192 Ind. 604 | Ind. | 1923
Appellant was tried by the court and convicted of violating the Prohibition Law. (§8356a et seq. Burns’ Supp. 1921, Acts 1917 p. 15.) The affidavit on which he was tried did not bear the endorsed approval of the prosecuting attorney as required by §1990 Burns 1914, Acts 1905 p. 584, §119. Appellant moved to quash the affidavit. The overruling of this motion is the sole error claimed.
Appellant cites and relies on Cole v. State (1907), 169 Ind. 393, 82 N. E. 796, which is squarely in point. In that case the question here presented was fully considered and the various provisions of the Criminal Code on this subject reviewed, and it was there said: “The legislature appears to have made the approval of the affidavit by the State’s representative a condition or requirement preceding its filing with the clerk of the court and the recording thereof by the latter officer, and it can have no standing or effect as a pleading or document in the case until authenticated by the approval' of the prosecuting attorney, as the law exacts.”
The deputy attorney-general asserts that the affidavit here in question was signed and sworn to by the individual who is the prosecuting attorney. Neither the face of the affidavit, nor the jurat, discloses that the one who swore to the affidavit is the prosecuting attorney. It is asserted by the state that this court will take judicial notice of who is prosecuting áttomey in a judicial district. If this should be granted, we could not infer that the name subscribed to the affidavit represents the identical person who, as prosecuting attorney, was served with notice of appeal. The deputy attorney-general says that it would be a reproach to the law to reverse this- cause and put the state to the expense of retrial. We think not. We prefer to leave the reproach where it belongs, and where Cole v.
The above section of our Code wisely places the sound discretion of the .prosecuting attorney between the public and the machinery of the Criminal Code. If it did not do so, a reproach to the law might come from prosecutions instituted with no reasonable expectation of conviction, thus putting the state to useless and needless expense. The above section has also wisely placed this sound discretion of the prosecuting attorney between the malice and spite of the individual and the machinery of prosecution. It surely would be a reproach to the law if a court of review connived at, and helped out, the carelessness, neglect and failure of the prosecuting attorney to perform a plain statutory duty. He should not have permitted a situation like we find in this record to come to this court, if he had any knowledge of, or had anything to do with, this case.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion to quash the affidavit.