170 A. 98 | Vt. | 1934
This respondent has been convicted of the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor, and the case has been passed to this Court, before sentence, upon his exceptions. The first question concerns the denial of his motion to quash the information, upon the ground that the search warrant upon which the liquor was seized was void. The argument is that, *102
since this was so, the liquor would not be admissible in evidence, and so there could be no conviction for the possession of it. But if the search warrant were invalid, which it is not necessary to decide, this result would not follow. The legality of the search would not be in issue. When evidence is offered, the court will take no notice of how it was obtained, whether legally or illegally, whether properly or improperly, and it will not form a collateral issue to try that question. The Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the federal Constitution, relating to unreasonable search and seizure, and freedom from self-incrimination, are not restrictions upon the powers of a State, but operate only upon those of the federal government. The corresponding provisions of our State Constitution (Articles 10 and 11) do not prevent the admission in evidence of things, the possession of which tend to show the guilt of a respondent, even though obtained from him by means of a search without a warrant. All this is fully stated, and the authorities are cited, in State
v. Stacy,
Furthermore, the motion to quash was not a right, but was addressed to the discretion of the court. State v. Louanis,
The respondent pleaded autrefois convict, and not guilty. Trial by jury was waived, as it might be under G.L. 2494, and after hearing evidence upon the issues, the court filed a finding of fact. The finding, which so far as the claim of double jeopardy was concerned, followed, in the main, the allegations of the plea, is this: In August, 1931, agents of the federal government, armed with a proper warrant searched the respondent's premises and found a quantity of intoxicating liquor. On the 11th of September following the respondent was indicted for the illegal possession of it, and, at a session of the District Court of the United States for the District of Vermont, he pleaded guilty and paid a fine. On the 17th of October the *103 officers of the State searched the same premises, which were still occupied by the respondent, and found, artfully concealed beneath the flooring of the woodshed, more intoxicating liquor which had been there at the time of the visit of the federal officers, but which they had failed to unearth. The liquor had been hidden in this place before the first raid occurred, by two friends under the direction of the respondent. That the liquor was the property of the respondent was admitted.
It is urged that the conviction in the United States District Court is a bar to a prosecution in the State court, because otherwise the respondent would be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense, as prohibited in the Fifth Amendment to the federal Constitution.
The plea of autrefois convict, as well as the plea of autrefois acquit, is grounded upon the universal maxim of the common law that no man is to be brought into jeopardy of his life more than once for the same offense. III Blackstone Comm. 335, 336. Although this language in strictness applies only to capital crimes, the operation of the maxim is not so confined, but extends to misdemeanors, 4 Stephen, Commentaries, 451, note. And so, too, the phrase "jeopardy of life or limb," as used in the Fifth Amendment to the federal Constitution, while by strict construction it extends only to treasons and felonies, has been practically and wisely applied to all indictable offenses, including misdemeanors. 1 Bishop, New Criminal Law (8th ed.) par. 990, 991, and cases cited. The maxim itself is stated in different forms: "Nemo bis debet vexari pro una et eadem causa";"Nemo bis in periculum veniet pro eodem delicto"; and "Nemo bispunitur pro eodem delicto," but in each instance the meaning is essentially the same, and includes all criminal offenses. This ancient and well-established rule of the common law is sanctioned and enforced in most of the constitutions of the several states and in that of the United States. Commonwealth v. Roby, 12 Pick. (Mass.) 496, 502. Constitutional provisions against double jeopardy are regarded as merely declaratory of the common law.Kepner v. United States,
A plea of former conviction may, therefore, be based either upon a constitutional guaranty or upon the common law,Commonwealth v. Ramunno, supra.
The plea must, however, be upon a prosecution for the identical crime, and must make it to appear that the offenses charged in both cases are the same in law as well as in fact, for it will be vicious if they are perfectly distinct in point of law, however nearly they may be connected in fact. State v. Pianfetti,
It is not a second jeopardy for the same act, but a second jeopardy for the same offense that is prohibited. Theisen v.McDavid,
And so, too, the same act may constitute a criminal offense equally against the United States and the State, subjecting *105
the guilty party to punishment under the laws of each, provided the act is one over which both sovereignties have jurisdiction. In re Guerra,
There is, therefore, no double jeopardy here under the Fifth Amendment. The Constitution of Vermont contains no corresponding provision (State v. Felch,
Aside from this, the two offenses were not identical in point of fact. The liquor seized by the federal agents was listed in the indictment returned by the federal grand jury, and it was for the possession of this particular contraband that the respondent was convicted in the federal court. On the other hand, the liquor seized by the State officers, and set out in the information filed in the State court against the respondent, was not that which had been made the basis of the former conviction. The only connection between the two lots was that the respondent had once possessed them both at the same time. The possession of the second lot continued subsequent to, and was therefore distinct from, that of the first. The former conviction, if it had been obtained in the State court, would have been a bar in a subsequent prosecution only as to the offense specified in the proceedings upon which the first judgment was based. State v.Leonard,
The plea of autrefois convict was properly held not to avail the respondent.
By an exception to the findings, the respondent urges that the State failed to offer any intoxicating liquor in evidence, and that none was received, so that the conviction is without supporting evidence. Of course the introduction of the liquor itself was not necessary, because the unlawful possession could have been proved without it. But seven bottles of intoxicating liquor, conceded to have been the property of the respondent, and which the evidence showed were concealed beneath the floor of the shed by the direction of the respondent, were produced in court. True, the transcript fails to show any offer of them in evidence, or any ruling upon the subject, but they were marked State's Exhibits 1 to 7, inclusive, so far as appears, without objection, were referred to as such during the trial by both sides, and were used by respondent's counsel in the examination of his witnesses. They are designated exhibits in the bill of exceptions. No question appears to have been made below as to their status, and they were treated as being properly in the case. The objection now made is unavailing. *107 Lavalley v. Ravenna,
The further point is made that the respondent could not be found guilty because the State had failed to prove that he had knowledge that the liquor was on his premises at the time of the search by the State officers. He had the right, he claims, to assume that the federal agents had before that time found and taken all the liquor that he had. But it is certain, from the testimony of his own witnesses, that he caused it to be concealed. From the indictment found by the federal grand jury, he must have known what liquor he was charged with possessing, and that this did not include what was later found by the State officers. And, so assuming that his knowledge was material, there was evidence tending to show that it existed.
Finally, it is urged that to find the respondent guilty would result in the imposition of an excessive fine or a cruel and unusual punishment, within the prohibition of the Eighth Amendment to the federal Constitution because he had already paid a fine of $500 to the federal government, and might under G.L. 6558, as amended by section 1, No. 135, Acts of 1923 (the law in force at the time of the trial), be sentenced to pay to the State a fine of not less than $300 and not more than $1,000, or to be confined in prison for not less than three months, or not more than twelve months, or both. The Eighth Amendment applies to the United States government and not to the states. O'Neil v.Vermont,
The respondent has cited decisions to the effect that a sentence in one jurisdiction may be taken into consideration in fixing or suspending the penalty in another, and that, although not prohibited, punishment in two jurisdictions should not in practice be imposed where there are no aggravating circumstances. See cases cited in note 16 A.L.R. 1242. But these cases do not lay down a rule of law, but merely suggest a guide for the exercise of the discretion of the court where such discretion exists in determining what penalty shall be imposed after conviction. The legality of the conviction is not affected. As we have seen, the respondent has not yet been sentenced, and therefore the argument is beside the point. No question of abuse of discretion exists, because no discretion has as yet been exercised.
Judgment affirmed. Let sentence pass and execution be done. *109