106 P. 546 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1910
The counsel for defendant filed an admirable brief in this case. The counsel for the state has filed the following confession of error:
"Comes now the state of Oklahoma by its attorney, Fred S. Caldwell, and represents to this honorable court that at pages 1 and 2 of the record the charging part of the information upon which plaintiffs in error were prosecuted in the trial court appears in words and figures as follows: `That the said W.L. Hughes and M.C. Simmons, retail apothecaries in the county of Muskogee, state of Oklahoma, on the 24th day of October, 1908, did knowingly and unlawfully, have and keep in and about their apothecary and place of business intoxicating liquor, said liquor not being furnished by the state agency and local agency, Muskogee, Oklahoma, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the state.' And that at page 8 of the record the first ground in support of plaintiffs in error's demurrer to the information appears in words and figures as follows: `First. That said information does not state sufficient grounds to constitute a public offense.' Wherefore, it is the opinion of the state of Oklahoma that upon the authority of Titsworth v. State,
First. In Titsworth v. State,
"Section 8, art. 2, of the enforcement act (Laws 1907-08, p. 600, c. 69), is applicable alone to those apothecaries or pharmacists who have complied, or attempted compliance, with the provisions therein contained. Other pharmacists or apothecaries who have not complied or attempted compliance with the conditions of said section are not subject to the penalties therein prescribed. An information or indictment which attempts to charge a violation of section 8, art. 2, of the enforcement act (Laws 1907-08, p. 600, c. 69), must allege the offense in the language, or use substantially the language, of the section, and must allege a compliance with the conditions of said section 8. If it fails to do this, it will not charge a public offense."
The Titsworth Case was approved and followed in Mason v.State,
Second. In Fletcher v. State,
"A similar instruction was condemned by this court in the case of Green v. United States,
In Banks v. State, Fletcher's Case was approved, and this court further said:
"Our views are well presented in the following authorities: `Because of the difficulty, however, in so framing an instruction, where the defendant's name is mentioned at all, as not to give his testimony undue prominence, either for or against him, it would be better for trial judges to let him pass, with all the other witnesses, under the purview of a general charge as to the credibility of all the witnesses, leaving to the attorneys in argument to call the attention of the jury to any peculiar facts applicable to any particular witness.' Vaughn v. State,
For the reasons given in the above authorities, the confession of error in this case is sustained, and the judgment of conviction is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
DOYLE and OWEN, JUDGES, concur.