Defense counsel, in the brief and in the oral argument, has insisted the trial court committed prejudicial error by permitting the Solicitor to place the defendant on trial for murder in the second degree, after having placed in the record the announcement he would ask for a verdict of guilty of manslaughter only. Had the jury convicted the defendant of murder in the second degree, as it might have under the Court’s charge, a grave question would be presented whether the verdict could stand. But the jury, having convicted of manslaughter only, we are confronted with the question whether prejudice is shown by the submission of murder in the second degree.
This Court, in many cases, has considered the effect of the Solicitor’s announcement that the State would not prosecute on certain counts in a bill. There seems to be no difference whether the counts are separately stated or included as different degrees of guilt in a single count.
In
State v. Hunt,
In
State v. Brigman,
In
State v. Wall,
In
State v. Locklear,
The use of the expression “with leave” seems to imply the capital charge might thereafter be 'revived.' We do not think the authorities permit another prosecution for any offense which the Solicitor has elected to eliminate. The Solicitor is a constitutional officer authorized and empowered to represent the State. The State is not permitted to split up an indictment and try it piecemeal. In
State v. Haddock,
In this case, the defendant has not shown prejudice. At the first trial, issues of his guilt of murder- in the second degree or man *246 slaughter were properly submitted. The jury convicted of manslaughter. The State’s evidence tended strongly to show the defendant intentionally shot Bruce Browning through the heart. Browning was unarmed. In neither of his trials did the defendant testify or introduce evidence. The record fails to disclose any valid ground upon which the defendant may place hope for a verdict of not guilty.
Inasmuch as the legal effect of the Solicitor’s announcement not to prosecute for murder in the second degree is directly presented on this appeal, we deem it not inappropriate to state here what we conceive to be the legal effect of the announcement. When, upon arraignment, or thereafter in open court, and in the presence of the defendant, the Solicitor announces the State will not ask for a verdict of guilty of the maximum crime charged but will ask for a verdict of guilty on a designated and included lesser offense embraced in the bill, and the announcement is entered in the minutes of the Court, the announcement is the equivalent of a verdict of not guilty on the charge or charges the Solicitor has elected to abandon.
State v. Pearce,
It appears the Solicitor’s announcement that he would prosecute for manslaughter only precluded the State from prosecuting for murder in the second degree. Consequently, the Court committed error in submitting second degree murder, and charging the jury on that offense. However, the record fails to disclose any basis for hope that another trial would produce a different or more favorable result. Technical error is not enough. Such error is non-prejudicial unless it may have affected the outcome.
State v. Woolard,
No error.
