Citation Numbers: 209 N.W. 419, 202 Iowa 168
Judges: Evans, De Grape, Stevens, Albert
Filed Date: 6/21/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
I. The indictment under which the defendant was prosecuted, was returned on February 25, 1925. It charged the offense as having been committed between the 20th day of August, 1924, and the 25th day of February, 1925. It was made to appear by 1. CRIMINAL the evidence that, on October 15, 1924, the LAW: former defendant was indicted by the grand jury of the jeopardy: same county for a like offense, alleged to have nuisance: been committed between the 19th day of September acquittal: and the 15th day of October, 1924. On February subsequent 17, 1925, such indictment was dismissed, upon overlapping recommendation of the county attorney. The plea charge. of former jeopardy and acquittal is predicated upon this former indictment. It appears from the record that the State used the same evidence before the grand jury in obtaining the last indictment that it had used in obtaining the first indictment, as regards the period of time antedating October 15, 1924. The question presented at this point for our consideration is whether the overlapping time included in the last indictment by specific dates, renders the plea of former jeopardy available to the defendant in bar of further prosecution under such indictment. We have never hitherto *Page 170
had occasion to pass upon the precise question thus presented. InState v. McAninch,
The evidence introduced in the first instance covered the period preceding the first indictment, as well as the period subsequent to the date thereof. The evidence relating to the first period was more significant and weighty than that pertaining to the second, and was sufficient to have supported a conviction under the second indictment.
The trial court recognized the merit of the plea of former jeopardy to the extent of the period of time covered by the first indictment. It therefore excluded from the consideration of the jury the evidence covering such prior period. We are confronted, therefore, with the further question whether such segregation and exclusion of evidence cured the infirmity of the prosecution and avoided the plea of former jeopardy. There was no amendment of the indictment. It is not necessary, therefore, for us to determine whether there could have been an amendment. The effect of the ruling of the court was to put the defendant upon trial upon an amended indictment. We think it sufficient at this point to say that the evidence thus excluded by the court was a large and substantial part of the evidence which was produced before the grand jury, and upon which the grand jury acted. It cannot be known that the grand jury would have returned an indictment at all, if such evidence had been withheld from its consideration. Nor can we see any fair reason why so obvious a violation of the defendant's rights should be cured so perfunctorily. The dismissal of the first indictment operated, under the law, as the equivalent of an acquittal, and *Page 171 became a complete bar to further prosecution for the alleged offense of nuisance committed prior to October 14, 1924. Section 14027, Code of 1924.
If, for the purpose of an indictment, the State, in its prosecution, may ignore this statute, and may use the same evidence, with additional later evidence, to procure a new indictment, without incurring other disadvantage than to have the evidence excluded upon the trial, it nullifies the statute, at least in part, and results in manifest unfairness of procedure. We can conceive of no legitimate reason why a prosecuting official should be aided or encouraged thus to transcend the statute. This feature of the indictment is not the result of mere error or inadvertence. It is a direct challenge to the statute, — a reassertion of guilt notwithstanding the dismissal; and its only possible function is to press the former acquittal as a reason for present conviction.
It is fundamental that only one offense may be charged in a single count in an indictment. Section 13737, Code of 1924. The indictment fixes the identity of the offense as one and indivisible. And this is so even though the 2. INDICTMENT offense be a continuing one, such as the AND maintenance of a nuisance, and though it be INFORMATION: evidenced by a series of acts, extending over a duplicity: period of time. A continuing offense, such as objection the maintenance of a nuisance, may have, so to revealed by speak, shifting boundaries of time; but the testimony. continuity of such an offense may be interrupted by an indictment, and a specific offense may be defined therein by specific dates. A continuing offense, thus defined, becomes segregated from after events, and becomes identified as a complete and single offense. Whether the result of the indictment be a conviction or an acquittal, the identity of the offense as one complete offense is never lost; nor can it ever afterwards be merged into after events, or into a subsequent continuance of the offense so as to become a part thereof. The offense charged and defined in the first indictment was likewise charged in the second indictment now before us. If it be assumed that the second indictment also charged a complete offense against the defendant as having been committed subsequent to the date of the first indictment, then, to say the least, the indictment becomes bad for duplicity. The fact that the duplicity does not appear upon the face of the indictment may not operate to deprive the defendant of his *Page 172
statutory right. In Commonwealth v. Robinson,
II. It is contended by the State that the defendant waived his plea of former jeopardy by failing to raise it before trial, and before the jury was impaneled. Reliance is had upon Section 13791, Code of 1924, as follows:
"All objections to the indictment relating to matters of substance and form which might be raised by demurrer shall be deemed waived if not so raised by the defendant before the jury is sworn on the trial of the case."
This statute fails to reach the difficulty. The indictment was good on its face, and was not vulnerable to a demurrer. It charged the maintenance of a nuisance in Clayton County, but did not otherwise describe the place thereof. The 3. CRIMINAL same thing was true of the first indictment. LAW: former Manifestly, the defendant could have been guilty acquittal: of maintaining more than one nuisance at the timely same time and in the same county. The identity objection. of the offense charged in each indictment, and the fact that both indictments had reference to the same offense, were not disclosed in the mere language of either or both indictments. The duplicity of the offense was *Page 173 disclosed by the evidence upon the trial. Upon such disclosure, the defendant interposed his plea of former jeopardy and acquittal.
State v. Costello,
It is our opinion that, by presenting evidence to the grand jury of the offense covered by the previous indictment, and by obtaining the return of an indictment covering such offense, notwithstanding that it covered also a later continuation of such offense, the prosecution thereby subjected the indictment to the plea of former jeopardy and acquittal. The previous indictment was in all respects valid. It was dismissed by the court upon the application of the county attorney, pursuant to the provisions of Section 14027, Code of 1924. This statute provides expressly:
"Such a dismissal is a bar to another prosecution for the same offense if it is a misdemeanor."
This statute is quite conclusive against the State at this point. We have no occasion to consider other alleged errors.
The judgment below is, accordingly, reversed. — Reversed.
De GRAFF, C.J., and STEVENS and ALBERT, JJ., concur.