after stating the case. The fact that the defendant took the coat was not used as evidence against him on the trial of the first indictment, because, while the Judge at first admitted it as evidence, he subsequently withdrew it from the consideration of the jury by charging them that there was no evidence of a conspiracy and consequently none of defendant’s guilt. The verdict in that case determines that there was no joint action between defendant and Bell and no intent common to both of them, and it further determines that defendant did not steal any of the goods mentioned in the first indictment. The object of the State was not to show that the defendant took the articles described in that indictment and the coat at one and the same time, but to prove that there was a conspiracy between Bell and Han-kins because they took different goods in the same store at the same time which belonged to the same person. The case does not therefore fall within the principle of
State v. Weaver,
In order to support a plea of former acquittal it is not always sufficient that the two prosecutions should grow out of the same transaction; but they must be for the same offense; the same both in law and fact.
State v. Jesse,
The rule we have just stated as to the sufficiency of the evidence is the one laid down by Archbold and approved by this Court in
State v. Williams,
Assuming, as we have, for the sake of the argument, that if defendant had himself stolen all the articles at one and the same time, the prosecutor had the right to carve as large an offense out of the transaction as he could, but must cut only once; and if defendant had been indicted for stealing only one of the articles and was acquitted, he could successfully plead the acquittal in bar of a subsequent prosecution for stealing another of the articles, we yet do not perceive how the defendant has made any such case, and for this reason we cannot say that there has been any former jeopardy.
We have not adverted to the fact that the plea, as far as appears, does not aver, nor does the proof show, that there was any judgment entered upon the verdict of acquittal in the first case, and this is an essential ingredient of a good plea, and, if properly averred, the necessary proof must be forthcoming to sustain the allegation. According to the precedents, the pleader should have averred that judgment was entered on the verdict of acquittal, “as by the record more fully and at large appears, which judgment still remains in full force and effect, and not in the least reversed or made void.” Archbold’s Cr. Pl. (3 Am. Ed.), 89;
State v. Williams,
The Judge’s ruling upon the plea of former acquittal was correct, and, there being no other error alleged or found in the record, the conviction of the defendant must be sustained.
No Error.
