1. Criminal law: appeal by the State. — The offense charged was triable and punishable before a justice of the peace. Eevision, § 4324, as amended by chapter 18, Laws of 1866, p. 25; Constitution, art. 1, § 11; Eevision, 5055.
*403That the right of appeal is given to the State by the statute in such cases, is not denied. The language is explicit, that either party may appeal; that the cause shall, when thus appealed, stand for trial anew, and that no appeal, in a criminal case, shall be dismissed. Revision, §§ 5094, 5100, 5101, and see State v. Tait, 22 Iowa, 140.
But the point made is, that these provisions are in conflict with the Constitution, which declares (art. 1, § 12) that “no person shall, after acquittal, be tried for the same offense.” The argument being, that the justice had the power to summarily hear and try the case — did determine it; that defendant was upon a full and fair trial before a jury acquitted, and the State cannot, upon appeal, .again try him for the same offense. And herein we have the very question presented for our determination. In the case above cited (22 Iowa, 140) the appeal by the State (where the defendant was convicted) was sustained. There the only constitutional objection made was that the statute giving the right of appeal was in conflict with section 11, article 1, which, it was insisted, by “ saving to the defendant the right of appeal,” denied it necessarily to the State; and, so far as we are advised,. the question now made is a new one for this State.
We need not say that the defendant, by the proceedings before the justice, was “ acquitted ” within the language of the Constitution. That is to say, the justice had jurisdiction of the offense, there was a regular trial, verdict and judgment of “ not guilty,” and no one would pretend that the State could, upon a new information or indictment, put the accused again upon his trial. So far as concerns the right of the State to initiate, a second prosecution, the acquittal would be just as conclusive and effective as though ordered by a court of the most general and indisputable jurisdiction. And as the accused could not be put in new jeopardy in the one case, neither could *404he in the other. Therefore, it seems to us that the true inquiry is, whether, by the appeal, there was new jeopardy or a mere oonbmuation of the old.
2.-constitional law: twice in jeopardy. We have seen that the defendants’ case falls within the language of the, Constitution. Why is it not within its spi/ñt and mecmmg ? If not, then there can be no constitutional acquittal, so long as the State, by its legislation, may devise means to prosecute, try and retry, one charged with crime. For it could be as well and consistently provided that the State could appeal from a verdict of not guilty in the District Court, and upon a reversal here, again put the defendant upon his trial. In principle, and looking at the spirit of the Constitution, the cases are parallel. And aware of this rule the legislature, while giving to the State the right of appeal to this court (section 4905), expressly provides that we cannot reverse the judgment, the decision being merely obligatory upon the District Court as the correct exposition of the law. The propriety of such a provision is manifest enough when we reflect upon the necessity of submitting mooted questions in some form to the final adjudication of a tribunal having a common jurisdiction over the whole State, for we, of course, thereby tend to insure uniformity in the judicial administration of the law. And, in our opinion, the legislature cannot do more than this, where there has been an acquittal by the justice. So much of the statute, therefore, as undertakes to give to the State the right of appeal, and to retry the party charged after acquittal (we do not stop to explain what would or would not amojint to an acquittal, for the fact is conceded in the case before us), must in our opinion be held invalid. Mr. Bishop (1 Or. Law, section 664) says, “ that, in England, writs of error, the practical object of which is generally to bi’ing the matter under the review of a higher tribunal, *405seem to be allowable to the crown in criminal cases; but the courts of some of our States refuse them, and also refuse the right of appeal to the State, except where such proceedings are expressly allowed by statute, as in some States they are.” And then in explanation of this it is further said that “ a legislative provision for the rehearing of a criminal cause cannot be interpreted to violate the constitutional rule under consideration (that which protects a party from being put twice in jeopardy), whatever the words in which the provision is expressed. When, therefore, the defendant has been once in jeopardy, the jeopardy cannot be repeated without his consent, whatever statute may exist upon the subject. And so the writ of error, or the like, allowed the State, can authorize the State to procure the reversal of erroneous proceedings and proceed anew, only in cases in which the first proceedings did not create a legal jeopardy. But when the indictment is sufficient and the proceedings are regular, before a tribunal having jurisdiction down to the time when the jeopardy attaches, there can be no second jeopardy allowed in favor of the State on account of any lapse or error at a later stage” (section 665); and further, “if the tribunal has authority * * * whether it is an inferior one, as a justice’s court, or whether it is a superior tribunal, a conviction or acquittal in it will be a bar to any subsequent proceedings in the same, or by any other judicatory.” Section 666. And these propositions, plain and unquestionable in themselves, are abundantly supported by the authorities cited in the notes.
In The State v. Reynolds (2 Hayw. 110) the Supreme Court of Tennessee held, that a writ of error or appeal in the nature thereof would not lie for the State in a criminal case. In the course of the opinion we find this language : “ It is a rule of the common law that no one shall be brought twice in jeopardy for the same offense. *406Were it not for this salutary rule, one obnoxious to the government might be harrassed and run down by repeated attempts to carry on a prosecution against him. Because of this rule it is that a new trial cannot be granted in a criminal case when the defendant is acquitted. A writ of error will lie for the defendant but not against him. And see the observations of Bronson, J., in The People v. Corning, 2 Comst. 9, and cases there cited; also of Shaw, Ch. J., in The Commonwealth v. Cummings, 3 Cush. 212; 1 Bishop, § 658, and the very full note (3).
We do not say that the State may not under this statute, and perhaps others, take steps to have the erroneous rulings of these inferior tribunals corrected precisely as in this court it may have reviewed those made by the District Court. What we hold is, that, where the accused after trial upon the merits has been acquitted before the justice, the State cannot, upon appeal, compel him to stand a second trial. For if so then it would be just as competent to allow the State to appeal after an acquittal before the justice and in the District Court, and if the cause should be here reversed, have a third trial; and if there should be a third acquittal, then another appeal, and so on without end; and thus the constitutional guaranty would not be “ worth the parchment upon which it is written.” When the jeopardy has once attached (as it surely has when there has been a trial and acquittal •before a court of competent jurisdiction), the State under no known rule can be allowed to take a backward step, neither the justice nor the District Court (if the trial had been there), could, after such acquittal, grant a new trial. What could not be done in one form of proceeding could not, in view of defendant’s constitutional rights, in another.
Affirmed.