84 Pa. Super. 281 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1924
Argued October 7, 1924. The indictment contained but one count, charging that the defendant "unlawfully did manufacture, sell, offer for sale, barter, furnish, transport, possess, and deliver to divers persons to the jurors aforesaid yet unknown, intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes, contrary to the form of the Act of General Assembly," etc. The trial resulted in a verdict of "guilty of making and having in his possession intoxicating liquors"; upon which the court sentenced the defendant, who appeals from that judgment.
The first assignment of error is based on the action of the court in refusing the motion of the defendant to quash the indictment. The defendant assigned five reasons for quashing the indictment, each of which challenged its sufficiency upon the ground of duplicity, alleging that it charged in a single count ten separate and distinct offenses, and averring that each offense charged should be set forth in a separate count. The indictment *284 was drawn under the Act of May 27, 1923, P.L. 34, which provides: "It shall be unlawful for any person to manufacture, sell, offer for sale, barter, furnish, transport, possess or deliver within, or import into, or export out of, this Commonwealth any intoxicating liquor for beverage purposes," etc. The learned judge of the court below held that the indictment being in the words of the statute, the different acts charged were to be considered as phases of the same offense relating to a single subject-matter, and upon which but a single punishment might be imposed; charged but one offense, and overruled the motion to quash, granting an exception to the defendant.
When a statute clearly specifies and denounces several distinct and separate acts, each of which amounts to a full and complete offense, yet if they are mere successive steps in one final act which completes the wrong, they amount to but one crime in fact, and a conviction and sentence for the final act constitutes a good defense to a separate indictment for each of the several previous acts. In such a case the specified acts may be distinct and separate offenses, or they may be so entirely parts of the same transaction that they may combine to make but one, and all may be charged in one count of the indictment: Com. v. Mentzer,
It must be recognized that under our laws any person charged with having committed a crime is entitled to know within reasonable limits the nature of the charge which he will be called upon to answer. He is not only *286
entitled to trial by jury but it must be upon an indictment first found by the grand jury. Several distinct misdemeanors, of like nature and subject to similar punishment, may be charged in different counts of the same indictment, but an indictment which charges distinct and separate offenses in a single count is generally bad for duplicity, and upon proper application will be quashed; the grand jury should be allowed to pass upon the charges separately: Hutchison v. Com.,
The court did not err in refusing to arrest the judgment upon the ground that the defendant had not entered a plea of not guilty. The defendant was present at the trial and represented by counsel; assisted in the selection of the jury and the trial proceeded regularly in all respects as if the formal plea had been entered, the omission is not ground for a motion in arrest of judgment. The judgment should not be reversed for a formal defect of this sort after a trial on the merits: Sauerman v. Weckerly, 17 S. R. 117; State v. Heft,
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court of Quarter Sessions of Clarion County for further proceedings. *288