27 Ind. 470 | Ind. | 1867
The appellant, being confined in the jail of Orange county, on a charge of grand larceny, and not indicted, was, at the February term, 1867, of the Orange Court of Common Pleas, upon an information filed by the prosecuting attorney of said court, taken before said court and put upon his trial. The information charges: “ That said Isaac Hoskins is now confined in the county jail of Orange county, on a charge of grand larceny,” &c., and recites the offense to be as follows: “ That said Isaac Hoskins did, at the county of Orange, and State of Indiana, on the 29th day of October, 1866, feloniously steal, take, and carry away sis one dollar bills, commonly known as ‘ greenbacks,’ of the value of one dollar each; two half dollars, fractional currency, of the value of fifty cents each,” &c. The jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty under the information herein, and that he be fined the sum of five dollars, and that he be imprisoned in the state prison for the teim of one- year, and disfranchised and rendered incapable of holding any office of trust or profit for the term of three years.” Upon the return of this verdict, appellant moved the court to be discharged, because the jury had returned no legal verdict against him. PLis motion was overruled and he excepted. Judgment was
The appellant insists that the finding of “guilty, under the information,” is a conviction of everything therein well charged; a finding that the appellant stole every article which the information specifies, and that they were each of the value stated; that therefore the conviction was of grand larceny, and as the statute requires' the punishment to be at least two years in the state prison, the jury had no power to impose the penalty of one year, and the finding was therefore illegal and void, and the appellant entitled to his discharge. The error assigned in this court is the refusal, to discharge the appellant. ¥e think there was no error. In the case of The Commonwealth v., Hatton, 3 Grat. 623, it was held that where a prisoner had been tried for a felony, and the judgment was arrested because the verdict against him was too uncertain and defective to authorize a judgment thereon, the prisoner might be again tried on the same indictment. In a case where it was the duty of the jury to impose the fine, and the verdict merely found the defendant guilty, it was held tlrat no judgment could be entered on the verdict over the objection of the defendant, but that a new trial must 'be had. The Commonwealth v. Scott, 5 Grat. 697. “ If the jury bring in a defective verdict, it is in the power, equally, of the prisoner and the prosecuting attorney, to have it set right, and suppose the prisoner chooses not to interfere, and suffers a defective verdict to be entered, as his interest would always prompt him to clo, in preference to a verdict of guilty in due form, he, by thus failing to interpose, waives his objection to being put' a second time in jeopardy for the same offense.” Bishop’s Cr. Proc., § 842. At all events, under our statute, the prisoner was not entitled to his discharge. The jury had power to find him guilty of petit larceny under the information, and to impose the exact punishment inflicted. Section 118 of the criminal code (2 G. & H. 419,) provides, that “ on the trial of a criminal prosecution, exceptions may be taken by the de
The judgment is affirmed.