167 Mass. 173 | Mass. | 1896
At the trial there was no evidence tending to show the keeping of any tenement by the defendant in Brockton; but there was evidence tending to show the keeping of a tenement by him, for the illegal purposes alleged, in Easton, in the county of Bristol, but within one hundred rods
The precise question presented in this case has not been decided. There is no doubt that the offence charged in the indictment is a local offence, and ordinarily ,the place must be proved as laid. Thus, if such offence is alleged to have been committed at a town named, and the entire tenement is shown 0 to have bejen in another town, both towns being in the same county, there is a variance, and the defendant cannot be convicted. Commonwealth v. Heffron, 102 Mass. 148. Commonwealth v. Bacon, 108 Mass. 26. Commonwealth v. Hersey, 144 Mass. 297.
The question then arises how far this rule is affected by the provisions of the Pub. Sts. c. 213, § 19, which are as follows: “ An offence committed on the boundary line of two counties, or within one hundred rods of such line, may be alleged to have been committed, and may be prosecuted and punished, in either county.”
In Commonwealth v. Gillon, 2 Allen, 502, the defendant was convicted before the police court of Milford, on a complaint which charged him with a single sale of intoxicating liquor at Milford in the county of Worcester. On appeal it appeared that the sale was in fact made at Holliston, in the county of Middlesex, but within one hundred rods of the boundary line between the two counties. It was held that the police court of Milford had jurisdiction of the offence charged; and that the complaint need not set forth as the place of the commission of the offence that it was on the boundary line of the counties of Worcester and Middlesex, and within one hundred ípds of the dividing line between them.
It is to be noticed that in the case last cited the offence was not a local offence, and it was not necessary to prove that it was committed in the place named; it was only necessary to show that it was committed in some place in the county. Commonwealth v. Kern, 147 Mass. 595. Commonwealth v. Ryan, 160 Mass. 172.
If, then, a local offence is committed within one hundred rods of the boundary line between two counties, which is also the boundary line between two towns, where must the offence be alleged to have been committed? Must-the place of the offence be alleged to be on the boundary line of the two counties and of the- two towns, and within one hundred rods of the dividing line between them ? Such a description was held to be unnecessary, as has been already stated, in Commonwealth v. Gillon, ubi supra, so far as county lines are concerned ; and we see no good reason for adopting this form where the offence is local.
It seems to us that the better rule is to say that the statute under consideration has the effect, in a case like the one before us, of extending not only the county line, but also the town line, “ for the purposes of allegation, prosecution, and punishment,” into the county and town adjoining.
Exceptions overruled.