There was a mistrial in both these cases, and the exceptions in both are to be sustained. The defendant filed, in both, a plea of former conviction, in the short form authorized by St. 1864, c. 250, § 4, and also a plea of not guilty. This last plea was an unnecessary and unusual addition to the first; Commonwealth v. Goddard, 13 Mass. 455; and he ought not to have been tried on it before the first had been regularly put in issue and decided against him. And such is also the law when former acquittal is pleaded. The two issues of former conviction or former acquittal and not guilty are distinct, and both cannot rightly be submitted to a jury at the same time. Charging them with- both issues at once,” said the English
This defendant was called to trial before the jury on the in - dictments and his two pleas thereto, and was required, against his objection, to give evidence in support of his special plea, though there was no issue thereon; and the judge, on hearing that evidence, ruled that it did not support the plea, and thereupon ordered that the trial proceed on the plea of not guilty. The judge treated the special plea as if it were before him on demurrer and joinder.
The argument for the Commonwealth is, that the defendant has not been injured, inasmuch as neither of the records, which he produced and offered in proof of his special pleas, showed a former conviction of the same offence for which he was then on trial; it having been decided that the charge of being a
In England a prisoner may be allowed to plead former ac quittai or conviction ore terns. But his plea is recorded by the clerk of arraigns, who replies thereto in behalf of the crown. It is therefore tried on an issue. The King v. Coogan, 1 Leach, (4th ed.) 448. Champneys’ Case, 2 Lewin C. C. 53, 54. Rex v. Bowman C. & P. 339.
Exceptions sustained, and new trials granted.
