People v. Bearss
People v. Bearss
Opinion of the Court
Terry, C. J., and Burnett, J., concurring.
By the common law, aiders and abettors who are present and participate in the perpetration of a crime, are regarded as principals in the second degree ; and where, in an indictment for murder, two arc charged as principals, one as chief perpetrator, and the other as present, aiding and abetting, it is immaterial which of them is alleged to have given the mortal blow, for the injury given by one is, in contemplation of law, inflicted by each. (Foster, 351; East’s Pleas of the Crown, 350; State v. Fley, 2 Brevard, 339.)
By the eleventh section of the Act concerning Crimes and Punishments, the distinction existing at common law between principals of the first and second degree is abolished; and the distinction between them and accessories before the fact is also abolished, so far as such distinction is capable of abolition. Persons standing by and aiding, abetting, or assisting, and persons not present who have advised and encouraged the perpetration of the crime, are designated as accessories, “ and shall be deemed and considered,” says the statute, “ as principals, and punished accordingly.” As principals, they may be indicted and tried together, or separately, and either may be convicted or acquitted without reference to the previous conviction or acquittal of the other. At common law, an accessory before the fact could not be tried or convicted without the previous trial and conviction of the principal. The acquittal of the principal discharged the
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE v. BEARSS
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- 17 cases
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- Syllabus
- By the eleventh section of the Act concerning Crimes and Punishments, the distinction existing at common law between principals of the first and second degree in crime, is abolished. So is the distinction between principals and accessories before the fact, so far as such distinction is capable of abolition. Accessories may, by the act of this State, be indicted and tried with the principal, or separately, and either may ho convicted or acquitted without reference to the previous conviction or acquittal of the other. At common law, aiders and abettors might be convicted, though the principals in the first degree had been acquitted. The statute of this State has not altered the law in this respect. Where W., R., and B., were indicted for the crime of murder, the indictment charging all the parties as principals, but in the statement of facts constituting the offence, alleging that the fatal blow was struck by W., and that R. and B. stood by and abetted, W. having been convicted: Held, that the record of W.’s conviction was inadmissible in evidence on B.’s trial for any purpose. The fact of W.'s conviction was immaterial to the guilt of B., and such evidence could only tend to prejudice the minds of the jury.