(after stating the facts as above). It is well settled, except in jurisdictions where it is otherwise provided by statute, that one accused of burglary with intent to commit larceny may, in a second count, be charged with the larceny. It is also well settled that upon such an indictment the accused may be convicted of either of the offenses charged. But the question which the case now before us presents is whether one thus accused of burglary and larceny may be convicted and punished for both offenses. Upon this proposition there is conflict of authority. In Ex parte Peters (C. C.) 12 Fed. 461, it was said:
“According to the great weight of authority, it may be regarded as settled that a person who breaks and enters a house with intent to steal therefrom, and actually steals, may be punished under separate indictments for two offenses or one, at the election of the power prosecuting him..”
And the court cited Josslyn v. Commonwealth, 6 Metc. (Mass.) 236, State v. Ridley, 48 Iowa, 370, Breese v. State, 12 Ohio St. 146, 80 Am. Dec. 340, and Wilson v. State, 24 Conn. 57.
On examining those cases it will be found that none but the last fully sustains the doctrine so announced. In Josslyn v. Commonwealth, Chief Justice Shaw said that, where burglary and larceny “are averred in distinct counts as distinct substantive offenses not alleged to have been committed at the same time, and as one continued act, * * * the defendant may be convicted on both, and a judgment rendered founded on both.” The inference frorti this language is that, if the offenses were alleged to have been committed at the same time, but one crime would be charged, and but one penalty could be imposed. That this is so is made clear by the opinion of the same judge in Kite v. Commonwealth, 11 Metc. (Mass.) 581, where he said:
“If the larceny charged In the second count appears, in proof, to have been committed at the time of the breaking and entering, then it is merged, and the conviction is properly for burglary, and the sentence must be accordingly. But if a breaking and entering with intent to steal be proved, and a different larceny done at a different time be also proved, then the sentence may properly be awarded as for both offenses.”
*114■ State v. Ridley is authority only for the proposition that under an indictment charging three offenses, as burglary, larceny in a store in the nighttime, and simple larceny, a verdict of guilty might be found upon any one of the crimes so charged. In Breese v. State, it was held that a count charging burglary might be united in an indictment with a count charging larceny, and that on a general verdict of guilty on such a count the accused might be sentenced for the burglary, but not for the larceny, and that upon a verdict of guilty of the burglary as charged the court might legally proceed to sentence for that crime, without waiting a response to the charge of larceny.
In line with the doctrine of Ex parte Peters, however, are Speers v. Commonwealth, 17 Grat. (Va.) 570, Wilson v. State, 24 Conn. 57, State v. Warner, 14 Ind. 572; and Dodd v. State, 33 Ark. 517. In Bishop’s New Criminal Law, § 1062, the doctrine of the decisions last cited is declared to be in accordance with the weight of authority; but the author, adds, adopting the language of the dissenting opinion of Waite, C. J., in Wilson v. State:
“Still to make a burglary tbus .double, and punish it twice, first as burglary .and secondly as larceny, hardly accords with the humane policy of our law, and we have cases which refuse this double punishment. They proceed on the highly reasonable ground that where a criminal act has been 'Committed, every part of which may be alleged in a single count in an indictment and proved under it, the act cannot be split into several distinct crimes, and a several indictment sustained upon each.”
In 3 Enc. of PI. & Pr. 785, it is said:
“But the verdict and the conviction in such a case cannot be for both the burglary and. the larceny,.though they may be for either offence singly. When both offenses are united in one indictment, it is permissible to convict for- either offense without the other.”
' On page 791 the same authority says:
“But there cannot be a conviction for both offenses. There may, however, under such an indictment, be found a general verdict of guilty; but on this verdict there can be but one sentence, that for the burglary alone, and not for both burglary and larceny.”
These views are, we think, sustained by thfe weight of reason and authority. State v. McClung, 35 W. Va. 280, 13 S. E. 654; Yarborough v. State, 86 Ga. 396, 12 S. E. 650; Commonwealth v. Birdsall, 69 Pa. 482, 8 Am. Rep. 283; Roberts v. State, 55 Miss. 421; Triplett v. Commonwealth, 84 Ky. 193, 1 S. W. 84, 8 Ky. Law Rep. 67; Lyons v. People, 68 Ill. 271; Jennings v. Commonwealth, 105 Mass. 586; Commonwealth v. Lowery, 149 Mass. 67, 20 N. E. 697; State v. Nicholls, 37 La. Ann. 779; Breese v. State, 12 Ohio St. 146, 80 Am. Dec. 340.
0The judgment is affirmed. •