76 Miss. 435 | Miss. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first count in the indictment attempts to charge an offense under § 1063, code of 1892, and the second attempts to charge the offense denounced by § 1066. The offense sought to be charged in the first count may be punished by twenty years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary; the latter could not be punished with more than ten years in the penitentiary. The indictment, therefore, seeks to charge two distinct felonies of different degrees and different punishments. A demurrer was interposed on this ground, amongst others, and sustained, and the indictment quashed, no leave to amend being applied for. The court exercised the discretion, given it in such cases, correctly, that the prisoner might not be embarrassed in his defense, and relieve itself of the embarrassment which might have arisen as to what judgment to render on a general verdict of guilty. That the action of the court was correct, objection being properly taken by demurrer, is granted. Wash v. State, 14 Smed. & M., 125; Teat v. State, 53 Miss., 439; Bishop Crim. Prac., secs. 425, 450.
Says Mr. Bishop, sec. 425: ££ When the court, on reasonable application, deems that the due order of judicial proceedings,
This is a wholly different question from the one which arises where the trial court, in the exercise of its discretion, overrules such a demurrer, and this court, looking backward over a completed trial, can see that no injustice was done, and, therefore, refuses to reverse because of the overruling of such demurrer, as was the case in Hill v. State, 72 Miss., 534, and also wholly different from cases like Gates v. State, 71 Miss., 874, where the offenses had the same punishment. The question here is not whether this court should reverse because the trial court overruled such demurrer, but whether it shall declare that the trial court’s exercise of its- discretion in such case, in sustaining the demurrer, was an abuse of that judicial discretion intrusted to it in just such cases. Clearly it was not only no abuse, but eminently proper action.