Plaintiffs in error were tried for murder in the court of first
instance in the Philippine Islands and were acquitted of the crime
of murder and convicted of the crime of assault and were sentenced
to six months' imprisonment and a fine. They appealed to the
Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, which reversed that
judgment and found them guilty of homicide and sentenced them to
various terms from eight to fourteen years' imprisonment and a
fine. On a writ of error seeking to review the judgment on the
ground that the action of the Supreme Court of the Philippine
Islands amounted to putting the accused in second jeopardy,
held that:
There is a vital difference between an attempt of the government
to review a verdict of acquittal in the court of first instance and
the action of the accused in himself appealing from a judgment
which convicts him of one offense while acquitting him from the
higher one charged in the indictment.
Kepner v. United
States, 195 U. S. 100,
distinguished.
Where, upon the indictment of a greater offense, the one accused
is found not guilty thereof, but guilty of a lower offense included
therein, and upon appeal from that judgment a new trial is granted
by the appellate court, the accused can, on the new trial, be tried
for the greater offense in the indictment, and such new trial does
not amount to placing him in jeopardy a second time for the same
offense within the meaning of the federal Constitution or of the
provisions in that regard in the Philippine Act of July 1, 1902, 32
Stat. 691.
The appeal of the accused in such case amounts to a waiver to
the plea of second jeopardy by asking that he be again tried for
the offense for which he has once been convicted, and if that
request be granted, he must take the burden with the benefit, and
go back for the new trial upon the whole case.
Quaere whether the constitutional provision against
second jeopardy was intended to apply to a judgment under these
circumstances.
In reversing the lower court and itself convicting the accused
on such appeal, the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands acted
within its powers, and in ordinary procedure in the courts of that
country under the Act of July 1, 1902.
The plaintiffs in error were proceeded against in the court
Page 199 U. S. 522
of first instance of the Province of Bulacan, Philippine
Islands, upon a complaint accusing them of causing the death of
Benito Perez "with great cruelty and evident premeditation . . . by
means of blows given with the butts of guns, they cooperating one
with the other." In other words, the accused were complained of as
guilty of murder in the first degree.
They were tried in the court above mentioned, and were acquitted
of the crime of murder, and convicted of the crime of assault,
which is included in the crime of murder charged in the complaint,
and they were therefore sentenced by the court to suffer a penalty
of six months' imprisonment, and to pay a certain sum to the heirs
of Perez, with subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency.
All three of the accused appealed to the Supreme Court of the
Philippine Islands from the judgment and sentence of the trial
court. The Supreme Court, having heard the case, reversed the
judgment of the court of first instance and convicted the accused
of the crime of homicide (in substance, murder in the second
degree), which is included in, and is a lower degree of, the crime
charged in the complaint, but is a higher degree of crime than that
of which the accused were convicted in the court below. Two of them
(Angeles and Trono) were sentenced to fourteen years, eight months,
and one day, and Natividad to imprisonment for eight years and one
day, and all three to the payment of an indemnity to the heirs of
the deceased.
The accused have brought the case here by writ of error to the
Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, for the purpose of
reviewing the judgment of that court.
Messrs. Aldis B. Browne, Alexander Britton, and Maurice Kelly
for plaintiffs in error.
Page 199 U. S. 528
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs in error seek a reversal of the judgment in their
case on the ground that the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands
had no power to reverse the judgment of the court of first
instance, and then find them guilty of a higher crime than that of
which they had been convicted in that court, and of which higher
crime that court had acquitted them, and they contend that such a
conviction by the Supreme Court of the Islands was a violation of
the act of Congress, passed July 1, 1902, 32 Stat. 691, a portion
of the fifth section of that act providing that "no person for the
same offense shall be twice put in jeopardy of punishment."
This language is to be found in connection with other language
in the same act providing for the rights of a person accused of
crime in the Philippine Islands. The whole language is
substantially taken from the Bill of Rights set forth in the
amendments to the Constitution of the United States, omitting the
provisions in regard to the right of trial by jury and the right of
the people to bear arms, and containing the prohibition of the
Thirteenth Amendment, and also prohibiting the passage of bills of
attainder and
ex post facto laws.
The important question to be determined is whether this action
of the Supreme Court of the Islands did violate the act of Congress
by placing the accused twice in jeopardy.
The meaning of the phrase, as used in the above-mentioned act of
Congress, was before this Court in
Kepner v.
United
Page 199 U. S. 529
States, decided in May, 1904,
195 U.
S. 100, where will be found a very full discussion of
the subject. The plaintiff in error in that case had been acquitted
of the crime charged against him in the court to first instance,
but the government, not being satisfied with the decision, appealed
to the Supreme Court, and that court reversed the judgment of
acquittal and found Kepner guilty of the crime of which the court
of first instance had acquitted him, and sentenced him to a term of
imprisonment, and suspended him from any public office or public
trust, and deprived him of the right of suffrage. This Court, upon
writ of error, held that, in reversing, upon the appeal of the
government, the judgment of the court of first instance, and itself
convicting the accused and pronouncing judgment against him, the
Supreme Court of the Islands violated the provision in question,
and its judgment was therefore reversed and the prisoner
discharged. It was also held that the government had no power to
obtain a review of a judgment or decision of the trial court
acquitting an accused party, and that the phrase in question was to
be construed as the same phrase would be construed in the
instrument from which it was originally taken --
viz., the
Constitution of the United States -- and that the settled and well
known meaning of the language, as used in the Constitution, must
also be taken when the same language is used in the act of
Congress, and not as it might possibly be construed with reference
to Spanish law or Spanish procedure.
The difference between that case and the one now before the
Court is obvious. Here, the accused, while acquitted of the greater
offense charged in the complaint, were convicted of a lesser
offense included in the main charge. They appealed from the
judgment of the court of first instance, and the government had no
voice in the matter of the appeal; it simply followed them to the
court to which they appealed. We regard that fact as material and
controlling. The difference is vital between an attempt by the
government to review the verdict or decision of acquittal in the
court of first instance and the action of the accused person in
himself appealing from the
Page 199 U. S. 530
judgment and asking for its reversal, even though that judgment,
while convicting him of the lower offense, acquits him of the
higher one charged in the complaint.
We may regard the question as thus presented as the same as if
it arose in one of the federal courts in this country, where, upon
an indictment for a greater offense, the jury had found the accused
not guilty of that offense, but guilty of a lower one which was
included in it, and, upon an appeal from that judgment by the
accused, a new trial had been granted by the appellate court, and
the question was whether, upon the new trial accorded, the accused
could be again tried for the greater offense set forth in the
indictment, or must the trial be confined to that offense of which
the accused had previously been convicted, and which conviction
had, upon his own motion, been set aside and reversed by the higher
court.
This question has given rise to much diversity of opinion in the
various state courts. Many of them have held that the new trial
must be confined to the lesser offense of which the accused had
been convicted on the first trial, while other courts have held
precisely the contrary, and that, upon a new trial, the whole case
was open as if there had been no former trial. Most, if not all, of
these two classes of cases have been cited by the respective
counsel in this case, and will be found in their briefs herein. It
would be unprofitable to cite and refer to each of them in detail
here. They have been carefully examined.
Those cases which limit the new trial proceed upon the ground,
as stated in
People v. Dowling, 84 N.Y. 478, 483, by
Folger, Chief Judge, as follows:
"The matter at the bottom is the constitutional provision that
'no person shall be subject to be twice put in jeopardy for the
same offense' (Const. of N.Y., Art. 1, par. 6), and yet new trials
are granted in criminal cases on the motion of the accused, and, if
he gets a new trial, he is thus subject to be twice put in
jeopardy. This is done on the ground that, by asking for a
correction of errors made on the first trial, he does waive his
constitutional protection, and does himself ask for a new
Page 199 U. S. 531
trial, though it brings him twice in jeopardy. But that waiver,
unless it be expressly of the benefit of the verdict of acquittal,
goes no further than the accused himself extends it. His
application for a correction of the verdict is not to be taken as
more extensive than his needs. He asks a correction of so much of
the judgment as convicted him of guilt. He is not to be supposed to
ask correction or reversal of so much of it as acquitted him of
offense. He therefore waives his privilege as to one, and keeps it
as to the other. It is upon this principle that where, by a verdict
of guilty on one count or for one offense and an acquittal on or
for another, there has been a partial conviction on an indictment,
and on writ of error there has been a reversal of the conviction,
the acquittal still stands good, and is, as to that count or
offense, a bar. As to that, the plea of
autrefois acquit
can be upheld, though the plea of
autrefois convict cannot
be upheld as to the offense of which the verdict was guilty. The
waiver is construed to extend only to the precise thing concerning
which the relief is sought."
But, in the subsequent case of
People v. Palmer, 109
N.Y. 413, 419, the effect of the statute of New York known as
sections 464 and 544 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, was under
consideration. Those sections enacted as follows:
"SEC. 464. The granting of a new trial places the parties in the
same position as if no trial had been had."
"SEC. 544. When a new trial is ordered, it shall proceed in all
respects as if no trial had been had."
The statute was held valid, and that it did not violate the
constitutional provision against subjecting a person to be twice
put in jeopardy for the same offense, as the jeopardy was incurred
with the consent of, and as a privilege granted to, the defendant
upon his application.
And generally it may be said that the cases holding that a new
trial is not limited in the manner spoken of proceed upon the
ground that, in appealing from the judgment, the accused
necessarily appeals from the whole thereof, as well that which
acquits as that which condemns; that the judgment is one entire
Page 199 U. S. 532
thing, and that, as he brings up the whole record for review, he
thereby waives the benefit of the provision in question for the
purpose of attempting to gain what he thinks is a greater benefit
--
viz., a review and reversal by the higher court of the
judgment of conviction. Although the accused was, as is said,
placed in jeopardy upon the first trial in regard not only to the
offense of which he was accused, but also in regard to the lesser
grades of that offense, yet by his own act and consent, by
appealing to the higher court to obtain a reversal of the judgment,
he has thereby procured it to be set aside, and when so set aside
and reversed, the judgment is held as though it had never been.
This was in substance decided in
United States v. Harding,
tried in the United States circuit court in 1846, 26 Fed.Cas. 131,
before Mr. Justice Grier, then a member of this Court, and this is
the ground substantially upon which the decisions of the other
courts are placed.
In
Kring v. Missouri, 107 U. S. 221, it
was stated by Mr. Justice Miller, who delivered the opinion of the
Court, that it was admitted that, by the law of Missouri as it
stood at the time of the homicide, the prisoner having been
convicted of murder in the second degree upon an indictment
charging him with murder in the first degree, if that conviction
was set aside, he could not again be tried for murder in the first
degree. That law was in force at the date of the homicide for which
Kring was sentenced to death, but it was subsequently, and before
his retrial, changed so as to deprive him of the benefit to which
he would otherwise have been entitled, and this Court held that
that change was, as to him,
ex post facto and void. It was
also said by the Court that there was
"no question of the right of the State of Missouri, either by
her fundamental law or by an ordinary act of legislation, to
abolish this rule, and that it is a valid law as to all offenses
committed after its enactment. The question here is does it deprive
the defendant of any right of defense which the law gave him when
the act was committed, so that, as to that offense, it is
ex
post facto?"
"This Court answered that question in the affirmative. "
Page 199 U. S. 533
In our opinion the better doctrine is that which does not limit
the court or jury, upon a new trial, to a consideration of the
question of guilt of the lower offense of which the accused was
convicted on the first trial, but that the reversal of the judgment
of conviction opens up the whole controversy, and acts upon the
original judgment as if it had never been. The accused, by his own
action, has obtained a reversal of the whole judgment, and we see
no reason why he should not, upon a new trial, be proceeded against
as if no trial had previously taken place. We do not agree to the
view that the accused has the right to limit his waiver as to
jeopardy when he appeals from a judgment against him. As the
judgment stands before he appeals, it is a complete bar to any
further prosecution for the offense set forth in the indictment, or
of any lesser degree thereof. No power can wrest from him the right
to so use that judgment, but if he chooses to appeal from it, and
to ask for its reversal, he thereby waives, if successful, his
right to avail himself of the former acquittal of the greater
offense contained in the judgment which he has himself procured to
be reversed.
It is urged, however, that he has no power to waive such a
right, and the case of
Hopt v. Utah, 110 U.
S. 574, is cited as authority for that view. We do not
so regard it. This Court held in that case that, in the Territory
of Utah, the accused was bound, by provisions of the Utah statute,
to be present at all times during the trial, and that it was not
within the power of the accused or his counsel to dispense with
such statutory requirement. But, on an appeal from a judgment of
this nature, there must be a waiver to some extent on the part of
the accused when he appeals from such judgment. When the first
trial is entered upon, he is then put in jeopardy within the
meaning of the phrase, and yet it has been held, as late as
United States v. Ball, 163 U. S. 662,
163 U. S. 671
(and nobody now doubts it), that, if the judgment of conviction be
reversed on his own appeal, he cannot avail himself of the "once in
jeopardy" provision as a bar to a new trial of the offense of which
he was
Page 199 U. S. 534
convicted. And this is generally put upon the ground that, by
appeal, he waives his right to the plea and asks the court to award
him a new trial, although its effect will be, if granted, that he
will be again tried for the offense of which he has been once
convicted. This holding shows that there can be a waiver of the
defense by reason of the action of the accused. As there is
therefore a waiver in any event, and the question is as to its
extent (that is, how far the accused by his own action may be
deemed to have waived his right), it seems much more rational and
in better accord with the proper administration of the criminal law
to hold that, by appealing, the accused waives the right to
thereafter plead once in jeopardy, when he has obtained a reversal
of the judgment, even as to that part of it which acquitted him of
the higher while convicting him of the lower offense. When, at his
own request, he has obtained a new trial, he must take the burden
with the benefit, and go back for a new trial of the whole case. It
does not appear to us to be a practice founded on solid reason to
permit such a limited waiver by an accused party while himself
asking for a reversal of the judgment.
There is also the view to be taken that the constitutional
provision was really never intended to, and, properly construed,
does not, cover the case of a judgment under these circumstances,
which has been annulled by the court at the request of the accused,
and there is therefore no necessity of relying upon a waiver,
because the correct construction of the provision does not make it
applicable.
A further question is made as to the power of the Supreme Court
of the islands to reverse the judgment appealed from and itself
convict the accused on appeal. The Supreme Court, in so doing,
acted within its power and jurisdiction. It is a result of the
ordinary procedure in the courts of that country, proceeding under
the act of Congress already referred to.
See statement of
the procedure in the case heretofore cited,
Kepner v. United
States, 195 U. S. 100.
Page 199 U. S. 535
The judgment of the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands is
right, and it is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting:
The plaintiffs in error were tried by one of the courts of first
instance in the Philippine Islands for the crime of murder. The
trial was before a single judge, without a jury, and simply upon a
written complaint filed by an individual with a justice of the
peace. The judge who tried the accused found them not guilty of
murder and guilty only of assault. For the latter offense they were
each sentenced to six months' imprisonment. Upon appeal by the
accused to the Supreme Court of the Islands, the judgment of the
trial court was reversed, and two of the accused were condemned to
the penalty, each one, of fourteen years, eight months, and one day
of
reclusion temporal, the other one to the penalty of
eight years and one day of
prision mayor, and all three to
the indemnification of five hundred Philippine pesos to the heirs
of the deceased.
I did not so state in a separate opinion in
Kepner v. United
States, 195 U. S. 101,
but my concurrence in the judgment in that case was upon the ground
that, from the moment of the complete acquisition of the Philippine
Islands by the United States, and without any act of Congress or a
proclamation of the President upon the subject, the people of those
islands became entitled, of right, to the benefit of all the
fundamental guaranties of life, liberty, and property to be found
in that instrument. Hence my approval of the review announced in
Kepner's case that the accused was entitled to the benefit
of the jeopardy clause of the Constitution.
Assuming that it was competent for the court of first instance
to proceed without a jury against the accused upon a mere complaint
by an individual, I desire to express my concurrence in the
dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE McKENNA so far as it
Page 199 U. S. 536
holds that the accused in the present case were entitled to the
benefit of the jeopardy clause of the Constitution, and that, after
their acquittal in the tribunal assuming jurisdiction to try them
for the crime of murder, they could not thereafter, in any
appellate tribunal deriving its authority from the United States,
be again tried for that crime or for any crime more serious than
the one of which they were convicted in the court of first
instance.
But I dissent from the opinion and judgment of the Court in the
present case upon the broader ground that, as the Constitution of
the United States is the supreme law of the land, as that
instrument declares that, except in cases arising in the land or
naval forces, or in the militia when in actual service in time of
war or public danger, "no person shall be held to answer for a
capital or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or
indictment of a grand jury," and that "the trial of all crimes,
except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury," and as the
people of the Philippine Islands are as much under the authority
and jurisdiction of the United States as are the people within the
limits of the several states and of the organized territories of
the United States, the prosecution of the accused, based only upon
the written complaint of an individual, filed with a justice of the
peace, and their trial by a single judge, was without authority of
law and a nullity from beginning to end. I repeat substantially
what has been said by me in former cases -- that no person within
the territory and subject to the sovereign jurisdiction of the
United States can be legally deprived of his life or liberty for
crime committed by him against the United States except in the mode
prescribed by the Constitution of the United States. I am unable to
perceive how a principle declared by the supreme law of the land to
be essential in all prosecutions for crime against the United
States can be recognized as applicable to a part of the people
subject to the sovereign jurisdiction of the United States, and yet
be denied to another part of the people equally subject to the
national authority. No tribunal or officer deriving its
Page 199 U. S. 537
authority from the United States can disregard the mandatory
injunctions of the Constitution by which the government of the
United States is created, and under the sanction of which alone
that government exists and performs its functions. It may be that
the application of these principles to the Philippine Islands and
to the people who inhabit them may, particularly in criminal
prosecutions, prove sometimes to be inconvenient. But no authority
exists anywhere to set aside plain provisions of the supreme law of
the land and substitute the law of convenience for the written
fundamental law.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, with whom concurs MR. JUSTICE WHITE,
dissenting:
I am unable to concur in the judgment of the Court.
When the United States acquired the Philippine Islands, the
system of jurisprudence which prevailed there was different from
our Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence. Trial by jury was unknown. The trial
court, called the court of first instance, had full authority to
find the facts and adjudge the law, subject, however, to a review
by a higher court of both the facts and law.
This system was continued substantially by the orders of the
President and the Act of July 1, 1902, providing for the government
of the islands.
Therefore, when
Kepner v. United States, 195 U.
S. 100, was decided, I was of opinion that, under such a
system, there could be no justifiable foundation for the plea of
autrefois acquit, resulting from a judgment of acquittal
by the lower court, when such judgment had been reversed by the
higher court -- in other words, that there could be no foundation
for the plea of
autrefois acquit arising from an acquittal
in a case where the acquittal was subsequently reversed as a result
of a right to review not only the law, but the facts, given by the
very statutes which provided for the trial. The Court, however,
decided otherwise, and I joined in a dissent to the opinion. The
Kepner case is not overruled. It is said to be so clearly
distinguishable as
Page 199 U. S. 538
not to call for much attention. I think otherwise. What was the
Kepner case, and what is this?
Kepner was charged with the crime of embezzlement. He was tried
in the court of first instance, without a jury, and acquitted. Upon
the appeal of the United States to the Supreme Court of the
Philippine Islands, the judgment of the court of first instance was
reversed, and he was found guilty, and sentenced to a term of
imprisonment. This Court reversed the judgment, and discharged
Kepner on the ground that, by his trial in the court of first
instance, he had been in jeopardy, and to try him again upon the
merits, even in an appellate court, was to put him a second time in
jeopardy for the same offense. In the case at bar, the plaintiffs
in error were charged with murder. They were tried in the court of
first instance without a jury. They were convicted of simple
assault. They appealed to the Supreme Court, and that court
reversed the judgment of the court of first instance and convicted
them of murder in the second degree. I will not stop to demonstrate
that the conviction of the lesser crime of assault was an acquittal
of the greater charge of murder. It has been made unnecessary by
clear concession in the opinion that plaintiffs in error were
acquitted of murder. Indeed, (though it probably makes no
difference in principle), it was explicitly so found and pronounced
in the judgment of the court of first instance. There is an exact
parallel, therefore, between this case and the
Kepner case
in all particulars but one. In the
Kepner case, the appeal
was by the United States; in the case at bar, it was by the
accused, and this difference is especially made the ground of
decision. It is, in effect, held that, because the defendants
(plaintiffs in error) appealed and sought a review, as authorized
by the statute, of the minor offense for which they were convicted,
the United States was given the right to try them for the greater
offense for which they were acquitted. In some of the cases quoted
in the opinion, such a result is said to arise from the consent of
the accused, deemed to be given by taking an appeal. An accused
would not purposely and consciously
Page 199 U. S. 539
appeal from an acquittal of a grave crime and cast from himself
the immunity that such an acquittal gives him. Should such consent
be imputed? Let it be remembered that we are dealing with a great
right -- I may even say a constitutional right -- for the opinion
of the Court discusses the case as though it were from a circuit
court of the United States. Should such a right be narrowly or
grudgingly considered? Should it be put in balance with other
rights, and lost by their exercise? I think that the guaranties of
constitutions and laws should not be so construed. The life and
liberty of the citizen are precious things -- precious to the state
as to the citizen -- and concern for them is entirely consistent
with a firm administration of criminal justice. I submit that the
state seeks no convictions except in legal ways, and because it
does not, it affords means of review of erroneous rulings and
judgments, and freely affords such means. It does not clog them
with conditions or forfeit by their exercise great and
constitutional rights. Yet, in my judgment, such is the effect of
the decision just rendered.
The opinion says that, as the accused takes up the whole record
for review,
"he thereby waives the benefit of the provision in question
[once in jeopardy] for the purpose of attempting to gain what he
thinks is a greater benefit --
viz., a review and reversal
by the higher court of the judgment of conviction."
I repeat again that constitutional guaranties and statutory
remedies should not be put in such barter; that a defendant should
not be required to give up the protection of a just (it must be so
regarded for the sake of the argument) acquittal of one crime as
the price of obtaining a review of an unjust conviction of another
crime.
In the opinion in the
Kepner case it was said:
"It is not necessary to determine in this case whether the
jeopardy provision in the Bill of Rights would have become part of
the law of the islands without congressional legislation."
Resting the decision on that legislation, the Court further
observed:
"How can it be successfully maintained that these expressions of
fundamental rights, which have been the subject of frequent
Page 199 U. S. 540
adjudication in the courts of this country, and the maintenance
of which has been ever deemed essential to our government, could be
used by Congress in any other sense than that which has been placed
upon them in construing the instrument from which they were taken?
It is a well settled rule of construction that language used in a
statute which has a settled and well known meaning, sanctioned by
judicial decision, is presumed to be used in that sense by the
legislative body.
The Abbotsford, 98 U. S.
440."
If this language expresses a proper and determining test of once
in jeopardy against the appeal of the United States, it must also
be the test of once in jeopardy against the appeal of the accused
in the case at bar. By that test, the judgment should be reversed.
Here and there may be found a decision which supports the
exposition of once in jeopardy expressed in the opinion. Opposed to
it is the general consensus of opinion of American textbooks on
criminal law and the overwhelming weight of American decided cases.
Which may we suppose Congress adopted in its legislation, the
interpretation of a few cases (able, it may be, and highly
sanctioned by the reputation of the courts that delivered them), or
the interpretation of the courts of a large number of the states of
the Union?
See cases in the margin.
*
THE CHIEF JUSTICE also dissented.
* Alabama --
Bell v. State, 48 Ala. 684;
Berry v.
State, 65 Ala. 117;
Sylvester v. State, 72 Ala.
201.
California --
People v. Gilmore, 4 Cal. 376;
People
v. Apgar, 35 Cal. 389;
People v. Gordon, 99 Cal.
227.
Florida --
Johnson v. State, 27 Fla. 245;
Golding
v. State, 31 Fla. 262.
Illinois --
Brennan v. People, 15 Ill. 511;
Barnett
v. People, 54 Ill. 325.
Iowa --
State v. Tweedy, 11 Ia. 350;
State v.
Helm, 92 Ia. 540.
Louisiana --
State v. Dennison, 31 La.Ann. 847;
State v. Victor, 36 La.Ann. 978.
Michigan --
People v. Knapp, 26 Mich. 112, 114;
People v. Comstock, 55 Mich. 405, 407.
Minnesota --
State v. Lessing, 16 Minn. 75.
Mississippi --
Morris v. State, 8 S. & M. 762;
Hurt v. State, 25 Miss. 378.
Missouri -- Prior to alteration effected by constitutional
amendment of 1875, as to which
see State v. Simms, 71 Mo.
538, in
State v. Ross, 29 Mo. 32;
State v.
Kattlemann, 35 Mo. 105;
State v. Brannon, 55 Mo.
63.
New York -- Prior to alteration effected by the Code of
Procedure, as to which
see People v. Palmer, 109 N.Y. 413,
in
Guenther v. People, 24 N.Y. 100;
People v.
Dowling, 84 N.Y. 478,
and see People v. Cignarale,
110 N.Y. 23.
Oregon --
State v. Steeves, 29 Or. 85.
Tennessee --
Campbell v. State, 9 Yerg. 333;
Slaughter v. State, 6 Humph. 410, 415.
Texas --
Jones v. State, 13 Tex. 168.
Virginia -- Before alteration by statute, as to which
see
Briggs v. Commonwealth, 82 Va. 554, doctrine enforced in
Stuart v. Commonwealth, 28 Gratt. 950. Reinstated by later
statute, as to which
see Forbes v. Commonwealth, 90 Va.
550, and
Benton v. Commonwealth, 91 Va. 782.
Washington --
State v. Murphy, 13 Wash. 229.
Wisconsin --
State v. Martin, 30 Wis. 216;
State v.
Hill, 30 Wis. 416;
State v. Belden, 33 Wis. 120. But
not in cases of misdemeanors --
Rasmussen v. State, 63
Wis. 1.
Georgia, owing to constitutional provisions, and by statute in
the States of Indiana, Kansas, and Kentucky, when a new trial is
granted on motion of an accused, he may be tried again for the
greater offense of which he was acquitted on the first trial.
Morris v. State, 1 Blackf. 37;
Veatch v. State,
60 Ind. 291;
State v. McCord, 8 Kan. 232;
Commonwealth
v. Arnold, 83 Ky. 1.