15 N.Y.S. 815 | Superior Court of Buffalo | 1891
The defendant is arraigned upon two indictments, and files a demurrer to each. The first charges the defendant, in separate counts, with the crime of burglary, third degree, petit larceny, and receiving stolen property, respectively. The second charges the defendant with the crime of burglary, third degree, and petit larceny, stated in separate counts. The demurrers are alike in each case, and the grounds specified are—First, that more than one crime is charged; second, that the court in which the indictment was found had no jurisdiction of the crime alleged in the second count, and that this court is without jurisdiction to try the same. The third ground is like the second, except that it refers to the third count. The indictments were found in the court of oyer and terminer, and sent to this court for trial. Ho complaint is made but that the count alleging burglary is good in all respects; but the claim is that the court has no jurisdiction of the crime of petit larceny, and that said crime, as well as the count alleging the crime of receiving stolen property, is improperly joined with the count.charging burglary. It is well settled that an indictment may embrace a count charging a felony, and also a count charging a misdemeanor, when the misdemeanor is .a degree of the felony charged, or when the facts constituting the crime alleged arose out of the same transaction. People v. Emerson, 6 N. Y. Supp. 274; State v. Lincoln, 49 N. H. 464; Stevens v. State, 66 Md. 202, 7 Atl. Rep. 254. It is equally well settled that counts charging burglary, larceny, and receiving stolen property are properly joined in one indictment where the •offenses so alleged relate to the same transaction. People v. Baker, 3 Hill, 159; Hawker v. People, 75 N. Y. 487. It is no objection that such counts constitute different grades of offense, and call for the imposition of different penalties. The distinction made in pleadings of this character seems to be that, when the offenses alleged are for different and independent felonies, then the joinder is bad, and an attempt to try in one indictment, for such ¿separate offenses, will not be permitted; but where the different offenses