125 Tenn. 143 | Tenn. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants, Carl White, John H. Conner. Thos. P. Hagan and J. H. Kelly & Co., the latter a corporation, were jointly presented hv the grand jury of Hamilton county, charged with unlawfully selling intoxicating liquors as a beverage in violation of chapter 1, Acts 1909, commonly known as the “Four‘Mile Law.” The case was called for trial March 3, 1911, and upon a plea of guilty entered by White, Conner, and Hagan the court adjudged that they were guilty of the offense charged in the presentment, “and that for such offense they pay a joint fine of $100 and the costs of the case; and that, in
The defendants were also severally adjudged as further punishment for their offense to be imprisoned for the term of sixty days, the execution of which latter judgment, however, was suspended until the next term of the court.
The case is now before us upon a writ of error prosecuted by the State. The error first assigned is that the trial judge erred in imposing a joint fine upon the three defendants for $100, the contention of the State being that a separate fine of not less than the minimum sum imposed by the statute, $50, should have been adjudged against ea,ch.
This contention is sound, and must be sustained. Where two or more persons jointly presented or indicted are convicted, the general rule is that the judgment and sentence against them must be separate. There may be but one judgment, but the sentence, the punishment, must be several. The only exceptions to tbs rulé are cases where the agency of two or more is of the essence of the offense, as in conspiracy and riot. Each and every one who violates the criminal laws is subject to the whole penalty denounced. There is no partnership in crime, and there can be no division of the punishment that follows its commission. Payment of a fine by one of several offenders cannot be allowed to relieve others
The four mile law provides that ‘‘any one” violating its provisions “shall be punished by a fine for each offense of not less than $50 nor more than $500' and be imprisoned for a period of not less than thirty days nor more than six months.” This is mandatory. The courts have no discretion upon a verdict of guilty by a jury, or a plea of guilty, to impose less than the minimum nor more than the maximum fine and imprisonment prescribed upon each defendant. France v. State, 6 Baxt., 478; Needener v. State, 1 Shan. Cas., 374; Tarrant v. State, 4 Lea, 483; McCapbell v. State, 116 Tenn., 109, 93 S. W., 100.
Error is also assigned upon the action of the trial judge in suspending the imprisonment severally imposed upon the defendants. While this action was beyond the power of the trial court as held in another case
The judgment will be corrected so as to impose the minimum fine denounced by the statute upon each of the defendants, but for costs it will be joint, as there is only one case.