Commonwealth v. Jenks
Commonwealth v. Jenks
Opinion of the Court
The other questions in the present case, raised on the bill of exceptions and the original motion in arrest of judgment, having been either waived, or decided by the opinions already pronounced in other cases, we have only to consider the point presented in the motion in arrest filed at the present term. The ease is thus: An indictment is found against the defendant, containing three counts; the first charges him with being a common seller of intoxicating liquors on the first day of January 1853, and from thence continually to the first Monday of December 1853; the second count charges a single sale to John Critchley on the first day of June, 1853, and the third charges a single sale to the same person on the 15th of said June. The record before us shows that, upon a trial before a jury to whom the case was committed, a general verdict of guilty was returned upon all the counts in the indictment.
The attorney general now appears, and asks for judgment and sentence upon the first count, and has entered a nolle prosequi upon the two remaining counts, to have such effect, as it may legally, upon the question before us.
The single question is therefore this : Can judgment be properly rendered upon the first count, being that charging the offence of being a common seller of intoxicating liquors ?
It was insisted on the part of the defendant, that no judgment can be entered upon any of these counts, inasmuch as it was impossible that he could properly have been convicted on all; and that the uncertainty, as to which a verdict of guilty should have been returned upon, should now operate to vacate and set aside the verdict as to all the counts. The ground assumed is, that the charge of being a common seller from the 1st of January
It is to be remembered that the question before us arises wholly upon the record, and is whether, upon any evidence that might have been offered, the verdict can be sustained as to the first count.
It must be conceded, that, as to the count for being a common seller, the time in reference to which this verdict was rendered is distinctly marked and fixed by the time stated in the indictments. The acts constituting the defendant a common seller must have taken place within the time there recited; Commonwealth v. Elwell, mte, 463; and they might be shown to have occurred at any time within the whole period therein named. Such is not the rule as respects the counts for single sales. As to these, the time alleged is not material, and the government is not confined to the day alleged, but may give evidence of a sale at any period before the finding of the indictment, and within the statute of limitations. Commonwealth v. Dillane, ante, 483. Treating these counts as for independent offences, and having no connection with the first count, and not introduced to meet the case of a failure to establish by the evidence the higher charge, and applying to them the ordinary rule as to such cases of single offences, the government would have been at liberty to support them by evidence of sales prior to the first of January 1853. Hence it might be urged, that there is nothing on the face of this record to show that the second and third counts were not supported by evidence of sales long anterior to the period of time embraced in the first count.
But waiving that view of the case, and treating it as the ordinary case of several counts, in the same indictment, embracing the same acts, and where establishing the guilt of the defendant on the higher charge should merge the minor charges con
The attorney general now proposes to enter a nolle prosequi as to the second and third counts, and thus discharge the defendant as to those counts. The authority of the attorney general to enter a nolle prosequi after verdict, as to one of several counts, or a distinct and substantive part of a count, is fully recognized by this court in Commonwealth v. Tuck, 20 Pick. 366. The only judgment asked for by the Commonwealth is upon the first count. No objection exists as to that, in point of form, and the jury have found, as appears by the record, that the defendant is guilty of the offence therein charged. If the verdict on the second and third counts was erroneous, as a verdict against the evidence, or in matter of law, the defendant is relieved from all the consequences of such error, by the nolle prosequi of the attorney general.
We perceive no reason for arresting judgment upon the first count. Motion in arrest overruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.