168 P. 578 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
The defendant was, by a jury, in the superior court of San Joaquin County, adjudged guilty of violating section 8 of an act of the legislature prohibiting, under certain specified conditions, the sale of poisons. (See Stats. 1907, p. 124; Stats. 1909, p. 422; Stats. 1911, p. 1106; Stats. *687 1913, p. 692, and Stats. 1915, p. 863.) He appeals from the judgment and the order denying him a new trial.
Section 8 of said act, as amended by the legislature of 1913 (Stats. 1913, pp. 692, 695, supra), provides that it shall be unlawful for any person, etc., to sell, furnish, give away, or offer to sell, furnish, or give away or to have in their or his possession certain specifically named poisons, including cocaine and morphine, or any of the salts, derivatives, or compounds thereof, or any preparation or compound containing any of the "foregoing substances" or their salts, derivatives, or compounds, excepting upon the written order or prescription of a physician, dentist, or veterinary surgeon, licensed to practice in this state, etc. "Such order or prescription," proceeds said section, "shall be permanently retained on file by the person, firm or corporation who shall compound or dispense the articles ordered or prescribed and it shall not be again compounded or dispensed if each fluid or avoirdupois ounce contains more than . . . 1 grain of morphine . . . or 1 grain of cocaine, . . . excepting upon the written order of the prescriber for each and every subsequent compounding or dispensing."
It is further provided by said section that the foregoing provisions thereof "shall not apply to sales at wholesale by jobbers, wholesalers and manufacturers to pharmacies, as defined in section one of an act entitled: 'An act to regulate the practice of pharmacy in the state of California and to provide a penalty for the violation thereof; and for the appointment of a board to be known as the California State Board of Pharmacy,' approved March 20, 1905, and acts amendatory thereof; or physicians, nor to each other, nor to the sale at retail in pharmacies by pharmacists to physicians, dentists or veterinary surgeons duly licensed to practice in this state." The exceptions thus provided by the section are subject to certain conditions prescribed thereby.
Section 7 of said act, as amended by the legislature of 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 863, supra), in part provides: "Any person violating any of the provisions of section eight . . . of this act shall upon conviction be punished as follows, viz.: For the first offense by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars, and not to exceed four hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not less than fifty days and not exceeding one hundred and eighty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment; for *688 the second offense, by a fine of not less than two hundred and fifty dollars, and not to exceed five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not less than ninety days and not exceeding six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment; and for the third offense by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than one year and not more than five years."
The information alleges that the defendant, on or about the twenty-eighth day of September, 1916, at and in the county of San Joaquin, did ". . . sell, furnish and give away, and have in his possession, hydro-chloride of cocaine containing more than one-sixth grain of cocaine to the fluid or avoirdupois ounce, and morphine and sulphate of the alkaloid of morphine, containing more than one-quarter grain of morphine to the fluid or avoirdupois ounce, and said sale and possession was not upon the written order or prescription of a physician, dentist, or veterinary surgeon, licensed to practice in the state of California." It is then alleged that the sale and the possession so charged are not within the cases expressly excepted by said section 8 from the provisions thereof interdicting such sale and possession. The information then charges two previous convictions of the defendant of violating the provisions of said section.
The assignments of error upon which the defendant relies for a reversal are: 1. That the information fails to state facts sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the superior court to try the charge alleged therein; 2. That the trial court prejudiced the rights of the accused by refusing to grant his motion that the people be required to elect and designate the particular offense of the several which it is asserted are charged under the statute and to the establishment of which they intended particularly to address the proofs; 3. That the court misdirected the jury in matters of law; 4. That the verdict as returned by the jury was incomplete and insufficient to authorize the superior court to pronounce judgment thereon, inasmuch as the jury did not specifically find upon the alleged previous convictions of the defendant.
We think the point last stated must be sustained, and consideration of the other points relied upon may therefore be waived.
Section
The record here discloses that, when arraigned, the defendant made no plea or answer to the previous convictions charged against him in the information, and that the jury made no special finding as to the said prior convictions, the verdict found and returned being general and reading as follows: "We, the jury in the above-entitled cause, find the defendant, Byron Dueber, guilty as charged."
It is, of course, but the statement of a self-evident proposition to say that the authority of the superior court to impose judgment of sentence in a case arising under the statute upon which this prosecution is founded rests wholly upon the fact of two prior convictions of the accused under the provisions thereof, and that the fact of such prior convictions must be alleged and proved, or admitted by the defendant.
The contention of the attorney-general is that, while it is true that the first and second violations of the statute are each mere simple misdemeanors, yet, when a third offense thereunder is committed by the same party, the three, taken together — that is, the two distinct offenses of which he had previously been convicted and the third offense charged — constitute a specific felony, the same as if the charge involved but one act or transaction, and in support of this view he cites People v. Delaney,
We do not conceive it to be important to the decision of the point upon which, as declared above, we find ourselves constrained to reverse this case to consider whether a distinct and independent felony is committed where there exists and is charged against the accused a combination of a previous conviction of a certain public offense with the specific offense subsequently committed and charged. This, though, appears to be the view expressed in People v. Delaney, supra.
But whatever may be the correct legislative theory of the code sections referred to — whether it was to make the prior convictions essential elements of a distinct and specific felony, or merely to make it imperative for the superior court to impose aggravated punishments upon those possessed of a confirmed habitude for the commission of petty and other crimes — the indisputable proposition remains that the legislature has, without qualification, ordained, by the enactment of section
This precise question arose in the case of thePeople v. Eppinger,
We are unable to coincide with the contention that section
There is no other legal course open to us but to reverse the judgment and the order, and it is so ordered.
Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred.