Lovelady v. State

Defendant was indicted for stealing two chickens of the value of two dollars, alleged to have been the property of Oliver Poe, was tried, and acquitted. Thereafter, an affidavit charging the defendant with the theft of two chickens, the property of Beadie Poe, was filed in the county court, upon the trial of which a judgment of conviction resulted. An appeal was taken to the circuit court, and defendant interposed a plea of former acquittal. The circuit court, sitting without a jury, found for the state upon this plea, and found the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment.

An acquittal of the defendant under a charge of larceny of property alleged to belong to one person is not a bar to prosecution under a charge of larceny of the same property alleged to belong to another person. Martha v. State, 26 Ala. 72. The test is, as pointed out in Hall v. State, 134 Ala. 90,32 So. 750, could the accused have been convicted under the first indictment upon proof of the facts averred in the second? Manifestly not; for ownership must be proven as alleged, and proof of the facts as averred in the second indictment, or affidavit, would have constituted a variance from the first indictment as to ownership. See Brown v. City of Tuscaloosa,196 Ala. 475, 71 So. 672.

As indicated, this prosecution was begun upon an affidavit filed in the county court. Section 3843 of the Code of 1923 provides that on appeal to the circuit court the trial shall be de novo, without indictment or presentment by the grand jury, but that the solicitor shall make a brief statement of the cause of complaint. In this case no brief statement was made by the solicitor, nor is it made to appear that the defendant waived this requirement. The trial was had upon the affidavit filed in the county court. In this there was error to reverse. McKee v. State, ante, p. 259, 107 So. 224; Perry v. State,17 Ala. App. 80, 81 So. 858.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.

Reversed and remanded.