Burress v. Commonwealth
Burress v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the hustings court of the city of Richmond, rendered on the 17th day of June 1875, convicting the plaintiff in error, Roger D. Burress, of the forgery of a certain order, and sentencing him therefor to confinement, in the penitentiary for the term of two years; the period by the jurors in their verdict ascertained.
The said order is described in the indictment as being of the following purport and effect, to wit:
“Messrs. Parker & Co. will please pay to Thomas*936 Moore, or order, the sum of forty-seven dollars and 23c., and charge to my account.
Resp’t’y, Allen & Bro.
Jeb> 24th, 1875.”
There were two counts in the indictment, the first was for the forgery of the order, the second for uttering the forged order, knowing it to be forged. The conviction was of the offence charged in the first count.
Several questions arose and were decided in the progress of the case in the court below, to most of which decisions exceptions were taken, the bills of exceptions so taken being four in number. The plaintiff, in his petition for a writ of error, assigns six errors in the judgment; which assignments of error we will notice in their order.
1. The first is, that it was error not to have remanded the prisoner for examination for the felony charged in the indictment.
This assignment of error is founded on the first bill of exceptions; which states that upon the calling of the case, the prisoner “moved that he be sent back to be examined for the felony for which he is indicted; to which the attorney for the commonwealth objected by vouching the certificate of the police justice in the case, and claimed that the prisoner had been examined before a justice of the peace, which certificate is in the words and figures following to-wit:
“ City of Richmond, to-wit:
To the clerk of the hustings court of said city:
I, J. J. White, police justice of the said city, do hereby certify, that I have this day committed to jail R. D. Burress, for his appearance before the hustings
‘ Messrs. Parker & Co. will please pay to Thomas Moore, or order, the sum of forty-seven dollars and ■tweriiy-three cents, and charge to my account.
Kespectfully, Allen & Bro.
Feb’y 24th, 1875.’
with intent to defraud. Given under my hand, this '7th day of June 1875.
J. J. White, police justice.”
“And the court thereupon sustained the objection of the commonwealth’s attorney, and overruled the motion of the prisoner, to which ruling of the court” the prisoner excepted.
We are clearly of opinion that there was no error in the said ruling of the court. Even the record of an examining court when that court was in existence, was not required to be as special as an indictment. See 3 Rob. Old Pr. pp. 121-124, and the cases cited, especially Halkem’s case, 2 Va. Ca. 4; and Mabry’s case, Id. 396; in which latter case R. E. Parker, J., delivering the opinion of the court, states the law on the subject very fully and clearly. Certainly the proceedings before an examining justice under the present law, cannot be required to be more special than were the proceedings before an examining court
2. The second assignment is, that “ it was error in the court to have sustained the commonwealth’s demurrer to the prisoner’s plea of a former acquittal, and to have rejected the plea.”
This assignment of error is not founded on any bill of exceptions, but upon proceedings otherwise had in the case, which sufficiently appear in the record. After-the court had overruled the motion of the prisoner to remand him as aforesaid, and also his motion to quash the indictment, and his demurrer to said indictment and each count thereof, (on the decisions of the court in regard to which two latter motions no errors are assigned or complained of), the prisoner tendered to the court a special plea in writing (verified by his affidavit) of former acquittal of the same offence; and the said plea being seen and inspected, the attorney for the-commonwealth craved oyer of the record in the said plea mentioned, and demurred to the said plea, which demurrer was sustained by the court; arid the court rejected the said plea, which plea is set out in words and figures in the record of this case. From which it appears that, on the 12th day of May 1875, the prisoner was acquitted on another indictment for felony, which
There can be no doubt but that the two indictments were intended to. be for the same felony, and that the prisoner was acquitted on the first indictment, upon the ground of a variance between the order described and set out in that indictment, and the order exhibited on the trial as the subject of the forgery charged in the indictment. That variance consisted only in this: that in the order set out in the indictment, the amount is specified as “forty-seven dollars and 25 c.;” whereas in the order offered as evidence in support of the charge, the amount is specified as “forty-seven dollars 23 e.” Now this appears to be, and in fact is, a very small difference; but it is a difference, and in contemplation of law, and as to the case under consideration, it stands on the same footing, and is governed by the same principle, as if the difference were ever so large in amount. An order for 25 e. is not an order for 23 e., and the prisoner was therefore entitled to his acquittal under the former indictment, upon the ground of a fatal variance between the allegata and the probata; and
The question of variance between the two indictments was properly raised by the commonwealth by craving oyer of the record of the first indictment, and demurring to the plea of former acquittal. For although the plea avers that the felonies charged in the two indictments are one and the same, the record shows that they are, as charged and in contemplation of law, not one and the same, but different. felonies. The verity of the record in this respect cannot be denied by plea, and a demurrer to a plea, containing such denial, is an admission of the plea only in subordination to the record, which is paramount and conclusive.
For the law on this subject of former acquittal, reference may be had to Archbold’s Criminal Practice and Pleading, Waterman’s notes, vol. 1, pp. 111-113 marg., and the cases there cited.
In Hite v. The State, 9 Yerger R. 357, a case very ably argued by counsel, and very well considered by the court, “ it was held, that to entitle the prisoner to the benefit of the plea of autrefois acquit, it is necessary that the crime charged in the last bill of indictment be precisely the same with that charged in the first, and also that the first indictment is good in point of law; that the true test to ascertain whether a plea of autrefois
In Mortimer’s case, 2 Va. Ca. 325, it was held that if a prisoner be acquitted of burning the barn of Josiah Thompson, he cannot plead this acquittal in bar of an indictment for burning the barn of Josias Thompson. That is a very strong case, and very much like the one under consideration. Indeed, they seem to be identical in principle as to the question we are now considering. See also Vaughan’s case, Id. 273.
But it is contended that two recent provisions of our statute law create a difference in this respect. Those provisions are sections 15 and 16 of chapter 195 of the Code, page 1218, which are in these words :
“15. A person acquitted by the jury upon the facts and merits on a former trial may plead such acquittal in bar of a second prosecution for the same offence, notwithstanding any defect in the form or substance of the indictment or accusation on which he was acquitted.
“ 16. A person acquitted of an offence on the ground of a variance between the allegations and the proof of the indictment or other accusation, or upon an exception to the form or substance thereof, may be arraigned again upon a new indictment or other proper accusation, and tried and convicted for the same offence, nothwithstanding such former acquittal.”
It is contended that under the first of those provisions of the Code, to wit: § 15, the prisoner may have been acquitted upon the facts and merits on the former trial, and that upon the demurrer to 'the plea of autrefois acquit in this case, it must be considered that he was so acquitted.
Conceding, at least, for the purposes of this case, that the prisoner might have been acquitted upon the facts and merits on the former trial; certainly he might have been acquitted, and was entitled to be acquitted, on the ground of a variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proofs, and as it does not appear in the record, and is not averred in the plea, that he was acquitted upon the facts and merits on the former trial, it must be inferred, in considering this demurrer to the plea, that he was acquitted on the ground of the variance. If he had been acquitted upon the facts and merits, the fact would, no doubt, have so appeared upon the record, and could easily have been made so to appear. And at all events, as it does not appear, it ought to have been averred in the plea. Section 15 gives a right to plead an acquittal on a former trial in bar of a second prosecution for the same offence, notwithstanding any defect in the form or substance of the indictment on
The section does not make the variance immaterial.
The accused must be acquitted upon that ground, if no other. And if acquitted, the presumption, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is, that he was acquitted on that ground. But section 15 authorizes an acquittal in such case upon the merits, instead of upon the ground of variance; and if acquitted upon the merits, makes the acquittal a bar to a second prosecution for thé same offence. The accused, however, to be entitled to the benefit of the bar, must affirmatively show that his case comes within the meaning of the section. Section 16 does not vary the case. It does not relate to pleading, but is merely declaratory of the common law, that an acquittal on the ground of variance is not a bar to a second prosecution for the same offence; and therefore declares that a person acquitted upon that ground may be arraigned upon a new indictment, &c.: that is, it merely declares that the common law on this subject remains in full force, except so far as section 15 creates an exception. And a person, to get the benefit of that exception, must show that his case comes within its terms.
We are therefore of opinion that the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the plea of former acquittal and rejecting the plea.
3. The third assignment is that “the court erred in not excluding from the jury, on the ground of variance, the paper set forth in the second bill of exceptions.”
“Richmond, March 5th, 1875, received of T. A. Parker & Co. forty-seven 23-100 dollars in full of this order.
Thomas Moore.”
We think there was, clearly, no variance between the said paper and the said order. Certainly the difference between the word “ account” and the contraction “ act,” aforesaid is no variance, or at least is wholly immaterial. And certainly the receipt at the foot of' the said paper, and the absence of such a receipt at the foot of the said order, constitute no variance. The receipt is no part of the forged paper. The receipt is not charged to be forged. In fact it is a genuine instrument.
We therefore think the court did not err in not excluding from the jury the paper set forth in the second bill of exceptions.
4. The fourth assignment is, that “the court erred in excluding from the jury the alleged genuine order with the receipt upon it, mentioned in the third bill of exceptions, which the witness said had been presented to him on a former occasion by the prisoner.”
The third bill of exceptions states, “that on the trial of the cause, after the commonwealth had introduced as a witness one Truman A. Parker, who gave evidence tending to prove that the prisoner had pre
The draft referred to seems to have been wholly irrelevant to the case before the court, and was therefore inadmissible. The draft had on it a receipt in prisoner’s proper name for the amount thereof. There was no specific tender by the prisoner of his said receipt
5. The fifth assignment is, that “ the court erred in excluding from the jury the testimony referred to in the fourth bill of exceptions, as to the incompetency or inability of the prisoner to have written the paper with the forgery of which he was charged.”
The fourth bill of exceptions states, “that upon the trial of this cause the prisoner offered a witness, Dr. Otho W. Kean, who proved that he was a resident of Goochland county, and had lived in the same neighborhood with the prisoner for many years; that he was a practising physician of many years standing, and
The only remaining assignment of error was waived and abandoned by the learned counsel for the prisoner, and therefore will not be further noticed by us.
We think there is no error in the judgment, and that it ought to be affirmed.
Judgment arrirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.