1. The advantages of different statements, in distinct counts of an indictment, are very apparent, and tbe cautious pleader will always insert as many counts as *24may be necessary to meet every possible contingency. This the law permits; and it is also well settled, that a general verdict of guilty, under an indictment containing both good and bad counts, will be,referred to the good counts, and the judgment of conviction thereupon sustained.—Shaw v. The State, 18 Ala. 547; Hudson v. The State, 34 Ala. 253. If an indictment, then, should contain both good and bad counts, no sufficient reason can be perceived, why a demurrer may not be sustained to the bad, without affecting the good counts, or the prisoner’s liability thereunder. A motion to quash being different from a demurrer, the result might be changed if the bad counts were quashed.—Rose v. The State, Minor, 28. But, it has been held in Tennessee, that a judge may, at his discretion, quash a defective count in an indictment, without quashing the entire indictment. Jones v. The State, 6 Humph. 435. Be this as it may, we hold that the court, in the case before us, did not err in overruling the demurrer to the second count of the indictment, and holding the prisoner to answer thereto, after the first count had been held bad on demurrer. — Wharton’s Criminal Law, § 127, and authorities there cited. If such was not the law, there could be no such thing as separate demurrers to distinct counts of an indictment; but a demurrer to any one count, would be equivalent to a demurrer to the whole indictment.
2. A conviction may be had under section 3178 of the Code, for concealing, or aiding to conceal, a horse, mare, or other animal specified in section 3182, knowing the same to have been stolen, notwithstanding the latter section provides for the punishment of the offense of buying or receiving the same species of property, knowing the same to have been stolen.—Barber v. The State, 34 Ala. 213. But, in the opinion of the court in Barber v. The State, a remark was made, not necessary to the decision of any question involved in the cause, and to which we can not give our assent. The remark to which we allude, is italicized in the following quotation from the opinion: “It follows, that, for concealing, or aiding in the concealment of the different species of personal property enumerated in section 3182, known to have been stolen, a conviction may be had under *25section 3178, if the intention to injure or defraud be found, as provided by that section.” To show the incorrectness of the remark italicized above, it is necessary to examine section 3178, in connection with section 3176. The latter section provides as follows: “Any person who takes, or destroys, any deed, or conveyance, of lands, or personal property) belonging to another, with the intent to injure or defraud, must, on conviction, be punished as if guilty of grand larceny.” Section 3178 provides, that “any person who buys, receives, conceals, or aids in the concealment of, any personal property, or deed, conveyance, or other writing specified in section 3176, knowing such personal property to have been stolen, or such deed, conveyance, or other writing to have been taken with the intention to injure or defraud, must, on conviction, be imprisoned,” &c. The reading of the two sections, we think, clearly shows, that in no prosecution under section 3178, is it necessary to be either averred, proved, or found, before a conviction can be had, that the offense charged was committed with the intention to injure or defraud. In a prosecution under this section, relating to personal property that had been stolen, it would be necessary to aver and prove that the act charged was committed, “knowing the property to have been stolen”; and in such prosecution, relating to any writing specified in section 3176, it would be necessary to aver and prove that the offense charged was committed, “knowing the deed, conveyance or writing, to have been taken with the intention to injure or defraud.” This erroneous remark corrected, we hold Barber v. The State to be a sound exposition of the law; and we have been the more particular in correcting it, because the remark is relied on as- authority to defeat the prosecution in the case before us.
3. The act of the 7th of October, 1864, (Session Acts, p. 19,) provides for the punishment of horse-stealing with death, or ten years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. It is contended that this act not only repealed section 3180 of the Code, the prior law fixing the punishment of the same offense, but that it also repealed the accessorial section, 3178, under which the present indictment was found; and that, therefore, at the time of the commission of the al*26legecl offense in this case, "there was no statutory law for its punishment. It needs no argument to show the unsoundness of this position. The act of the 7th of October, 1864, did not leave the offense of horse-stealing without statutory law for its punishment; it only changed the punishment of the offense ; and to hold that such change repealed the accessorial section, 3178, would be making an application of the doctrine of repeal by implication, that could not be sustained by either principle or authority.
4. The legislature, by an act approved January 23,1866, (Acts 1865-6, p. 121,) amended the section of the Code under which the indictment was found, by adding, at the end of the section, the following words : “ or by fine and imprisonment, one or both, at the discretion of the jury trying the same ” ; thus making the section read, in so far as it relates to the punishment, as follows : “ must, on conviction, be imprisoned in the penitentiary, not less than two, or more than five years, or by fine and imprisonment, one or both, at the discretion of the jury trying the same.” A very cursory reading is sufficient to show what was intended by the legislature in making this amendment; it was to provide alternative punishments, at the discretion of the jury ; and by supplying the words, “be punished,” after the word “or ”, where it first occurs in the amendment, so that it will read, “ or be punished,” &c., what is simply a verbal inaccuracy will be corrected. It is a cardinal rule in the construction of a statute, that effect is to be given, if possible, to every clause and section of it; and it is the duty of courts, as far as practicable, so to reconcile the different provisions as to make the whole act consistent and harmonious. If this becomes impossible, then we are to give effect to what was manifestly the intention of the legislature, though by so doing we may restrict the meaning or application of general words. — Sedg. Stat. and Con. Law, 238.
The Code provides, (§§ 3620, 3621, 3622,) that “where an indictable offense is punished by fine only, or by fine and imprisonment, the jury must assess the fine, unless it is otherwise provided ” ; that “the court, in all cases, must fix the imprisonment, unless the power is expressly con*27ferred on the jury” ; and that “ imprisonment in the penitentiary must in no case be inflicted by the court, unless the power is expressly given.” Under these sections, construed in connection with section 3178, as amended, is it for the court or the jury, on a verdict of guilty, in a prosecution under the last-named section, to fix the punishment of imprisonment, if such punishment is prescribed ? The proper construction of these sections forces us to the conclusion, that in every such case it is for the jury to prescribe, and the court to fix the period of, the imprisonment; prescribing and fixing the period of imprisonment being separate and distinct things. Under the clear and explicit language of section 3621, as we have seen, “the court, in all cases, must fix the imprisonment, unless the power is expressly conferred on the jury” Now, does section 3178, as amended, expressly confer on the jury the power to fix the imprisonment, either in the penitentiary, or in the county jail ? Whatever may have been the intention of the legislature in the passage of the amendment, the answer must be that it does not; and such power not being expressly conferred, the conclusion attained, that the court must fix the period of imprisonment, is irresistible. And the soundness of this conclusion is not at all shaken by the words, “at the discretion of the jury”, where they occur in the amendment. The discretion conferred by these words refers exclusively to the “fine and imprisonment, one or both”, provided as an alternative punishment; and, if a fine be imposed, or, “ at the discretion of the jury ”, a fine be imposed and imprisonment prescribed, in either event, section 3620 expressly limits the power of the jury to the assessment of the fine, while the succeeding section (3621) expressly confers upon the court the exclusive power to fix the period of imprisonment.
“ Imprisonment in the penitentiary ”, or “ fine and imprisonment, one or both, at the discretion of the jury”, are alternative punishments, both presenting but a single choice. That choice rests exclusively with the jury : they may prescribe either the one or the other ; so that, as to these alternatives, the jury, necessarily, have the same discretion that they have as to fine and imprisonment, one or both, if *28that be the alternative adopted. It is clear, then, that the words, “at the discretion of the jury”, in the amendment, do not militate against the conclusion attained as to this part of the case.
5. Under section 3178, as amended, the punishment to be inflicted on a verdict of guilty, is an essential ingredient of the verdict; and no sentence of punishment by the court is authorized, unless the verdict shows the punishment to be inflicted. In every such case, it is the right of the accused to have the question of his punishment considered and passed upon by the jury; and it cannot be known that this right has been accorded to him, unless the verdict shows it. This right is of no minor importance ; for, if the question of punishment is considered, the milder or less rigorous may be imposed; and to sustain a verdict silent upon this question, woulcj place the accused in a position powerless for redress, if the jury should, either from incompetency, negligence, or willful refusal, fail to accord to him this clear legal right. We cannot, to sustain the verdict in the case before us which is thus defective, make the intendment that the jury properly' passed upon the question of punishment; such a conclusion would be at war with every just and benign principle on which our system of criminal law is founded, as it might result in depriving the accused of a clear legal right by intendment, without fault or neglect, or even implied acquiescence, on his part. We can never give our assent to the establishment of such a principle.
We think it a correct legal proposition, that the verdict alone can be looked to for the action of the jury as to all questions legitimately involved in, and necessary to be decided by it; and if the proper action upon all such questions is not affirmatively shown by the verdict, the legal presumption is, that the consideration of them was omitted by the jury. Let us apply this rule to the verdict in the case before us, which is in the following words : “ We, the jury, find the defendant guilty, in manner and form as charged in the bill of indictment.” Now, if the rule stated above be correct, the conclusion is excluded by the verdict *29itself, that the jury passed upon any other question than that of the guilt or innocence of the accused.
But further : If the accused had pleaded guilty, or confessed his guilt, would the record have shown more than is shown by the verdict, viz., “ that the accused was guilty» in manner and form as charged in the bill of indictment” ? In the event of such a plea, could the court have fixed the punishment, without the intervention of a jury? If it could not, then the sentence of the court on the verdict in the case before us, was unauthorized; if it could, then the statute prescribing alternative punishments at the discretion of the jury, is a nullity.
In such a prosecution, it is a mistake to suppose that the verdict of the jury, on a finding of guilty, determines whether the offense charged is a felony or a misdemeanor. A felony, within the meaning of our Code, “ is a public offense, punished with death, or which is or may be punished by confinement in the penitentiary.” — Code, § 3071. In every such prosecution, the punishment may be imprisonment in the penitentiary ; consequently, every offense denounced by the section is a felony; and the same remark is applicable to section 3085 of the Code, which provides alternative punishments for the offense therein named, in terms similar to those used in the statute before us.
6. The amendment to section 3178 did not change the punishment, and inflict a greater punishment than the law annexed to the crime when committed ; it simply provides a mitigated, alternative punishment, at the discretion of the jury; fine, or fine and imprisonment in the county jail, one or both, at the discretion of the jury, being considered a mitigated punishment, as compared with imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than two, nor more than five years. Therefore, the amendment in question is not obnoxious to the objection of being an ex-post facto law, within the prohibition of the constitution.—Calder v. Bull, 3 Dallas, 386; 1 Bishop’s Criminal Law, § 219, and authorities there cited.
7. The reversal of the judgment, because of the defective verdict of the jury, and unauthorized sentence of the *30court thereon, will not entitle the prisoner to be discharged, as is contended. It is the settled law of this State, that if one has been convicted of a felony, and the judgment has been reversed at his instance, or a new trial granted on his motion, he may be tried again.—Cobia v. The State, 16 Ala. 781.
For the error we have pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded ; and the prisoner will remain in custody until discharged by due course of law.