130 A. 804 | R.I. | 1925
Petition for a writ of habeas corpus directed to the keeper of the Providence County Jail.
The petitioner, McGrane, was indicted for an assault with a dangerous weapon. He alleges that he appeared before the Superior Court to answer to the indictment; that the assistant attorney general in open court entered a nolle prosequi of the indictment, and thereby said indictment was annulled; that petitioner was required to answer to a charge of assault and battery to which charge he pleaded nolo contendere and was then sentenced by the court to be imprisoned and to pay a fine; that petitioner has been committed to jail and that his imprisonment is illegal as there was no indictment upon which sentence could be based.
The indictment, which is in the usual form, charges that McGrane did commit an assault upon Clarence F. Pine with a dangerous weapon, to wit, a bottle, and him the said Clarence F. Pine then and there did cut, wound and ill treat. The jacket entry of record on the indictment is as follows: "1925 Oct. 23. Hahn J. Nol pros'd as to assault with a *107
dangerous weapon. deft arraigned pleads nolo contendere to simple assault and sentenced to pay a fine of 300.00 and costs and to Prov. County Jail for 2 months and committed". This record, although condensed, is sufficient to disprove the allegation of the petition that the entire indictment was nol prossed.
Assault with a dangerous weapon is merely an aggravated assault, the penalty for which by statute is made more severe than for a simple assault. The offence includes an assault with the additional element of the use of a dangerous weapon. A nolleprosequi has been defined (16 C.J. s. 778) as a formal entry upon the record by the prosecuting officer, by which he declares that he will not prosecute the case further, either as to some of the counts of the indictment, or as to part of a divisible count, or as to some of the defendants, or altogether. In this State the power of and responsibility for the entry of a nolle prosequi
is by the constitution (Art. VII. s. 12) exclusively in the attorney general and his assistants (G.L., C. 22, s. 5). SeeRogers v. Hill,
In the case at bar, it is evident from the record that there was no misunderstanding of the action of the attorney general. Upon a trial, the defendant might have been found guilty of the lesser offences of assault or assault and battery (G.L. 1923, C. 407, s. 11). A divisible portion of the indictment before trial was eliminated by the attorney general to the advantage of the defendant who thereupon pleaded to the lesser charge and was legally sentenced thereon.
The petition for writ of habeas corpus is denied.