
    191 La. 380
    STATE v. O'DAY.
    No. 34840.
    Supreme Court of Louisiana.
    May 30, 1938.
    On Rehearing Oct. 31, 1938.
    Second Rehearing Refused Nov. 28, 1938.
    
      J. Bernard Cocke, of New Orleans, for appellant.
    Gaston L. Porterie, Atty. Gen., James O’Connor, Asst. Atty. Gen., Charles A. Byrne, Dist. Atty.,. and Conrad Meyer, Jr., and Sidney A. Mitchell, Asst. Dist. Attys., all of New Orleans, for the State.
   ODOM, Justice.

The defendant was prosecuted in the Parish of Orleans, this state, for the crime of murder. He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to serve a term of six and one-half to twenty years at hard labor in the State Penitentiary. He appealed to this court, and the conviction and sentence were affirmed.

Thereafter, the district attorney filed a bill of information against him under Act No. 15 of 1928, charging that he was a multiple offender; that in June, 1931, he had been charged in the Province of Alberta, Dominion of Canada,, “with the crime of stealing an automobile of the value of Eight Hundred and Fifty ($850.00) dollars, which said crime is a felony under the law of Louisiana; that the said defendant pleaded ‘Guilty’ to the said crime and was duly sentenced on June 25th, 1931, to imprisonment in the Penitentiary of the Dominion of Canada, located at Saskatchewan, in the Province of Alberta, Dominion of Canada, for a term of two years”.

It was further charged in this bill that the defendant had previously been convicted of the crime of grand larceny in the State of Oregon and had served a term in the state penitentiary of that state.

Counsel for defendant moved to quash the indictment on the ground:

“That there is no such crime or felony known to the law of Louisiana as ‘stealing an automobile of a value of $850.00’; that the terms of Act 15 of 1928 specifically provide that in order that one might become amenable to its provisions, the previous felony must have been a felony under the laws of this state; that there being no felony known to our laws such as ‘stealing an automobile of the value of $850.00’ same cannot serve as a basis for a prosecution under the terms of Act 15 of 1928.”

The motion to quash the indictment was overruled by the court, and counsel for defendant reserved a bill. In order to show that defendant had committed a felony in the Province of Alberta, Dominion of Canada, the district attorney offered to file in evidence the following certificate, properly authenticated:

“Whereas — Jack Day alias Jack O’Day. — - of — -Calgary Alberta — was on this day convicted before the undersigned for that * * * he the said — -Jack Day — on or about the — 31st—day of- — May A. D. 1931 at — Calgary Alberta — in the said Province did — unlawfully steal a Buick Sedan automobile, License No. 5-815 of the value of about $850.00 the property of R. Hind. Contrary to Section 377 of the C.C.C. and the said Jack Day having elected to be tried summarily pleaded ‘Guilty’.
“And it was thereby adjudged that the said — Jack Day — for his offence should be imprisoned in the Penitentiary Prince Albert in the said Province, and there kept for the term of — two years. — ”

Counsel for defendant objected to the introduction of this certificate on the ground that there was nothing to show that the crime of “stealing an automobile” as defined by the Penal Code of the Dominion of Canada would be a felony if committed in- the State of Louisiana.

The objection was overruled, the certificate was admitted in evidence, and counsel, for defendant reserved a bill.

Defendant was convicted under Act No. 15 of 1928, his previous sentence of six and one-half to twenty years at hard labor was set aside, and he was sentenced, as a third offender, to serve a term of from forty to sixty years*at hard labor in the State Penitentiary. From this conviction and sentence defendant appealed.

Other bills were reserved during the course of the trial, but under the view which we take of the case they need not be discussed.

While being a multiple offender is not a crime or offense (State v. Ugarte, 176 La. 54, 145 So. 266; State v. Guidry, 169 La. 215, 124 So. 832), yet a proceeding by the State under Act No. 15 of 1928 to have a defendant sentenced as a second or third offender is in the nature of a criminal prosecution, and the burden is upon the State to prove the charges laid in the indictment. State v. Brown, 185 La. 855, 171 So. 55.

In the case at bar it is charged that defendant was prosecuted in the Province of Alberta, Dominion of Canada, “with the crime of stealing an automobile of the value of Eight Hundred and Fifty ($850.00) Dollars”, that he had pleaded guilty and was sentenced to hard labor for two years. It is further alleged that “said crime is a felony under the law of Louisiana”. It was therefore necessary for the State to prove that the crime of “stealing an automobile” valued at $850 in the Dominion of Canada is such a crime or offense under the laws of Canada as would, if committed in Louisiana, be a felony under our laws. In the case of State v. Brown, supra, the State alleged that the defendant had been convicted in the State of Texas of the crime of “felony theft”. The defendant contended that the crime of “felony theft” as denounced by the penal statutes of the State of Texas was not such a crime as would amount to a felony if committed in the State of Louisiana. In the course of our opinion we said [page 56] :

“As to bill No. 2, if it be true that the crime of ‘felony theft’ as denounced by the laws of Texas would not amount to a felony if committed in Louisiana, the motion to quash is good and should have been sustained by the trial judge, because it is perfectly clear that where Act No. 15 of 1928 is -invoked in order to have a defendant sentenced as a second or third offender, and where it is alleged that he had been previously prosecuted and convicted of crimes committed in other states, it must be alleged and shown that those crimes, if committed in this State, would be felonies under our law.”

In that case it was shown that the crime of “felony theft” under the Texas law is theft of property of the value of $50 or more, and we held that the State had made out its case, because under our laws the .larceny of property having a value of $50 or more is a felony.

In the case presently before us, no effort was made by the State to show that the crime of “stealing an automobile” as that crime is defined in the Criminal Code of Canada would be a felony if committed in Louisiana. See State v. Brown, 175 La. 357, 143 So. 288. As a matter of fact, the State could not have made that proof if it had made the attempt. The Criminal Code of Canada speaks for itself. Under that Code as interpreted *by the-courts of Canada, it is perfectly clear that one may be guilty of “stealing an automobile” without carrying it away or without the element of “asportation”, which under our law is an essential ingredient of the crime of larceny.

In Canada there are no crimes called “larceny” or “stealing”. Such crimes or offenses are included in the term “Theft”, as defined by the Dominion Criminal Code. “Theft” is defined by Article 347 of that Code as follows:

“Theft or stealing is the act of fraudulently and without colour of right taking, or fraudulently and without colour of right converting to the use of any person, anything capable of being stolen, with intent
“(a) to deprive the owner, or any person having any special property or interest, temporarily or absolutely of such thing or of such property or interest; or
“(b) to pledge the same or deposit it as security; or
“(c) to part with it under a condition as to its return which the person parting with it may be unable to perform; or
“(d) to deal with it in such a manner that it cannot be restored in the condition in which it was at the time of such taking and conversion.
“2. Theft is committed when the offender moves the thing or causes it to move or to be moved, or begins to cause it to become movable, with intent to steal it.” (Italics are ours.)

Commenting on this article of the Code, the author says in a note:

“General. From the above definition itself and from explanations of the subject by the Royal Commissioners (quoted at pp. 40.1-404 ante) it will be seen that Theft is not restricted to what, under the common law, constituted larceny, — the principal ingredient of which was the physical asportation or taking and carrying away of an article of personal property 'out of the possession and against the will of the owner, for the purpose of converting it to the taker's own use, or depriving the owner of it ■ — but that it is intended to and covers all other means of fraudulent conversion, or misappropriation of another’s personal property; so that Theft, as a general term, includes not only everything and every act amounting to larceny under the common law, as one of the different ways in which ■the offense can be committed, but all other fraudulent conversions and misappropriations of any article of personal property as Another method as committing theft; the essential ingredient of larceny at common law — namely, the taking and carrying away of the thing out of the owner’s possession and against his will,- — being no longer necessary, but any fraudulent conversion or misappropriation of any article or thing belonging to another being sufficient to constitute theft, whether, at the time of the fraudulent conversion or misappropriation thereof, the article or thing is in the offender’s lawful possession or not.” (Italics are ours.)

Article 377 of that Code prescribes the punishment for “stealing an automobile” as follows:

“Everyone who is found guilty of stealing an automobile or motor car shall be sentenced to not less than one year’s imprisonment, etc. etc.”

In the case of Henderson v. Northwest Mutual Insurance Co., reported in Dominion Law Reports, Volume I, Page 339, decided in 1925, the Court of Appeal, British Columbia, held that under the Criminal Code of Canada one might be guilty of “stealing an automobile” without moving or carrying it away. In that case the court found as a fact that the defendant did not move the automobile from the garage where it was stored. It was shown, however, that the thief opened the car doors, got into the automobile, but was unable to start it because he could not' manipulate the switch. There was no “asportation” of the car. Notwithstanding this, it was held that there was a “stealing” of the car. In arriving at this conclusion, the court pointed out that under the Code “theft is committed when the offender * .* * begins to cause it to become movable”. In other words, it was held that the defendant was guilty of stealing the car because he began a manipulation of the switch and the starter as preliminaries to the moving and the carrying away of the car.

In the case of Canadian Surety Company v. Doucett (New Brunswick Supreme Court, Appeal Division), reported in Dominion Law Reports (1936), Volume II, at Page 619, suit was brought by the school board against the surety on the bond of the secretary. The secretary of the school board gave a bond for the “faithful performance of the duties of his office”, the bond indemnifying the school board against acts of “larceny or embezzlement”. The court said:

“It was contended that the plaintiff must prove that the defendant was guilty of the crime of larceny or embezzlement before any liability is attached. There is no crime called ‘larceny’ now under the Criminal Code. It is included under ‘Theft’. There is no crime under the code called ‘Embezzlement’. It is also dealt with under ‘Theft’, etc. etc.”

In the instant case the State proved that the defendant had, prior to his conviction and sentence in Louisiana, been guilty of the crime of “stealing an automobile” valued at $850 in the Dominion of Canada.

But whether he feloniously took and “carried it away” does not appear. Under the laws of Canada he may have done no more than open the car door, get into it, attempt to manipulate the switch and the starter. He may have failed to start it, may not have moved it at all. And yet, under the laws of Canada, if he did that and nothing more, he was guilty of stealing the car, if such acts were done with intent to steal it, because in Canada a theft is committed when the offender causes a thing to move “or begins to cause it to become movable, with intent to steal it”.

But, under the laws of this state, such acts would not constitute the crime of larceny of an automobile. The burden was upon the State to prove that such acts as were committed by the defendant in the Dominion of Canada would, if committed in the State of' Louisiana, amount to a felony here. It has failed to do so.

For the reasons assigned, the conviction and sentence under Act No. 15 of 1928 are set aside.

On Rehearing.

HIGGINS, Justice.

The accused, Jack O’Day, alias Jack King, was indicted and tried for the murder of one Estelle Hughes. He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to a term of six years and six months, to twenty years in the State Penitentiary. He appealed and the verdict of the jury and sentence of the court were affirmed. State v. O’Day, 188 La. 169, 175 So. 838.

The State then filed a bill of information under Act No. 15 of 1928, charging the defendant with being a multiple or habitual offender, alleging that he had been previously convicted and sentenced, first, for the crime of manslaughter in Louisiana, second, for the crime of “stealing an automobile of the value of $850.00” in the Dominion of Canada, and, third, for the crime of “grand larceny” in the State of Oregon.

When arraigned, the defendant elected to stand mute and the case was set for trial. Thereafter, the district judge found him guilty as charged and sentenced him to serve a term at hard labor in the State Penitentiary of not less than forty years nor more than sixty years. He again appealed, relying for a reversal of the conviction and sentence on several bills of exceptions.

This court concluded that the State had failed to prove that the theft of the automobile in Canada, for which the defendant had been convicted and sentenced, would constitute the crime of grand larceny under the law of this State, because the essential element of larceny was not shown and asportation was not a necessary ingredient of the crime of stealing an automobile under the Canadian statute. We ordered the conviction and sentence, under Act No. 15 of 1928, set aside, stating that our conclusion made it unnecessary to pass upon the other bills of exception.

The State then applied for a rehearing on the ground that this Court had set aside the conviction and sentence in its entirety without passing upon the legality of the conviction of the defendant as a second offender. A rehearing was granted and the bills of exception, heretofore not passed upon by us, were reargued.

Preliminarily to presenting his argument with reference to the respective remaining bills of exception, counsel for the defendant raised, in this court, the point that, as we had decided that the count in the information with reference to the alleged Canadian felony had not been proved by the State, the entire finding and sentence of the trial judge should be set aside, because the admission of evidence under this illegal count so prejudiced the mind of the trial judge that the accused failed to obtain a fair and impartial trial, citing State v. Nejin, 140 La. 793, 805, 808, 74 So. 103; State v. Bailey, 165 La. 341, 115 So. 613, 58 A.L.R. 1.

The first case is not in point, because the affidavit under which the accused was being prosecuted failed to charge him with being a previous offender and, therefore, the evidence with reference to prior convictions and sentences was inadmissible. We said that, as the trial judge was then considering the question of the guilt or innocence of the accused on a similar charge and illegally permitted the introduction of this highly prejudicial evidence, the conviction and sentence in its entirety would be set aside. There, the accused was being tried for an alleged new offense and the judge had the right to determine whether or not he was guilty. It was our view that he was entitled to be tried and his guilt or innocence of the new offense determined without this illegal and prejudicial evidence being introduced against him. In short, the judge necessarily took into consideration this inadmissible and damaging evidence in determining his guilt on the new charge. In the instant case, the defendant had already been convicted by a jury for manslaughter and sentenced by the court therefor. The question of his guilt or innocence on that charge had been settled. The purpose of filing the information under Act No. 15 of 1928 was not to affect his guilt or innocence of the crime for which he had been convicted, but to determine the extent of the sentence that the court should impose. The question of whether or not the defendant had been previously convicted and sentenced and served a term in a penitentiary for a felony was simply a question of fact. It did not involve his guilt or innocence of the previous charges, but only the question of whether or not he was the same person who had been previously convicted of a felony and had served a sentence in a penitentiary therefor. State v. Guidry, 169 La. 215, 124 So. 832.

In the second case, State v. Bailey, supra, which cites with approval the first case, State v. Nejin, the accused was charged in separate counts in the information with the crime of assault and robbery and with a prior conviction. Under the second count, evidence that the accused had been previously convicted and sentenced for entering a dwelling house in the daytime was admitted against him over his objection. This court concluded that the evidence had been improperly and illegally admitted, because Section 974 of the Revised Statutes only authorized the judge to impose an additional sentence where the accused had been convicted and sentenced for violating the same law and not where the accused had been charged and convicted for a different offense than the one for which he was being tried. In setting aside the conviction and sentence, we followed the ruling of State v. Nejin, pointing out that the admission of this illegal and prejudicial evidence so influenced the minds of the jurors that the accused failed to obtain a fair and impartial trial with reference to the new offense for which he was being tried. Our observations of why the case of State v. Nejin is not apposite equally apply here.

The motion to quash the information was properly overruled by our learned brother below, because, while under the. Canadian statute, talcing and carrying away of the automobile was not an indispensable ingredient of the crime of stealing an automobile, it appears that cases where the automobile was moved are likewise covered by this Canadian statute, and therefore the State might have been able to show on the trial of the instant case that, as a matter of fact, the accused did move the automobile and, therefore, committed the crime of grand larceny denounced as a felony under the laws of this State. In our original opinion we pointed out that the State failed to prove asportation and, therefore, did not estáblish one of the necessary elements of the crime of grand larceny under the laws of Louisiana."

The defendant has also cited the ' case of State v. Brown, 175 La. 357, 143 So. 288, which is not in point, because it was there shown that the offense under the Alabama statute was not a crime in Louisiana. In the instant case, the Canadian law covers both types of stealing, i. e., where there was asportation and where there was none. The former is a crime under our larceny laws, the latter is not. Therefore, the State was entitled to prove, under this count of the information, if it could, that the defendant did take or move the automobile away. The mere fact that the State was unable to prove asportation of the automobile under this count of the information does not per se make the evidence introduced with reference thereto inadmissible. The evidence, unless otherwise inadmissible, was lawfully before the court, but inadequate to prove the State’s case on this count. The accused was entitled to have this count of the information and the evidence introduced thereunder rejected, because the State failed to show that he was a third offender under the statute, but he was not entitled to have the entire finding and sentence of the trial judge dismissed.

Bill of exception No. 1,"having been disposed of in our original opinion, as above supplemented, the next one for our consideration is bill of exception No. 2. This exception results from the trial judge overruling pleas of former jeopardy and former acquittal. The record shows that after the accused had been convicted and sentenced for the crime of manslaughter, the district attorney filed an information under Act No. 15 of 1928, charging the defendant with being a third offender. He was arraigned, tried and found guilty. He filed a motion for a new trial, based upon sixteen bills of exception. The motion was overruled and the accused was then sentenced. After the attorney for the defendant filed his bills of exception and motion for an appeal, but before the trial judge placed his per curiam on the bills, or signed the order of appeal, he granted the defendant a new trial, based upon his previous motion therefor. The defendant objected to the granting of a new trial and his objection was overruled. He reserved a bill of exception. The district attorney then nol-prossed the first information and filed a second one under Act No. 15 of 1928. The accused then applied to this court for writs of certiorari, mandamus and prohibition, which were refused on the ground that the applicant made no showing of injury and had obtained, by the ruling of the district judge in granting him a new trial, all of the relief that he could have obtained by the successful prosecution of his contemplated appeal.

Our ruling was not only correct, but was in accord with the jurisprudence which holds that there is no former jeopardy in proceedings where an accused is charged as a second and third offender. State v. Hardy, 174 La. 458, 141 So. 27; State v. Ugarte, 176 La. 54, 145 So. 266; State v. Guidry, 169 La. 215, 124 So. 832, and State v. Cass, 188 La. 606, 177 Sa 682.

It is very difficult to follow counsel’s argument as to his plea of former acquittal, because the accused was found guilty and, even if illegally convicted, would be subject to further prosecution on a legal charge, after the illegal proceeding had been set aside on appeal.

Bill of exception No. 3 was reserved when the court, over defendant’s objection, admitted in evidence that portion of a free and voluntary statement made by the defendant to the district attorney in which he admitted that he had served two, two-year terms in two penitentiaries. The objection was in four parts: First, that the complete statement contained irrelevant matters; second, that the count with reference to the Canadian charge did not set up any felony under the laws of Louisiana and, therefore, no evidence could be admitted under it; third, that the information charges that defendant admitted having served two years in the Oregon State Penitentiary for robbery, whereas, the information alleges that he served this sentence for the crime of grand larceny; and, fourth, that in his statement the accused admitted that he had served a term in the penitentiary in Alberta, Canada, for the crime of robbery, whereas, the information charged that he had served this sentence for stealing an automobile.

We shall discuss these points in the above order:

(1) The learned trial judge excluded all of that part of the confession or statement of the accused with reference to the killing of Estelle Hughes, and admitted only that portion that dealt with the alleged criminal record of the accused. The issue before the court was whether or not the prisoner was the same party who had been convicted of the alleged felonies covered by the documentary evidence consisting of the certificates of the Wardens of the penitentiaries. The portion of the defendant’s statement admitted in evidence was pertinent and admissible to show his correct name and age and that he had been arrested and served terms for “robbery of a car and theft”, and that he had served time in the penitentiary therefor. It also revealed the penitentiaries in which he had served and the different aliases he used. All of this information was relevant to the issues before the court.

(2) The second objection is a reiteration of the defendant’s contention made in connection with the motion to quash the count of the information with reference to the Canadian charge and we have already disposed of that matter.

3 and 4. The defendant’s admission that he had served terms in penitentiaries for “robbery of a car and theft” was admissible in evidence as tending to show that he was a multiple offender, in having served a term in the Oregon Penitentiary for grand larceny and a term in the Canadian Penitentiary for having stolen an automobile. The mere fact that he used the word “robbery” in his statement does not mean that he was confessing to robbery only in its technical meaning, for it appears that he was using that word in the sense of “theft” or “stealing”. The State, therefore, was not proving that the defendant confessed to having been con-victed and having served sentences for crimes different than those charged in the information.

Bill of exception No. 4 was reserved to the admission in evidence of exhibit “Byrnes 1 and 2”, which is a carbon copy of a letter consisting of two pages, written by the district attorney to J. W. Lewis, Warden of the Oregon Penitentiary, at Salem, Oregon. It is said that the exhibit was irrelevant, immaterial and hearsay evidence and, therefore, inadmissible. The evidence was not hearsay, because the district attorney identified the copy of his letter while he was on the witness stand. He explained that he addressed the letter to Honorable J. W. Lewis, Warden of the Penitentiary, Salem, Oregon, asking for a certificate, authenticated and in proper form, in the matter of Jack O’Day, alias Jack White, Joe Day, etc. The witness testified that the original of this exhibit was deposited in the United States mails, after having been properly addressed, sealed and stamped. He states that the Warden’s certificate and authenticating documents were received at his office in due course, through the United States mail, in a properly addressed and sealed envelope, postmarked “Salem, Oregon”, with the stamps thereon properly cancelled.

The warden’s certificate was an essential part of the State’s case and the purpose of the original of the exhibit, which is the subject of the bill of exception, was to confirm the explanation of the district attorney as to the manner in which he came in possession of the documents, “Nos. 3 and 4”, the warden’s certificate. Furthermore, this evidence was admissible as tending to establish the genuineness of exhibits “Nos. 3 and 4”, for the latter exhibits were created in order to comply with the requests of the district attorney’s letter, exhibit “1 and 2”, which was admissible for the purpose of identifying and interpreting the warden’s authenticated certificate.

Bill of exception No. 5 was taken to the judge’s ruling in admitting in evidence exhibits “Nos. 3 and 4”, which consist of the certificate of the warden of the Oregon Penitentiary at Salem, Oregon, and the certificate of the Secretary of the State of Oregon, certifying to the authenticity of the warden’s certificate. As stated by the trial judge, these exhibits are in accordance with the provisions of Act No. 16 of 1928 and the Act of Congress (R.S. Sec. 906, 28 U.S.C.A. § 688; Acts of Mar. 27, 1804, C. 56, §§ 1, 2, 2 Stat. 298, 299; Feb. 21, 1871, C. 62, 16 Stat. 419). This certificate and the defendant’s voluntary statement show indisputably that the prisoner at the bar and the one who served a term in the Oregon State Penitentiary for grand larceny under the name of “Joe King” and other aliases is one and the same person. It appears that the attestation is in due form and by proper officer and bears the seal of the State of Oregon.

Bill of exception No. 6 was taken to the ruling which permitted the introduction in evidence of “Byrnes 6, 7, and 8”, consisting respectively of the superintendent of the Canadian Penitentiary’s certificate, the committment of the trial court and the authenticating certificate of the Vice-Consul of the United States at Ottawa, Canada. The district judge, in his per curiam, states:

“Act 16 of 1928 provides for the admissibility of the certificate of the superintendent or other chief officer of a penitentiary. The aforesaid certificate and committment thereto attached, complies in every respect with our statute and this Court therefore, admitted the same in evidence, ‘as prima facie evidence of the imprisonment and of the discharge of such person’ as permitted by our Act 16 of 1928. This Court took the position that Byrne 6 and 7 were admissible in evidence without the aid of Byrne 8 under the provisions of Act 16.”

This evidence was admitted under the count in the information charging the defendant with having been convicted and sentenced to a term in the penitentiary for “stealing an automobile valued at $850.00” in the Province of Alberta, Canada. The superintendent certified that he was the keeper of all of the records of the Canadian Penitentiary and he affixed his signature and seal to the document in which .he certifies that Jack O’Day had been incarcerated in the penitentiary for two years under a committment of the trial court, which showed that he had pleaded guilty to stealing a Buick automobile valued at $850 and was sentenced to serve two years in the penitentiary. The authenticating certificate shows that the superintendent of the penitentiary was in charge of the records and the custodian thereof, and had authority to authenticate his documents with the seal of his office. This evidence was relevant, because it tended to establish the identity of the accused and was in proper form. It was legally before the court, • even though its effect subsequently was nullified by the State’s failure to prove that the accused had moved the Buick car. But even if these documents had been improperly admitted, it would avail the defendant no further relief for the entire Canadian-count has been eliminated by our previous holding.

Bills of exception Nos. 7 and 8 are substantially the same as bills of exception Nos. 4, 5 and 6, except that they involve the carbon copy of a letter of the assistant district attorney v and the authentic certificates of the warden of the Oregon Penitentiary and the superintendent of the Penitentiary of the Dominion of Canada. Our rulings on the previous bills are decisive of the points presented in these exceptions.

The ninth bill of exception was reserved to the court’s ruling in refusing to grant a motion for a new trial. The allegations of the motion consist of a reiteration of all of the bills of exception, the only new matter being that the State had failed to offer any proof that the accused is the same person who was charged in the Parish of Orleans with the murder of Estelle Hughes and convicted of and sentenced for manslaughter. The record shows that the accused was tried for murder and convicted of manslaughter before a jury in the court of the same judge who sentenced him. The present proceeding is a part of the original prosecution against him for that crime. State v. Guidry, 169 La. 215, 124 So. 832. Our learned brother below had the right to take judicial cognizance of any prior proceeding which was a part of the same case he had previously tried. The filing of the information was solely and only for the purpose of having the court impose a sentence upon the accused, according to the laws of this State, as a second or third offender. Therefore, proof that he was the prisoner who had been sentenced by the judge under the previous conviction by the jury was not necessary.

Bill of exception No. 10 was taken to the action of the court in denying the motion in arrest of judgment, which was based upon the same reasons- contained in the motion to quash the count of the indictment with reference to the Canadian charge. This issue has already been resolved in favor of the accused in our original opinion, as modified by this opinion, to the extent of setting aside the finding of the trial judge that the accused was a third offender.

The district judge, having found the defendant guilty as a third offender on the Canadian count in the information, necessarily concluded that he was guilty as a second offender under the Louisiana and Oregon counts of the information. We differed with our learned brother below that the State had shown that the accused had served a term in the penitentiary in Canada for an offense which would have been a felony under the laws of this State, if committed here, but we concur in the legality of his finding that the accused was a second offender, the State having proved the Louisiana and Oregon counts of the information.

For the reasons assigned it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that our original decree setting aside the sentence of defendant as a third offender is reinstated, but it is amended so as to affirm the judgment of the district judge, finding the ac-’ cused guilty as a second offender, and the case is remanded to the district judge for the purpose of having sentence imposed upon the defendant, Jack O’Day alias Jack King, as a second offender, according to law. Defendant’s right to ask for a rehearing is reserved.

ROGERS, J., absent.  