Rider v. Commonwealth
Rider v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
At a quarterly term of the Hustings court held for the city of Lynchburg on the 5th of March 1860, the prisoner was indicted for feloniously stealing an axe of the value of fifty cents; and it was alleged in the indictment that the accused had previously been indicted in the same court of a different offence of petit larceny, and sentenced to punishment. The accused being in custody plead not guilty to so much of said indictment as charged the felonious stealing of the axe; and admitted the truth of so much of the indictment as charged that he had been previously indicted, convicted and sentenced for a different offence of petit larceny. The jury empanneled to try the issue, found him guilty, and fixed the time of his imprisonment in the city jail to seven days; but further found that he had been indicted, tried, convicted and sentenced in due form of law for the petit larceny charged in the indictment.
On this finding of the jury, the Attorney for the Commonwealth moved the court to sentence the accused to one year’s imprisonment in the penitentiary according
Upon these proceedings the first question is that raised by the motion in arrest of judgment, and assigned as error in the petition: Had the Hustings court jurisdiction to try the cause, as the offence with which the accused was charged is punishable with confinement in the penitentiary?
The county and corporation courts of the commonwealth deriving their existence from the acts of the legislature, can exercise such jurisdiction only as has been conferred by statute. The Code, p. 616, cli. 157, § 3, provides that the county or corporation courts shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine all cases, &e., “except criminal causes against free negroes charged with felonious homicide, or any felony, the punishment whereof may be death, and against white persons, charged with any offence, the punishment whereof may be death, or imprisonment in the penitentiary.”
This provision of the Oode, except that portion in reference to free negroes, conforms to the policy of the legislature from the first organization of county courts. By the act of 1748, 5 Hen. Stat. 489, § 5, entitled “An act for establishing county courts, and for regulating and settling the proceedings therein,” cognizance of such criminal causes where judgment or conviction shall be
The Code, p. 750, ch. 199, § 1, defines felony and misdemeanor: “ Offences are either felonies or misdemeanors. Such offences as are punishable when committed by free persons with death or confinement in the penitentiary, are felonies; all other offences are misdemeanors.”
At common law simple larceny, whether grand or petit larceny, was felony: Offences, Blackstone says, which are considerably distinguished in their punishment, but not otherwise. 4 Black. Com. 229. And it is said by Hawkins, that whenever an offence would amount to grand larceny if the thing stolen were above the value of twelve pence, it is petit larceny if it be of that value or under. And it seems that all petit larceny is felony, and consequently, requires the word felonice, in an indictment for it. Hawkins’ Pleas of the Cr. 146. § 34, 36.
By the act found in 1 Eev. Code of 1819, p. 617, § 7, it was provided, that if any person shall feloniously take, steal and carry away any goods or chattels, under the value of fom’ dollars, he should on conviction, be. punished with stripes or by confinement in the jail and penitentiary for a term not less than six or more than eighteen months. And if any person having been punished by stripes for such offence, shall be convicted of a like offence a second time, he shall be sentenced to .undergo a confinement in the penitentiary for a term not less than five or more than ten years. The Code has in some respects changed the law in regard to the two kinds of larceny. By the Eevised Code of 1819, it continued a felony though it might on conviction be punishable with stripes or confinement in the penitentiary at the discretion of the jury. The Code, p. 729,
It was suggested in argument that the provision contained in the Code, ch. 199, § 7, could not be reconciled with the construction that would make this offence felony to be tried in the circuit court only. The section referred to, punishes the principal in the second degree, as if he were the principal in the first degree. He is punishable for his own offence as the principal in the first degree, but is not sentenced according to the sentence which may be imposed upon the principal offender. Being the first offence in his case, he may be punishable as for a misdemeanor, whilst the principal offender may be sentenced to a different punishment. And so it would be in. cases under the 25th and 26th sections of chapter 199, imposing additional punishment after previous convictions and sentences.
I think the Hustings court had no jurisdiction to proceed with the case. That the indictment charged the accused with a felony, and when returned by the grand jury it should have been treated as a presentment, and steps taken in conformity with the Code, p. 771, ch. 207, § 15.
It therefore seems to me that the judgment of the Circuit court affirming the judgment of the Hustings court was erroneous, and should be reversed. And this court proceeding to render such judgment as the Circuit court should have done, it further seems to me that the judgment of the Hustings court overruling the motion
The other judges concui red in the opinion of Allen, P.
Judgment reversed, all proceedings subsequent to the indictment set aside, and cause remanded to the Hustings court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rider v. The Commonwealth
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- Published