155 Mass. 54 | Mass. | 1891
1. In each of these indictments a count for keeping and maintaining a common nuisance is joined with counts charging single illegal sales of intoxicating liquor. In the first two cases the defendants, before the jury were impanelled, asked the court to rule that there was a misjoinder of counts, that the counts for single sales could not be joined with the first count, and that the four counts could not be tried together. After the evidence was closed, the defendant renewed his objections, and asked the court to rule that, even if the evidence was sufficient to prove all of the counts, the Commonwealth could not have a verdict on them all, but only on the first count, or on the other counts for the single sales. In the last case, the defendant requested the court to rule that the Commonwealth must elect on what count or counts it would proceed to trial, contending that the keeping of a common' nuisance and the making of single illegal sales of liquor were not similar offences, nor of the same general nature, and could not be joined in the same indictment. Neither indictment contained an averment that the different counts were different descriptions of the same act.
It is well settled in this Commonwealth that counts for distinct substantive offences may be joined in one indictment, when the offences charged are of the same general nature, and the mode of trial and the nature of the punishment are the same. Carlton v. Commonwealth, 5 Met. 532, 534. Commonwealth v. Jacobs, 152 Mass. 276, 281.
The keeping of such a nuisance as was here charged, and the making of illegal sales of intoxicating liquor, are in a fair sense of the same general nature, are tried in the same mode, and are punishable in the same way. It is not the specific, but the general nature of the offences charged, which determines whether they may be included in one indictment. The fact that upon the counts charging the keeping of the nuisance it is essential for the prosecution to prove that the defendant kept a build
2. In each of the first two cases a witness called by the defendant was asked by the district attorney, upon cross-examinatian, whether he was the same person who was convicted of larceny in a court, and at a time named in the question, and he replied in the affirmative. The defendant’s counsel then asked the witness to state the facts and circumstances connected with the transaction, and the court refused to permit the witness to answer. The defendant excepted, and the government then put in the record of the conviction. It is not necessary to consider whether, if the government had not proposed to show the record of the conviction, paroi evidence might have been introduced to show the degree of the offence. The question excluded would have allowed the witness to state, not only the degree of the of-fence, but matters tending to contradict the record and to show that he had not committed the offence. Such testimony is inadmissible to rebut evidence that a witness has been convicted of crime, and was properly excluded. Commonwealth v. Gallagher, 126 Mass. 54. Gertz v. Fitchburg Railroad, 137 Mass. 77, 80.
The exception of the defendant Taber to the refusal of the court to rule that, upon the evidence, the jury would not be warranted in finding the defendant guilty, was not argued.
Exceptions overruled.