delivered the opinion of the Court.
The parties will be referred to herein by name.
On February 28, 1955, a grand jury returned an indictment under C.R.S. ’53, 40-19-3, which provided in pertinent part that:
“ * * * ED BUSTAMANTE, late of the County of Las Animas, State of Colorado, then and there being a duly elected officer * * *, to-wit, a duly elected * * * and acting County Clerk and Recorder of * * * the County of Las Animas * * *, did, between the dates of May 24, 1953, аnd October 19, 1954, wilfully, unlawfully, corruptly and feloniously use, make way with, secrete, and convert to his own use the sum of $1,689.00, * * * being a portion of the public funds or moneys * *
Bustamante was tried under this indictment, convicted by a jury and sentenced to the state penitentiary. In
Bustamante v. People,
In
Bustamante v. People,
Bustamante now seeks relief against a second prosecution on the original indictment by original proceeding in the nature of prohibition. He urgеs that the offenses charged being misdemeanors and not being separately stated fall within the bar of C.R.S. ’53, 39-1-3, which provides in pertinent part:
“No person shall be prosecuted, tried or punished, for *100 any misdemeanor or other indictable offense below the grade of a felony * * * unless the indictment, information or complaint, * * * shall be found or instituted within one year and six months from the time of the committing of the offense * * *.
“Nothing herein contained shall extend to any person fleeing from justice. * *
The petition and briefs here disclose that this indictment was returned February 28, 1955, and that Bustamante was not a fugitive from justice at any time. February 28, 1955, was twenty-one months and seven days after May 24, 1953, the first date alleged; however, an amended motion to quash the indictment on the grounds above stated was overruled by the trial court and a trial date was set.
The people urge that this is not a suitable case for application of prohibition and that Bustamante must proceed to trial and urge the statute of limitations by way of defense. We do not agree.
There is a diversity of opinion in various jurisdictions as to the. effect of the statute of limitations in cases like this, but no apparent conflict exists as to the applicability of prоhibition where the statute is held to be a bar to prosecution. Colorado has not had uniformity in its adoption of a consistent rule as to the effect of the statute of limitations.
Packer v. People
(1809),
In the
Packer
case, supra, it was held that it is not necessаry to allege in an indictment the exception that relieves it from the bar of the statute of limitations, such as that the defendant was a fugitive from justice during all or a part of the period of limitation. Packer had been indicted for the murder of five men; the crime was alleged to have been committed in March 1874. He was
*101
first tried on those charges in 1883 and his conviction of murder reversed in 1885 in
The statute of limitations considered in Packer read:
“No person or persons shall be proseсuted, tried or punished for any offense denominated by the common law felony, (murder, arson and forgery excepted), unless the indictment for the same shall be found by a *102 grand jury within three years next after the offense shall have been done or committed * * Gen. Stats. 1883, Ch. XXV, Sec. 975.
The acceptance in Packer of the rule in United States v. Cook, supra, was improvident. We cannot agree that the Cook case enunciates the better rule when it states:
“Accused persons mаy avail themselves of the statute of limitations by special plea or by evidence under the general issue, but courts of justice, if the statute contains exceptions, will not quash an indictment because it appears upon its face that it was not found within the period prescribed in thе limitations * * *. Nor is it admitted that any different rule would apply in the case even if the statute of limitations did not contain any exception, as time is not of the essence of the offense * * (Emphasis supplied.)
The Packer case has been cited in Wentzel v. People, supra, and in Thorpe v. People, supra.
In Wentzel, the felony of incest was charged by an information filed August 8, 1907, to have been committed on September 25, 1905. This was within the three years permitted by the statute, thus Packer was not applicable.
In Thorpe, the felony charged was one embezzlement made on October 11, 1939. Similar offenses committed on December 30, 1937, and February 27, 1940, were admitted in evidence to show intent and scheme to defraud. It was held that it was not error to admit the evidence of prior offenses because the crime charged was well within the three year period. The court stated in Thorpe that the statute of limitations was a matter of defense. Packer was cited as authority therefor.
The point in regard to the statute of limitations is that in
Packer v. People,
supra, the statute did not apply, since the charge was that of murder in pending indictments, and though Packer’s first conviction was had for a crime committed on March 1, 1874 (
To the extent that
Packer
(
The better rule which we adopt is that time is material and must be alleged in an indictment or information when the crime alleged tо have been committed is one which the statute of limitations bars from prosecution after the period prescribed. When the time so alleged shows on the face of the charge that it is barred by the statute of limitations, it is necessary that the indictment or information expressly allege one or more of the exceptions provided by the statute, otherwise the application of the statute is automatic. This is true whether the crime be a felony or a misdemeanor. (See
Our statute is clear and if a defendаnt can bring himself under its protective cloak, he may assert his right any time and in many manner.
Indictments, of course, must be specific in other essential details and must contain sufficient express averments to enable the trial court to determine that it has jurisdiction on other matters as well.
Herman v. People, supra, is thе first time that this court had indicated it would not follow the Packer case — though that case was not mentioned therein. This was a larceny case involving the use of the date September 12, 1940, in the information instead of September 12, 1949. The trial court denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict but did grant thе state a nolle prosequi. On writ of error this court held that the information was invalid and that any judgment or sentence based upon a conviction thereunder would be void because of the statute of limitations.
The
Herman
case is in accord with
People v.
*104
McGee
(1934,) 1 Cal. (2d) 611,
In McGee the court pointed out that in criminal cases the state through its legislature has declared it will not prosecute crimes after the period has run, hence has limited the power of the courts to proceed in the matter. It then said:
“It follows that where the pleading of the state shows that the period of the statutе of limitations has run, and nothing is alleged to take the case out of the statute, for example, that the defendant has been absent from the state, the power to proceed in the case is gone.”
The California statute involved was somewhat similar to ours with the offense chargеd “on or about March 30, 1926,” and the information filed on November 3, 1930.
It has been said, that statutes of limitation in criminal cases create a bar to the prosecution, while in civil cases they are merely statutes of repose, and that the time within which an offense is committed is a jurisdictional fаct in all cases subject to limitation.
Idaho v. Steensland
(1921),
It follows that the bar of the statute of limitations may be raised either by a plea of not guilty or by motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. When raised by a plea of not guilty, proof must be made by the state showing that its right to prosecute and punish for the offense alleged is not barred, Idaho v. Steensland, supra. Of course, where as here, the state’s own indictment makes the time element material there is no need of *105 further proof. It then is merely the duty of the trial court to apply the statute and quash the indictment.
Revell v. State
(1923),
Colorado is now to be numbered among those jurisdictions where the act averred in the indictment, must appear to have been committed within the period prescribed by the statute of limitations (42 C.J.S. 1010; 1011) or an exception must be set forth. Thus we conclude that if the indictment avers two dates, one of which is so rеmote as to be barred by the statute of limitations, it is defective.
Harwell v. State
(1901) (Tex. Cr.),
The indictment before us contains no allegation of any specific offense committed within eighteen months of the date the indictment was returned, hence the trial court has no jurisdiction to try Bustamante on the charge sеt forth therein. We are not impressed with the argument of respondent that there were several offenses occurring within the eighteen months period included in this indictment, and that those not barred by the statute may be prosecuted thereunder. The state *106 made a blanket charge of one total sum and the trial court cannot consider any evidence in weighing the validity of this indictment.
In
Treadwell v. District Court of Denver
(1956),
Prohibition has also been held to be applicable to restrain a trial court from proceeding with a criminal trial when it has no jurisdiction over the subject matter.
Ray v. Stevenson
(1941), 71 Okl. Cr. 339,
In
Moss v. Arnold
(1938), 63 Okl. Cr. 343,
“ ‘Prohibition’ is commonly defined, substantially, as a writ to prevent the exercise by a tribunal possessing judicial powers of jurisdiction over matters not within its cognizance, or exceeding its jurisdiction in matters of which it has cognizanсe. * * *
“The general rule is that the writ may not be used to test the sufficiency of an information; but this is subject to qualification, recognized in almost every jurisdiction, that where the accusation is not merely defective or technically insufficient, nor merely demurrable or subject to a motion to quash or set aside, but is elementary and fundamentally defective in substance, so that it charges a crime in no manner or form, the accused is entitled to have a writ of prohibition issue, or where it appears that the information charges an offense not within the jurisdiction of the trial court.”
In thе instant case the trial court, though having jurisdiction of Bustamante, is without jurisdiction to try *107 him under this indictment, hence a trial would be a useless act, an expense to the public and to the defendant who could not be legally sentenced even if convicted under this indictment. As we have stated earliеr, the statute of limitations in a criminal case is not merely a defense that may be asserted at the trial as in civil matters, but denies jurisdiction to prosecute an offense not committed within the period limited.
“As has been stated above, a writ of prohibition is proper, not only in cases whеre the lower tribunal has no legal authority to act at all, but also in cases wherein such inferior tribunal, although having general jurisdiction over a particular class of cases, has exceeded such jurisdiction in the particular case. Therefore, prohibition may issue to prevent a court from . . . proceeding against the express prohibition of a statute or where an adequate and exclusive remedy to obtain certain relief is provided by statute and the inferior court proceeds by another remedy ...”
We conclude that prohibition is the proper remedy for relief under the facts here presented.
The Rule to Show Cause is made absolute.
Mr. Justice Moore and Mr. Justice Hall not participating.
