102 Mo. App. 34 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
The defendant was prosecuted and convicted of the offense of obstructing a public road in Clark county. Most of the testimony introduced at the trial related to the issue of whether there was a public road at the place where the obstruction was built, and on this question, suffice, to say, there was plenty of evidence to show a road sixty feet wide has existed there since a time anterior to the Civil "War. The fence charged to be an unlawful obstruction, took up about one-half the road and enclosed it with the defendant’s land, and the testimony shows he built part of the fence himself. His guilt is clear and the points involved in the appeal are technical. One of them is that he had been previously in jeopardy on the same charge and had been acquitted. His plea of former acquittal was tried along with the merits of the present case with the consent of both parties, the dispute on that plea being whether the obstruction charged in the former information was the same as the one charged in the present case. This, of course, was an issue to be determined by the jury, but as there was only one verdict the defendant assigns for error that he was entitled to a separate-verdict on his plea in bar. Perhaps he was if he had asked it; but the court adopted his own request in instructing the jury, and he chose to have the plea of former acquittal tried as a defense to the merits of this case. In fact the brief he filed in this court states that by consent of parties the two disputes were tried together.
The defendant presented and the court gave an instruction that if the jury believed an indictment had.
Another point made for reversal is, that the defendant was charged in this information with maintaining an obstruction in a public road, but was convicted of obstructing the road by building a fence thereon, the contention of the defendant being that the statute under which he was tried created two offenses, one for obstructing a road and one for maintaining an obstruction. The information charged the defendant with obstructing the road on the first day of January, 1901, by keeping a wire fence on it and by continually obstructing it. thereafter by keeping and maintaining said fence. The issue referred to the jury was whether or not the defendant on or about January 1,1901, kept or maintained an obstruction in the road, and that issue was submitted by instructions given at the instance of both the State and the defendant. The information was a good one for obstructing the highway and was in the language of one approved by the Supreme Court in the case of State v. McCray, 74 Mo. 303.
The second clause of section 9454, Revised Statutes 1899, authorizes the imposition of a fine of five dollars a day for every day a road continues to be obstructed by a person who has had five days notice from a road overseer to remove the obstruction. No such punishment was visited on the defendant in this case, but he was found guilty of the offense with which he was charged and fined twenty-five dollars.