A special presentment was returned by the grand jury of Newton county against the Central Georgia Power Company, charging it with a violation of the Penal Code (1910), § 681» The court overruled the demurrer to the presentment, and error is assigned upon this judgment.
The presentment alleged, that the accused, on the 16th day of September, 1911, in the county of Newton, “with-force and arms did erect, and did continue, after notice to abate it, a nuisance which tends to annoy the community, and which tends to injure and which does injure the health of the citizens in general, by then and there creating and causing a pond of water to overflow and stand upon an area of land of three thousand acres, which pond contains logs, stumps, limbs, and growing and decaying matter, and is producing malaria, large quantities of mosquitoes, and creating poisons in the air, and causing sickness and disease in the community surrounding'said pond in said county.” The demurrers were to the effect that the special presentment failed to set out any offense against the law; that it failed, to describe the nature and character of the nuisance, or the location of the nuisance; that it failed to set out either literally or in substance the notice to abate, or the person to whom the notice was given, or when the notice was given, and further failed to set out the officer or agent of the defendant company to whom the notice was given; that it failed to describe the character of the poisons in the air, alleged to have been created, or the nature and character of the sickness and disease alleged to have been caused by the nuisance, or who were made sick, or when and where the sickness and disease ensued; that it failed to allege that the nuisance “ damages all persons who come within the sphere of its operation;” that it failed to set out the manner in which the pond of water referred to in the presentment was created and caused to overflow; that it failed to describe the pond by boundaries, or
We do not think any of the grounds of the demurrer are well taken. Section 681 of the Penal Code, under which the special presentment was returned, is in the following language: “Any person who shall erect, or continue after notice to abate, a nuisance which tends to annoy the community, or injure the health of the citizens in general, or to corrupt the public morals, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” While the statute makes criminal the erection, or maintenance after notice to abate, of a public nuisance, it is aimed at the particular kind of a public nuisance described in the statute, to wit, one which “tends to annoy the community, or injure the health of the citizens in general, or to corrupt the public morals.” The erection, or maintenance after notice, of a nuisance such as is described in this statute is unlawful without reference to whether it is such a public nuisance as is described in the Civil Code (1910), § 4457. An indictment is sufficient which charges an offense in the language of the statute, and in which the acts alleged as constituting the offense are described with sufficient fullness to put the defendant on notice of the offense with which he is charged. Glover v. State, 126 Ga. 594 (1), (
: It is argued by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the power company had, the right, under the laws of this State, to build and maintain a pond and dam in connection with the operation of its business, and it is insisted that, having the right to do this, the State can not indict and punish it for an act which it was authorized to perform. But manifestly no such question as this can arise upon demurrer to this indictment. If the point is well taken, it can be made in defense to the indictment when the defendant is put on trial. The defendant is sufficiently informed of the nature and character of the offense alleged against it, and, in our opinion, the allegations of the presentment are sufficient as against the demurrer filed by the defendant. Judgment affirmed.
