Appellant was charged with the possession of intoxicating liquor for the purpose of sale, the offense being alleged as of date October 5, 1923. Upon conviction, punishment was assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for one year.
Appellant interposed a plea of former conviction alleging that he had theretofore been indicted for the transportation of intoxicating liquor on said 5th day of October, 1923, had been tried thereon and legally convicted, and upon application and proof that he was under 25 years of age his sentence had been suspended. A copy of the former indictment, judgment of the court and order releasing him upon his personal recognizance under the suspended sentence law were made a part of said plea; it was further alleged therein that the offense of which appellant was so convicted and the offense charged against him in the present indictment was one and the same transaction and offense and not another and different transaction and offense. The State through her district attorney filed exceptions to appellant's plea on the ground: first, that the plea itself showed that the sentence in the former cause was suspended and that therefore no final judgment had resulted, and that the proceedings in that cause would not support appellant's plea of former conviction; second, because the plea did not show that the former prosecution was based upon the same offense, he being therein charged with the "transportation" of intoxicating liquor and in the present case charged with "possession of intoxicating liquor for the purpose of sale;" and that they were different offenses although growing out of the same transaction. The State's exceptions were sustained, appellant's plea stricken out, not permitted to be read to the jury, nor any evidence admitted thereon. After this action of the court appellant then filed a plea of former jeopardy in bar of the present prosecution, setting up therein identically the same matters as were contained in his plea of former conviction. The State excepted to the plea of former jeopardy for the same reasons that were urged to the plea of former conviction; the plea of former jeopardy was likewise stricken from the record, not permitted to be read to the jury nor any evidence heard thereon. *Page 647
The State's contention is not sound that because in one indictment the offense charged was "transportation" and in the other "possession for purpose of sale," therefore different offenses were necessarily charged. If the State relied upon the same criminal act in both cases two convictions could not legally be obtained. Both offenses could be charged in the same indictment in different counts, and a conviction had upon either one or the other, but the State could carve but once; it would be otherwise if the two offenses charged were based upon separate criminal acts. Whether this was true would necessarily depend upon the evidence offered in support of the plea, and in refusing to entertain the plea upon the ground that upon its face it disclosed different offenses the court was in error. The evidence should have been received upon the issue and the question submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions unless the first ground of the exceptions to the plea is maintainable. Plunk v. State, 96 Tex.Crim. Rep.,
Was the judgment granting appellant the benefit of the "suspended sentence law" upon conviction under the first indictment such a judgment as would support a plea of former conviction? We are not unmindful of the rule that a conviction to be available in bar of another prosecution for the same offense must be a "final conviction," — (See Dupree v. State,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.