of said Quitman county, after appellant was arrested, had been arraigned, and pleaded “Not guilty,” a nolle prosequi was entered by the district attorney, with consent of the court. On the 25th of November, 1901, appellant was by the grand jury of the county of Coahoma indicted for the murder of said Ella Coleman. The case coming on for trial at the 'April term of the circuit court of said Coahoma county, appellant demurred to the indictment, and, this being overruled, filed a plea in abatement,
We think the demurrer to the indictment was properly overruled. The indictment was plainly and accurately drawn, and. charged explicitly the commission of the offense in the second district of Coahoma county. Code 1892, § 1356.
We are of the opinion that the objection to the testimony in reference to the place of death was properly overruled. This did not constitute a variance between the proof and the indictment. It is true that in Stoughton's Case, 13 Smed. & M., 255, it was held that the party could only he. tried for murder in the county where the death happened, but this was on account of the statute as it then existed (Poindexter’s Code, p. 314, c. ,56), the terms of which required that the prosecution for the murder should be in the county where the death occurred; but that case has no application here. The cases of Riggs v. State, 4 Cush. (26 Miss.), 54, and Turner v. State, Cush. (28 Miss.), 686,
By § 1335, Code 1892, it is specially provided that where the “fatal blow” is struck in one county, and death occurs in another, the offender may be indicted and tried in either county. Therefore, as, by virtue of the statute, the circuit court of either county is vested with jurisdiction to try the offender, the indictment need only aver the commission of the offense within the jurisdiction of the court where the indictment is found, and it is not essential to charge in the indictment all the attendant circumstances of the homicide. The only reason for the setting out of the venue in the indictment is to show that the court is clothed with jurisdiction over the crime and its prosecution.
Under similar statutes enacted to abrogate or relax the technical rules of criminal pleading in force and adhered to under the common law, the great weight of the more modern, and, in our judgment, sounder-reasoned, authorities, assume the position that it is not necessary to aver more in the indictment than
Tbe demurrer to tbe plea in abatement should have been overruled. Section 1334, Code 1892, was designed to meet just "such a contingency as arose in tbe instant case. Under tbe common law, as construed in the Stoughton Gase, before cited, where a homicide was committed partly in one jurisdiction and partly in another, it was doubtful whether the offender could be prosecuted in either, but this is not true as the law now exists. Section 1334 provides that where an offense is committed partly in one county and partly in another, or where the, acts, effects, means, or agency occur in whole or in part in different counties, the jurisdiction shall be in either county where the offense was commenced, prosecuted, or consummated, “where prosecution shall be first begun.” That provision controls the case at bar. The state can begin its prosecution in any of the counties in which any of the criminal agencies operate — anywhere that any act is committed in prosecution of the criminal design — but, having chosen the tribunal before which the party accused shall stand trial, it cannot, of its own motion, divest that court of jurisdiction, and begin another prosecution before another court in another jurisdiction. Under the ancient law, under the facts disclosed by this record, the party accused could have been prosecuted in neither jurisdiction. Under existing statutes, he can
The judgment is reversed, and the indictment and prosecution in Coahoma county quashed and abated.
We do not' consider or decide the other assignments, as they may not arise, should there be another trial of this matter.
Reversed and remanded..