This is аn appeal from a conviction under an indictment for falsely assuming and pretending to be a notary public. The indictment was framed under an act passed November 12, 1866, found in the general laws of the regular session of-the-eleventh legislature, page 201. It is as follows : “ That if any person
One objection or ground of exception set up below to the indictment is that, under the present Constitution, the office of notary public is unknown, except as the powers •of a notary public are conferred uрon justices of the peace ex officio. In the case of Gilleland v. Drake,
The indictment charges and thе evidence shows that the defendant, acting as a notary public, took the acknowledgment of the maker of a deed and certified to it officially on March 17, 1874; and as it appears that hе was duly appointed by the Governor, his act is by the law made valid.
The court instructed the jury, in substance, thаt, if defendant acted as notary and was not legally entitled to do so, they would find him guilty unless he had reasonable grounds to believe that he was entitled to exercise the functions of the office, and fаrther, that these reasonable grounds should amount to reasonable certainty.
It was not the intentiоn of the law to punish one who honestly believed himself entitled to the office in which he assumed to act. The language of the statute, “ falsely assume or pretend,” implies a guilty knowledge. The ordinary tеst of criminality is the criminal intent or guilty knowledge; (1 Bish. Cr. L., sec. 370,) and in this case we think the statute makes such intent or knоwledge an essential constituent of the offense. (See also 1 Bish. Cr. L., sec. 396.) The provisions of the сode as to mistake do not apply to' offenses of this character. (See Buck Bray v. The State,
The charge of the court makes the defendant’s guilt or innocence depend not on his belief, intent, or honesty of purpose, but on the reasonableness of his belief, and under our construction of thе statute this was erroneous.
The indictment was found prior to the passage of the act of May 2d, 1874, and the case was tried probably before the fact had become known that the law had madе
For the error in the charge, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
