The sole issue in this appeal is whether appellant’s prosecution in circuit court for two felony charges of distributing marijuana on school property was barred under the provisions of Code § 19.2-294 due to two prior convictions in general district court for distributing marijuana, which convictions were based on the same acts. Code § 19.2-294 provides in pertinent part that “[i]f the same act be a violation of two or more statutes ... conviction under one of such statutes ... shall be a bar to prosecution or proceeding under the other.”
Matthew Phillips was charged with feloniously distributing marijuana on school property (two counts), in violation of Code § 18.2-255.2. A week later, Phillips was charged with distributing less than one-half ounce of marijuana (two counts), misdemeanors, in violation of Code § 18.2-248.1, based on the same acts as the felony charges. In a single proceeding in the general district court, that court accepted Phillips’ guilty plea on the misdemeanor charges and certified the felony charges to the circuit court, where the grand jury returned indictments. In the circuit court, Phillips entered conditional guilty pleas on the felony charges. On appeal, Phillips contends that under the provisions of Code § 19.2-294, the two misdemeanor convictions bar the Commonwealth from prosecuting him on the felony charges based on the same acts. We disagree and affirm the convictions.
“Code § 19.2-294 ... prohibits multiple convictions for separate offenses arising out of the same act [or acts],
except where the convictions are obtained in a single prosecution” Hall v. Commonwealth,
In
Slater,
we addressed whether Code § 19.2-294 precluded the Commonwealth from prosecuting and convicting a defendant for felony and misdemeanor charges arising from the same act or acts. Slater was “simultaneously charged” with driving while under the influence of alcohol, a misdemeanor offense, and driving after having been adjudged an habitual offender, a felony offense. The trial of the misdemeanor charge and the preliminary hearing on the. felony charge were heard together in a concurrent proceeding in the general district court. The general district court convicted Slater on the misdemeanor charge and certified the felony charge to the grand jury of the circuit court, where he was indicted and subsequently convicted. This Court held that Code § 19.2-294 did not bar the felony habitual offender prosecution in circuit court. Noting that the general district court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the felony charge, we held that “[w]here charges are brought simultaneously, the amenability of one to early conclusion while the other requires further proceedings does not alter the fact that the proceedings are concurrent, not successive, prosecutions.”
Id.
at 595,
Relying on our statement in Slater that “the time of institution ... determines whether multiple charges are simultaneous or successive,” Phillips argues that the felony and misdemeanor charges were successive because they were instituted on different dates. Thus, he reasons, the Commonwealth violated Code § 19.2-294 by convicting him for two *679 separate statutory offenses in successive prosecutions. 1 We disagree.
Code 19.2-294, like the Fifth Amendment former jeopardy protection, “was designed to prevent the [Commonwealth from] subjecting an accused to the hazards of vexatious, multiple prosecutions.”
Hall,
[B]y limiting its reach to successive prosecutions for multiple offenses for the same act, [the statute] prevents prosecutors from using the prosecution of a minor offense as a “dress rehearsal” for a more serious, later prosecution. Consequently, Code § 19.2-294 protects against a second prosecution or proceeding for separate statutory offenses based on the same act after there has been a conviction for one offense. See North Carolina v. Pearce,395 U.S. 711 , 717 [89 S.Ct. 2072 , 2076,23 L.Ed.2d 656 ] (1969).
Hall,
Considering the legislative purpose for enacting Code § 19.2-294, we find that the controlling principle in
Slater
is that both charges were prosecuted simultaneously or in a
*680
concurrent proceeding despite “the amenability of the misdemeanor charge to early conclusion” in general district court. The Commonwealth does not subject the accused to the “hazards of vexatious, multiple prosecutions” where it institutes felony and misdemeanor charges separately but prosecutes them at the same time in a single hearing before the court. Although arrest warrants may be obtained on different dates, the Commonwealth does not thereby impose a greater burden on the accused than when it institutes the charges simultaneously. Moreover, the Commonwealth does not receive a greater opportunity to rehearse its evidence by instituting charges on separate dates. Borrowing the “jurisdictional exception” from our double jeopardy decisions,
Slater
held that Code § 19.2-294 does not apply where the several crimes charged are not amenable to common jurisdiction and cannot be heard in the same proceeding.
See Freeman,
Here, Phillips was charged with both felony and misdemeanor marijuana distribution offenses arising out of the same acts. The charges were heard together in the general district court. Because the charges were not amenable to conclusion in the same court, Phillips was convicted for the misdemeanor charge in general district court and for the felony charge in circuit court. Under the jurisdictional exception to Code § 19.2-294 recognized in Slater, we find that the charges were prosecuted as part of a single proceeding. Where the charges are heard or prosecuted together, the fact that they were initiated on separate dates is a difference without a distinction.
Phillips asserted at oral argument that this case is controlled by
Wade v. Commonwealth,
Accordingly, we hold that the felony convictions for distributing marijuana on school property were not barred by Code § 19.2-294 because of the misdemeanor convictions for distri *682 bution of marijuana. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Phillips also contends the felony convictions violated the Fifth Amendment's Double Jeopardy Clause. In our January 8, 1998 order granting in part Phillips’ petition for appeal, we stated that the legislature expressly indicated that “[a] defendant can be prosecuted under both the general statute concerning the distribution of marijuana and Code § 18.2-255.2. The trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion to quash the felony indictments on double jeopardy grounds.”
See Hall,
. In. Slater, as in the present case, the misdemeanor and felo'ny charges were heard in a single prosecution in the general district court where Slater was convicted of the misdemeanor and the felony charge was certified to the circuit court grand jury. Slater leaves unanswered whether the simultaneous initiation of charges would have continued to control had there been a misdemeanor prosecution in the general district court separate from the felony preliminary hearing.
