It is a rule of the Common Law, that where a Statute prohibits an act which was before lawful, and enforces the prohibition with a penalty, and a succeeding Statute, or the same Statute in a subsequent, substantive clause, prescribes a mode of proceeding for the penalty, different from that by indictment, the prosecutor may, notwithstanding, proceed by indictment upon the prohibitory clause, as for a misdemeanor at Common Law, or he may proceed in the manner pointed out by the Statute, at his option. (Whart. Cr. L. 80, 3d edit.; 2 Hale, 171 ; 1 Burr. 545, per Dennison J.; 4 Tenn. R. 205 ; 1 Arch. Pl. 1-2.) But, if the manner of proceeding for the penalty, be contained in the same clause which prohibits the act, the mode of proceeding given by the Statute must be pursued, and no other. (2 Burrow, 805 ; 1 Str. 679.) The first Section of the Act (Hart. Dig. Art 490) simply prohibits the doing of that of which the defendant is charged, and thereby makes it indictable. (Whart. Cr. L. 79, 80 ; 1 Arch. Cr. Pl. 1.) And although a mode of proceeding before a Justice of the Peace, for the punishment of the offender, is provided in the second Section of the same Statute, it does not exclude the proceeding by indictment, under the rule above stated, because it is not' contained in the same, but a subsequent, distinct, substantive clause ; and, therefore, the State had the option to proceed by indictment upon the prohibitory clause, as for a misdemeanor at Common Law, or to proceed
Judgment affirmed.