delivered the opinion of the court.
At the January term, 1894, the appellee, Joe Bottoms, being under indictment in eight separate cases for unlawfully selling spirituous liquors, the following order was entered in the Adair Circuit Court, where said indictments were pending: “This day came the attorney for the Commonwealth, and Joe Bottoms, the defendant in the eight following prosecutions, Nos. 895, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, and 952, all upon the charge of unlawful selling of spirituous liquors in this county; and upon the faith of the promise of said Bottoms to forever- cease and abstain from selling such liquors in this county, directly or indirectly, in person or through another, these indictments are now filed away, with leave to reinstate without notice, and to carry said prosecutions to final trial and judgment, which is to be done in the event that said Bottoms should at any tim,e violate said promise.” In 1898 the appellee was indicted, tried, and convicted of selling spirituous liquors in Adair countj, and thereafter the attorney for the Commonwealth directed the clerk of the circuit court to redocket the eight cases against the appellee, and to issue process thereon, which was done. The appellee, in’ answer to that process, came into court, and filed a written motion to strike this case from the docket. The reasons assigned in said written motion are-that the order above is a nolle prosequi and a discontinuance of the cases against appellee; that the clerk had no authority in law to redocket the cases; that the-prosecution, by the order, was discontinued for more than one year — the statutory period of
In the case of Ashlock v. Com.,
We are of opinion that this order did not discontinue the prosecution, and that the statute of limitation does not apply as a bar by reason of the order. The cases may be redocketed, and proceed on the original indictments presented, the same as if they had remained on the docket, and a formal order of continuance made from term to term. For the reasons given, the judgment is reversed, and case remanded for proceedings consistent herewith.
