*147 OPINION
By the Court,
The state appeals from an order of the district court granting Carter’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. *148 The appeal is authorized by NRS 34.380 (4). Carter had initially been tried upon an information charging him, in separate counts, with the commission of two felonies relating to the same act, transaction or event; assault with a deadly weapon (NRS 200.400(2)), and robbery (NRS 200.380). A jury was permitted to return two verdicts, one convicting Carter of assault and battery and the other convicting him of robbery. Judgment was thereafter pronounced upon each verdict and separate sentences imposed (three months in the county jail for assault and battery, a misdemeanor, and a term of not less than five nor more than seven years in the state prison for robbery, a felony). In later granting Carter’s application for a writ of habeas corpus, the district court found that the mandate of NRS 173.260, “* * * but the defendant may be convicted of but one of the offenses charged, and the same must be stated in the verdict,” 1 was violated with the result that each judgment and sentence was entered without jurisdiction and was void. We agree that the assault and battery conviction was void, but for a different reason than that given by the district court. We do not agree with that court that the robbery conviction was also> void and entered without jurisdiction.
An information may properly charge different offenses if they relate to the same act, transaction, or event, and the prosecutor need not elect between them. NRS 173.260 supra. State v. Womack,
The provision of NRS 173.260 (2) that “the defendant may be convicted of but one of the offenses charged, and the same must be stated in the verdict” precludes more than one conviction of the offenses charged and of those necessarily included within the offenses charged. It is not violated when, as here, one of the verdicts is void and the other valid. Accordingly, the assault and battery conviction, being void, is set aside. The petitioner, however, is not entitled to release so long as he is held under a valid judgment of conviction for robbery. The order of the district court granting Carter’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is reversed, and his application for habeas corpus denied.
Notes
NRS 173.260, in full, reads: “1. The indictment or information may charge different offenses or different statements of the same offenses, under separate counts, but they must all relate to the same act, transaction or event, and charges of offenses occurring at different and distinct times and places must not be joined.
“2. The prosecution is not required to elect between the different offenses or counts set forth in the indictment or information, but the defendant may be convicted of but one of the offenses charged, and the same must be stated in the verdict.”
The jury instructions are not contained in the record on appeal.
Where the offense charged cannot be committed without necessarily committing another offense, the latter is a “necessarily included” offense. People v. Greer,
