277 P. 953 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1929
The plaintiffs in error, hereinafter called defendants, were convicted in the county court of Canadian county on a charge of having possession of mash and were each fined $50, and each sentenced to serve 30 days in the county jail.
This is a companion case to No. A-6545,
In the case of Hourigan v. State,
"The `same offense' as the term is used in the constitutional guaranty, section 21, art. 2, state Constitution, and the statutes just referred to, does not mean the same offense eo nomine, but means the same criminal act, transaction, or omission. To constitute a good plea on the ground of former jeopardy, the offense in which the plea is made must be the same as that in which jeopardy has attached. But to make the offenses the same, the informations need not be in identical language. The offenses may differ in name and yet be the same. First Bishop's New Criminal Law, par. 1050. Where the same testimony will support both charges, it is generally said that the offenses are the same. Estep v. State,
The facts in the case at bar are practically the same as facts in Hourigan v. State, supra. The defendants having been put in jeopardy in the trial of No. A-6545 and been convicted upon a charge of possession of a still, they could not then be convicted upon a charge of possession *138 of mash in connection with that still, the evidence all being obtained at the same time and under the same search warrant.
For the reasons stated, the case is reversed and remanded, with instructions to dismiss.
EDWARDS, P.J., and DAVENPORT, J., concur.