Roy v. Commonwealth
Roy v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The trial of the first indictment upon which a verdict -of guilty was rendered was properly pleaded in bar of the recovery under the subsequent indictment. All of the offenses with which the appellant is charged are alleged to have been committed within one year prior to the finding of the several indictments, and although each indictment contains the charge that the appellant was guilty of keeping a tippling house on a specified day, yet the attorney for the commonwealth upon the trial of the first indictment asked the court to say to the jury that a selling at any time within the year constituted the offense. This instruction was given, and left the jury to find appellant guilty although he may have sold the liquor on another day than that set forth in the complaint.
When the subsequent indictments were called for trial the plea of a former conviction was proper for the reason that the state saw proper to abandon the specific charge, viz.: selling on a named day, and tried the case as if the charge had been for selling within the year. This, of course, embraced every like offense committed within that period by the appellant, and the court will not stop to inquire of
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.