— Aрpellant was prosecuted upon an indictment which charged him with having, at the county of Whitiey and State of Indiana, on the 15th day of February, 1898, committed the crime of rape upon a girl under the age of fourteen years. He was tried by a- jury, and found guilty, and over his motion for a new trial was sentenced by the court to be imprisoned for an indeterminate period in the state prison, disfranchised, and rendered incapable of holding any office of trust or profit. From this judgment he appeals.
The evidence upon which aрpellant was convicted is not before us, neither have the instructions of the lower court been certified up, except a single one thereof upon which alone appellant bases his ground for a reversal. The record discloses that the indictment was returned by the grand jury of Whitley county into the lower court and filed April 11, 1902. Appellant was tried and convicted in the following Hovember. Instruction number two, of which appellant complains, was given by the court to the j~ "j at the request of the State, and it is-disclosed by the bill of exceptions to have been the only one given upon the particular subject-matter therein embraced and mentioned. Ho other instruction was given by the court which in any manner or form modified, limited, changed, or withdrew instruction number two from the jury. It is stated in the bill of exceptions that there was no evidence given upon the trial by the-court which either showed or tended to show when the warrant for the arrest of the accused upon the indictment returned was issued; nor was there any evidence to establish when the warrant came to the hands of the
Appellant’s counsel urge and contend that within the meaning of the laws of this State pertaining to public offenses and the prosecution thereof, a criminal action can not be deemed or held to have been commenced on the part of the State until a warrant for the arrest of the accused has been issued upon the indictment or information charging the offense. The argument seemingly is advanced that the issuing of the warrant is the act which crowns thе commencement of the prosecution, and that therefore until such warrant is issued the statute continues to run in favor of the accused party. The learned Attorney-General in his brief on behalf of the State admits that the question which he' concedes to bе involved in this appeal is one which under the laws of this State is surrounded with more or less doubt, and that little light is cast -upon the proposition by the decisions of this court. Section 1662 Burns 1901, §1593 Homer 1901, provides that prosecutions for rape and other crimes therein mentionеd may be commenced at any time within five years after the commission of the offense. It follows, therefore, in the case at bar that among other things it was essential to the conviction of the ■ defendant that the State establish beyond a reasonable
Jones v. State,
In State v. Iloke,
In Hoover v. State,
In Zimmerman v. State,
Carr v. State, 36 Tex. Cr. Rep. 390,
In Boughn v. State,
In Warrace v. State,
Upon the same question, see, also, Anderson v. State,
Without further consideration or references to authorities bearing upon the proposition we are of the opinion, and so conclude, that the answer to the question above propounded must be that a criminal prosecution by indictment may be deemed and considered as commenced at the time the indictment is returned and presented to the court by thе proper grand jury, and from that time the further running of the statute of limitation will be arrested. If the prosecution is by affidavit and information,
Wo have been cited to the case of Flick v. State,
It is finally claimed and urged by appellant’s counsel that the instruction complained of is erroneous for the further reason that it makes no mention of, nor does it advise the jury in regard to, the question of venue. The evidence, as we have said, is not before us; neither are any of the instructions in the case in the record, except the one in controversy. Therefore under this state of the record we must assume that the trial court in other instructions which it gave to the jury fully advised them in respect to what the State was required to prove in regard to the venue, and the fact that thе jury found the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment warrants the assumption that the evidence properly established that the crime of which the accused was convicted was committed in Whitley county.
The record presents no error, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
