35 Ky. 320 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1837
delivered the Opinion of the Court
The only question we are called on to decide in this. case, is whether a fine for a breach of the peace, assessed upon a warrant issued under the authority of the statute of 1802, (2 Stat. Law, 1390,) for suppressing “riots, routs, unlawful assemblies, and breaches of the peace, a legal bar to a subsequent indictment against the same party, for an assault and battery, in which, the breach of the peace, for which he was so fined, had been committed.
The answer to this question depends altogether on the proper constructive effect of the statute. And if that enactment stood alone, and had been unaffected by any judicial or legislative intimation heretofore applied to it, we should be inclined to the opinion that it should not be so construed as to embrace assaults and batteries. A breach of the peace is incidental to felonious homicide, robbery, rape, burglary, mayhem, and many other public offences, of which a justice of the peace, would have no cognizance in virtue of the statute of 1802. And therefore, as an aggravated assault and battery is punishable by indictment at common law, chiefly because it endangers personal security, just as larceny is indictable only because it strikes at the security of property, it should not be deemed to be included within the contemplated import of the term “breaches of the peace,” in the statute we are considering merely because there
But, by an act of 1809, (1 Stat. Law, 1391,) the Legislature seem to have supposed, that the statute of 1802 had constructively repealed the common law, in relation to assaults and batteries, as well as riots, routs, unlawful assemblies, and affrays, and breaches of the peace, and that, therefore, the statute of 1802 included assaults and batteries, and a proviso in the declaratory act of 1809, declares that that enactment shall not be so construed as to subject any person or persons to be twice punished for the same offence.”
And this Court also, in the case of Ely vs Thompson, (3 Marsh.) said that, the act of 1802 constructively embraced assaults and batteries.
Now, although the apparent legislative intepretation of 1809, if ever so clear and decided, should not, if wrong, control the judicial construction of the statute of 1802, and, although also, the opinion in third Marshall, was, as to the point we are considering, extrajudicial: nevertheless, as even without those expressions of
And therefore, submitting to those evidences of the import of the act of 1802, upon a point not free from, difficulty and doubt, we must conclude that a judgment rendered under the act of 1802, for an asssault and battery, or rather for a breach of the peace committed by an assault and battery, is a bar to an indictment for the same assault and battery, for, though the magistrate may have had jurisdiction only to impose a fine for the mere breach of the peace, which is not the only delictum, for which an indictment could be maintained for the assault and battery, yet it would be very difficult, if not impossible, for a jury to discriminate between the one and the other, and to determine how much should be assessed for each alone. And therefore, we suppose, that each should be considered as having been understood by the Legislature to be the same offence, when they declared, in 1809, that no person should be “twice punished for the same offence and, even if it were conceded that a magistrate could have no jurisdiction over an assault and battery, still the legislature had a right to declare that after a person had been actually punished by a judgment of a justice for an assault and battery, he should not be punished again for the same offence.
And therefore, as it appears, in this case, not only that Miller had been proceeded against, fairly and without any collusive purpose, under the act of 1802, for a breach of the peace, committed in the assault and battery for which he is now indicted, but that he had actually paid the fine adjudged against him, and thus been once punished — he is not legally liable to punishment upon the indictment for the same assault and battery.
Wherefore, the Circuit Judge having decided in his favor on the same ground, the judgment must be affirmed.