People v. Shepardson

California Supreme Court
People v. Shepardson, 48 Cal. 189 (Cal. 1874)

People v. Shepardson

Opinion of the Court

By the Court:

1. The indictment first charges the defendants as principals, and, in a second count, as accéssories, or rather as principals in the second degree. We see no objection to the indictment on this ground, under section nine hundred and fifty-four of the Penal Code. We think that that section, while changing' the phraseology, did not alter the substance óf section two hundred and forty-one of the Criminal Practice Act, which it supplanted.

2. But the judgment against the defendant is erroneous, because of the fifteenth instruction, in which the jury were told that, if the prisoner received a portion of the money obtained by the robbery, with the knowledge how it had been obtained, then he might be convicted of the crime of robbery charged in the indictment.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.

Reference

Full Case Name
THE PEOPLE v. MILTON SHEPARDSON
Cited By
4 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
Indictment as Pbincipad and Accessoby.—The Code has not changed the rule that an indictment may in one count charge the defendant as principal, and in another count charge him as an accessory. Chime op Robbeey.—A person who receives money obtained by robbery, with a knowledge of the manner in which it was obtained, cannot be convicted of the crime of robbery.