131 Va. 664 | Va. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
In Flint v. Commonwealth, 114 Va. 820, 822, 76 S. E. 308, 309, it is said: “As has been said by this court frequently, the same exactness and precision is not required in the statement of an offense where it is to be heard upon a warrant as in more formal proceedings by information or indictment. In this case it appears, further, that the defendant made no objection whatever to the form of the warrant in
“As was said in Robinson v. Commonwealth, 111 Va. 844, 69 S. E. 518, ‘.Under the broad powers conferred upon the trial court, by section 4107 of the Code, it was entirely competent for the court, of its own motion, pending the trial of an appeal from the justice of the peace, to direct the attorney for the Commonwealth to change the warrant from an attempt to commit larceny of Oats to an attempt to obtain money by false pretenses. While it would have been more regular, perhaps, to have directed the change to have been made before the trial began, yet where the prisoner did not ask for a continuance, and there is nothing to indicate that he was prejudiced by the amendment during the trial, the irregularity is harmless.’
“We think, therefore, that if there were formal objections to the warrant, the court had ample power under the statute to amend it, and that the accused cannot be permitted to go to trial upon a warrant which the court had full power to amend and after verdict and judgment, for the first time, to make known his objection.”
. [8] It is said in the reply brief that the warrant did not charge the commission of any crime under the laws of this State. It is sufficient answer to quote section 4533 of the Code, which is as follows:
“If any person, whether a passenger or not, shall, while in any car or caboose, or on any part of a train carrying passengers or employees of any railroad or street passenger railway, behave in a riotous or disorderly manner, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. The agent or employees in charge of the train, car, or caboose, may require such person to discontinue his riotous or disorderly conduct, and if he refuses to do so may eject him, with the aid, if necessary, of any other persons who may be called upon for the purpose.”
The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.