18 Haw. 246 | Haw. | 1907
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
The defendant was indicted on December 22, 1906, for having “unlawfully played, carried on and conducted as owner thereof certain games, to wit, Fan Tan and Pai How, in which said games money was lost and won.” The question reserved by the circuit court for the consideration of this court is whether under an allegation that the offense was committed on the 15th day of October, 1906, “and for a period of thirty days next thereto preceding,” there may be a conviction upon proof that it was committed on the 15th day of November} 1906, “and on each and every day prior thereto for a period of thirty days,” as stated in the bill of particulars.
If, therefore, a single offense is alleged to have been committed on a particular day it may be proved to have been committed on a different day under the general rule; so, under the statute, if no timé is alleged any time may be proved provided it is within the statute of limitations and before the finding of the indictment. Does, however, the fact that, as in the present case, the offense is of a continuing nature or that the time is alleged with a continuando make any difference? According to what is called the Massachusetts doctrine, it does. . In that state it is held that time is of the essence, of a continuing offense and that proof is.
The latter view seems to be sound in principle and in harmony with the analogies of the law. There is no reason of practical expediency or protection to the accused which calls for a distinction between single and continuing offenses in this respect.. The accused will not be prejudiced in his defense to the prosecution in question or in his right to plead former jeopardy in a subsequent prosecution any more in the case of a continuing offense than in the case of a single offense from the fact that the time proved need not be the same as that alleged, and in either case the law provides ample means of protection. To avoid surprise he may call for a bill of particulars and i'f necessary obtain further time for preparing his defense; and in pleading former .jeopardy he is not confined to the pleadings in the first case but may resort to the evidence to> show precisely of what he was convicted. In this case he has called for and obtained a bill of particulars and is as fully protected as if the time relied on had been ■stated in the indictment.
If there is any solid basis for a distinction between the two ■classes of offenses in this respect it must be found in the very 'nature of a continuing offense. It is difficult to find it there. .If proof may be made that an offense was committed on one day when it is alleged to have been committed on another day, why •should not proof be allowed that it was committed during one week or one month when it is alleged to have been committed ■during another week or another month? Even under the Massa
The case of Republic v. Kamakauila, 9 Haw. 607, is relied on bjr the defendant in support of the Massachusetts rule. In that case the charge was of adultery within one month prior to October 16, 1894. The trial court admitted proof of the commission of the offense at the time of the arrest early in the morning of October 17, and instructed the jury that it would be sufficient if they found that the act was committed at or previous to the time of arrest. That was held error. It was held, following Thayer v. Thayer, 101 Mass. 111, that evidence of
The question reserved is answered in the affirmative.