1. As the Code distinguishes between burglary in the daytime and burglary in the night-time, fixing the term of imprisonment and labor for the former at not less than three nor more than five years, and for the latter at not less than five nor more than twenty years, an indictment which is silent as to the time of the burglary, except in charging the mere date of its commission, is less full and specific than it ought to be, and is, therefore, demurrable. To be beyond the reach of exception or demurrer interposed in writing on arraignment, it-ought to charge all that is requisite to render plain and certain every constituent of the offense. Where the question of day or night is necessarily to be considered, and must be directly passed upon before a verdict of guilty can be rendered, the whole nature of the particular offense intended to be proved against the prisoner, cannot be easily understood by the jury from reading the indictment or hearing it read, if it does not refer the criminal act either to the day-time or the night-time. Failing in this, the indictment is ambiguous. However, after á verdict of guilty of burglary in the day-time has been returned, the judgment will not be arrested for the ambiguity, as such an ambiguity is aided by verdict. On motion in arrest, the indictment will be treated as sufficient to uphold the conviction.
2. Where the reasonable doubt of the jury vibrates between two offenses of different grades, both of which are within the terms of the indictment, the verdict should be a *144finding of guilty for tbe offense of the lower grade. But where the region of doubt is between an offense which is within the indictment and one wholly outside of it, and neither includes the other, the verdict should be not guilty ; since by acquittal only can the prisoner receive the benefit of the doubt. Hence, on an indictment for burglary containing no count for burglary in the night-time, if the evidence leaves it reasonably doubtful whether the burglary was in fact committed in the day-time, the prisoner cannot be convicted ; for burglary of the one class does not include burglary of the other. 46 Ga., 214.
If burglary in the night-time was in fact committed, it is as certain that the crime was not burglary in the daytime as it would be if no burglary whatever was committed; and the night-time felony not being charged, the jury cannot acquit of it any more than they can convict of it; so, the only possible way for them to give the prisoner the benefit of any reasonable doubt which they may have in respect to one offense or the other, is to acquit of the sole charge which the indictment brings before them. Where two offenses are within the indictment, a conviction of the lesser acquits as to the greater, and thus the prisoner gets the benefit of the doubt between them; but with a single offense charged, to convict whether there is reasonable doubt or not touching it, is, in effect, to ignore the doubt altogether. To prove that a burglary was committed in the day or in the night, one or the other, is certainly not to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that burglary in the daytime was committed.
While the court did not err in refusing to arrest the judgment, it did err in charging the jury on the subject of doubt. If the demurrer was in writing, there was also error in overruling it; but we do not find any demurrer in the record. Let there be a new trial unless the demurrer was in writing, in which latter case, let the indictment be quashed.
Judgment reversed.