State v. Beagles

GANTT, P. J.

This record is before us on a writ of error sued out in behalf of the State.

On the 27th day of January, 1902, the prosecuting attorney of Vernon county, filed in the circuit court of said county an information against the defendant charging him with the defilement of his ward.

The defendant was arrested, duly arraigned, and pleaded “not guilty.” The cause was continued and defendant entered into a recognizance for his appear*626anee at the next term. At the May term, 1902, the cause was reached, and a jury impaneled, and the evidence on the part of the State was heard, and at its conclusion, the record recites: ‘ ‘ The defendant demurred to the evidence and called the attention of the court to the fact that the information on which this trial was begun, had been quashed, and to show that it had been quashed called the attention of the court to the rolls and record entries in cause No. 226, being a case entitled the State of Missouri v. R. H. Beagles, and from an inspection of said rolls and record entries, the court finds that the information in the case on which ‘this trial has so far progressed was on the 24th day of May, 1902, quashed under the provisions of section 2522, Revised Statutes 1899, by the filing of the second information against the said defendant for the same matter. And the court therefore sustains the point raised by the defendant that there is no information in this case on which to try the defendant.”

Thereupon the jury was discharged.

Thereupon the prosecuting attorney sued out this writ of error.

I. The question which forces itself upon our attention at the outset, is the right of the State to prosecute a writ of error upon the facts disclosed. Section 2709, Revised Statutes 1899, provides that, “"When any indictment is quashed, or adjudged insufficient upon demurrer, or when judgment thereon is arrested, the court in which the proceedings were had, either from its own knowledge or from information given by the prosecuting attorney, that there is a reasonable ground to believe that the defendant can be convicted of an offense if properly charged^ may cause the defendant to be committed or recognized to answer a new indictment; or if the prosecuting attorney prays an appeal to the Supreme Court, the court may, in its discretion, grant’ an appeal.” The State is allowed an appeal *627only in the cases and under the circumstances mentioned in the foregoing section.

By section 2711, Revised Statutes 1899, “if no appeal be taken by or allowed to the State in any case in which an appeal would lie on behalf of the State, the prosecuting attorney may apply for and prosecute a writ of error in the Supreme Court, in like manner and with like effect as such writ may be prosecuted by the defendant,” etc. This last mentioned section was evidently intended to grant the State the right to bring up a criminal case by writ of error, a right which this court held had not been granted in the condition of the law up to the time of the decisions in State v. Copeland, 65 Mo. 497, and State v. Cox, 67 Mo. 46.

"Writs of error are only allowed, however, by section 2711, supra, in cases in which an appeal would lie.

In State v. Clipper, 142 Mo. 474, and State v. Carr, 142 Mo. 607, and State v. Cornelius, 143 Mo. 179, and State v. Van Brunt, 147 Mo. 20, it was ruled by this court that the right of appeal given to the State was limited to the quashing of an indictment, or adjudging an indictment insufficient on demurrer, or arresting a judgment on an indictment, and that the statute did not include a right of appeal from a judgment quashing an information, or adjudging it bad on demurrer. It is true that in State v. Carpenter, 164 Mo. 588, the appeal was entertained, but the point was not made and in so far as it militates against the conclusions reached in the Carr and Clipper and other like cases it is not to be regarded as in any manner changing the law as therein announced. Afterwards, when the right of a defendant to appeal from a conviction on an information was questioned in State v. Thayer, 158 Mo. 36, the Court in Banc, while construing the statute as allowing an appeal to the defendant, carefully refrained from overruling the Carr and Clipper cases as to the right of the State. So that if this were a question of the sufficiency of the information, it is clear the State could *628not prosecute this writ of error because the statute has not allowed it. But we think it is clear the circuit court did not pass upon the sufficiency of the information,, but ruled simply that the first information, the one on which the defendant had been put on trial, had been quashed by the filing of a new information. We think it is obvious in view of the exclusive language of sections 2708, 2709 and 2711, Revised Statutes 1899, that neither an appeal nor writ of error lies from the ruling-of the circuit court on the question raised, and as our jurisdiction is appellate only, it follows that we are forbidden to review the action of the circuit court, and the writ of error is therefore quashed and dismissed.

Burgess and Fox, JJ., concur.