89 Kan. 690 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Chester Mooney was prosecutéd upon an information which charged him in one count with committing burglary and larceny by breaking into a freight car and stealing goods therein. A verdict was returned in these words:
“We . .' . find the defendant, Chet Mooney, guilty of the offense of burglary and larceny, as charged in the information; and we further find the defendant, Chet Mooney, not guilty of the offense of burglary and not guilty of the offense of larceny from a freight car as charged in the information.”
The trial court treated this as a verdict of guilty, and held the defendant for sentence. The defendant regards it as a verdict, of not guilty, or as a void verdict, and asks to be discharged from custody by habeas corpus. Any difficulty in understanding what the j ury really meant by the verdict, when it alone is considered, disappears when it is read in connection with the instructions. The jury were therein told that the information charged three offenses, namely: (1) burglary and larceny combined; (2) burglary without larceny; and (3) mere larceny. Four forms of verdict were prepared by the judge, one being that adopted by the jury, which has already been quoted. A second rer cited a finding of guilty of burglary, not guilty of burglary and larceny, and not guilty of larceny; a third, guilty of larceny, not guilty of burglary and larceny, and not guilty of burglary; and the fourth,
“If any person in committing burglary shall also commit a larceny, he may be prosecuted for' both offenses in the same count, or in separate counts in the same indictment; and on conviction of such burglary and larceny, shall be punished by confinement and hard labor, in addition to the punishment hereinbefore prescribed for the burglary, not exceeding five-years.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2560.)
The trial judge obviously conceived that this section created a new offense, known as “burglary and larceny,” which in a way was distinct from the two offenses of which it was composed, forming a sort of aggravated or compound burglary, as though the statute , had said that burglary accompanied by larceny should be punishable by imprisonment for five years longer than in the case of simple burglary. Whether or not this conception was technically correct is not material. It worked no injury to the defendant. It was consistently followed throughout in drafting the instructions and forms of verdict. It was doubtless suggested to the court by the statutory language — a “conviction of such burglary and larceny,” and perhaps also by the fact that a larceny perpetrated in committing burglary, if prosecuted in connection therewith, could increase the punishment by but five years, while considered as a separate offense, if committed in a freight car, it could be punished by imprisonment for seven years. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2570.) Plainly what the jury meant by their verdict was that the defendant had both broken, into the freight car and stolen goods therein — that he was guilty of the offense which the instructions described as “burglary and larceny,” and therefore not guilty of burglary without larceny, and not guilty of larceny without burglary, or apart from burglary.
' In an early case this court held that the interpretation of the verdict in a criminal case can not be aided
“A verdict is not bad for informality if the court can understand it. It is to have a reasonable intendment, and is to receive a reasonable.construction, and must not be avoided except from necessity.” (Polson v. The State, 137 Ind. 519, 521, 35 N. E. 907, 908.)
“Verdicts are not to be construed as strictly as pleadings, but are to have a reasonable intendment and to receive a reasonable construction, and are not to be avoided unless from necessity, originating in doubt as to their import, from immateriality of the issue found, or their manifest tendency to work injustice.” (29 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 1022.)
“A verdict is not to be construed with the same strictness as an indictment, but it is to be liberally construed, and all reasonable intendments will be indulged in its support, and it will not be held! insufficient unless, from necessity, there is doubt as to its meaning. . . . The rule is that in determining the sufficiency of a verdict, and a judgment of conviction based thereon, the entire record will be searched and all parts of the record interpreted together, and a deficiency at one place may be cured by what appears at another.” (The People v. Tierney, 250 Ill. 515, 520, 95 N. E. 447, 448.)
We think it clear that the verdict was intended as one of conviction, and hold that it should be interpreted and given effect as such.
The petitioner is remanded.