This ease was an indictment for being an accessory after the fact in receiving goods stolen from another. The indictment did not set out that John King had been convicted or charged with any offense at all, or tried for any offense. It simply alleged that the defendant received from John King a gold watch worth $100 00, the property of one J. N. Rosser, knowing that it had been stolen and taken and carried away from Rosser before that time. There is no allegation that in taking and carrying the gold watch away, that it had been taken from *93a house, so as to make defendant accessory to larceny from the house, nor that it had been taken in a burglary, so as to charge him with being accessory to that crime; yet the court punished the defendant for being accessory to larceny from the house, of which there was no charge at all; and admitted a bill of indictment for burglary against John King, with his plea of guilty thereon. We think this bill of indictment, if good at all, only good to charge that defendant was accessory to simple larceny, and that the proof should have been confined to that, and the punishment should have been the same as for simple larceny. If the proof make a case of larceny from the house the indictment should allege it, so that the record will show that the judgment or sentence of the court accords with the indictment. The punishment for such an offense may go up to ten years confinement in the penitentiary. If the proof make a case of accessory to burglary, the indictment should charge that offense on John King, when the punishment may go as high as- twenty years, if at night, as was this proof. The punishment of the accessory varies with that of the principal: Sections of the Code 4488, 4888, 4414, 4310, 4489. In this case even larceny from the person is not charged, but the offense charged is that of being accessory only to the offense of simple larceny, and punishable under section 4310 of the Code; that is to say, just as ordinary accessories after the fact are punishable. We think, therefore, that the court erred in admitting the record of the burglary and plea of guilty thereon and all parol evidence of larceny from the house. The charge is accessory to simple larceny; the proof should have been confined to that. But is the indictment good even for that? We think not. It does not allege the conviction of King for any offense. The Code, sections 4488 and 4489, construing them together, seem clearly to provide that unless the principal thief can be taken and convicted, the accessory must be indicted for a misdemeanor. If, therefore, the indictment be under section 4488, it must allege that the principal thief has been convicted of the larceny or burglary-by which the goods received were stolen. We *94can,see no other sensible construction of these sections. This, too, was the rule at common law: 4 Blackstone, 263. It was more stringent, indeed, requiring sentence and punishment. The statute of Anne altered the rule so as to provide for the trial of the accessory after conviction, if he escaped before punishment. So these sections provide for indictment as a misdemeanor if the principal cannot be taken. We therefore think that this indictment should be quashed, and anew indictment be framed to conform tot-lie facts here proven; if desirable to indict again, it should be distinctly alleged that John King got possession of these goods by the burglary of which he was duly tried and convicted, and this defendant received them from him knowing the facts. Then the allegata-and probata will agree, and the record will show that the proper punishment has been inflicted upon the defendant, if found guilty of being such an accessory. Inasmuch as this ruling quashes this bill of indictment, and a trial under a new bill will make an entirely different case, it is unnecessary to go further into the consideration of other errors complained of.
Let the judgment be reversed and the indictment be quashed.