46 S.W. 645 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1898
Appellant was convicted for making, and permitting to remain standing, a fence, on land not his own, without the written permission of the owner, and appeals.
The indictment is drawn under article 509 of the Penal Code, and the charging part is in the following language: That "W.H. Gibbs did then and there unlawfully and knowingly make, and permit to remain standing, a fence on and around the land of J.A. Sherwood, to wit, the east one-half of section No. 20, certificate No. 145, block 2, Dallas *477 Wichita Railroad Company, situated in Knox County, Texas, without the written consent of the said J.A. Sherwood, duly acknowledged by him," etc. The act in question is in the following terms: "If any person or corporation shall knowingly make or permit to remain standing any fence on or around the land of another, or the public, * * * without the written consent of the owner thereof duly acknowledged, * * * he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof fined in any sum not less than fifty cents nor more than one dollar per acre per month for each month so inclosed, or fined and imprisoned in the county jail for any period not over two year." In a subsequent portion of act, in the same section, is the following: "Half of all fines collected under the provisions of this act shall be paid to the person or persons informing on the person or corporation who shall unlawfully inclose any land: provided that each three months said land is so inclosed shall constitute a separate offense."
The first proposition presented is whether or not a prosecution under this statute can be maintained under an indictment; it being insisted, under the statute, that, inasmuch as a part of the fine goes to the informer, it can only be prosecuted in the name of the informer, as a qui tam action. We are referred to the authorities in this State on the subject. Two cases appear to hold that the prosecution can only be maintained in the name of the informer. There are State v. Garcia,
Another question presented in this case is as to the validity of the indictment. The indictment fails to show the length of time in which the fence was permitted to stand or remain around said land. The statute provides that upon conviction the party shall be fined in any sum not less than 50 cents nor more than $1 per acre per month for each month the land may be inclosed. Evidently the land must be inclosed for a month, or there could be no penalty affixed. This demonstrates that the erection of the fence, though without the written permission of the owner, is no offense unless it remains for the space of three months. This is in accord with the form of indictment prescribed for this offense in White's New Penal Code, section 843. This is not like a case in which the statute provides that each day is a separate offense, because a day, in law, is indivisible. But under this statute we look to the proviso to the effect that each three months constitutes an offense, in connection with the provision in relation to the penalty; and we come to the inevitable conclusion that the act of making or erecting the fence, of itself, constitutes no offense against the statute. The object of these provisions was evidently to give the party time in which to remove the fence, if he had built the same on the land of another. To illustrate: Suppose the accused built a fence on the land of another, but, before the expiration of one month, removed the same. Evidently he would be guilty of no offense. Why? Because no punishment is annexed thereto. If the offense was not complete when the fence was placed there it was evidently incomplete until it had remained there for the space of three entire months.
It is further contended that the indictment is defective because it fails to allege the number of acres. We do not think this contention well taken. The indictment expressly charges that defendant inclosed a half section of land. We understand that a section contains 640 acres of land. A half section would therefore contain 320 acres, and we think the indictment was sufficiently definite in this respect. For the failure to allege that appellant permitted said fence to be and remain around said inclosure for the space of three months, the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed. *479