2 Aik. 181 | Vt. | 1827
delivered the opinion- of the Court.
The defendant is indicted for an assault, with intent to commit murder. The jury have, by their verdict, under the instruction of the county court, acquitted him of the offence charged, and convicted him of a common assault, and the question is, will the law justify the verdict ?
It is a general rtile at common law, “where the accusation in the indictment includes an offence of inferiour degree, the jury may discharge the defendant of the higher crime, and convict him of the less atrocious.” The exceptions to this rule are such as evidently tend to favour the accused, and to prevent oppression on the part of the prosecutor. Where the defendant, by being originally indicted for a different offence, would be deprived of any advantage which he would otherwise be entitled to claim, the jury must acquit altogether. One cannot at common law be found guilty of a misdemeanor, on an indictment for felony, because he would by that means lose the benefit of having a copy of the indictment, a special jury, and making full de-fence by counsel.
By the law of this state, there is no case in which on an indictment for a higher offence, the accused will be deprived of any benefit on trial, that he would have been entitled to, if indicted for an offence of inferiour degree. But on the contrary, the statute has in the case of high crimes, given him a right to peremptory challenges, to which he is not entitled on an indictment for inferiour crimes. And no good reason can be assigned, why the government or the prisoner should be subjected to the additional expense and trouble of a second indictment, in cases like the present. The suggestion that this mode of proceeding is oppressive to the defendant, being thereby exposed to augmented expense in defending, required to procure bail to a greater amount, and subjected to increased costs, are not well founded. There would be force in the objection, if it could be applied to the finding by the grand jury, and a presentment for the more aggravated offence avoided. But the presentment is made, and the accused must necessarily be exposed to the expense of a trial for the crime with which he is charged, and to the procuring of such bail as the nature of the crime charged demands ; and as to taxable costs against him, on conviction of the minor offence only, the rule is, that he is not to be charged with any costs, but such as were necessarily incurred in establishing the fact of his guilt, in reference to the crime of which
The judgment is, that the motion is overruled, and the cause is remanded to the county court for sentence.