delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from judgment on conviction of conspiracy to violate the lottery laws and of violations of the lottery laws. Most of appellant’s contentions are directed to the charge of conspiracy in the first count of the indictment. That count charges that appellant, Morris Garonzik (or Garon) and Agnes Slipka “unlawfully conspired together and with certain other persons * * * unknown, unlawfully to violate the lottery laws of the State.” Other counts charge specific violations of lottery laws by appellant, Garonzik and Slipka. Appellant was found guilty by the jury under the first and seven other counts, and was sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary and a fine of $2,000. On motion of appellant, this sentence was stricken out, and he was resentenced to five years in the penitentiary and a fine of $2,000. Though jointly indicted, appellant was tried alone. Garonzik and Slipka testified against him and under Article 27, section 438, of the Code of 1951, are exempt from punishment. After conviction of appellant the case against Garonzik and Slipka was entered “Stet”.
Garonzik testified that Slipka had played numbers, that he gave appellant her name and address because shé wanted to write numbers, that later when he would ask appellant how she was doing, appellant said all right. Before the instant indictment was filed, Slipka’s house was raided and she Was convicted of violation of lottery law and sentenced to not more than four months in the Reformatory for Women and a fine of $500.00. In the instant case she testified that at her trial she did not implicate appellant because she thought he would “take care of” her and she would “serve the time if *582 he would pay the fine”;; that the fine was not paid, and after serving six weeks she was “brought into town” and her sentence and the fine were suspended; that at her own trial, she had falsely testified that she was a player, not a writer of numbers, which she actually was. Though appellant did not pay her fine, he testified that he procured — and paid for — bail for her; her bail so testified. A police lieutenant testified that after arrest appellant told him he had told Slipka “to borrow the money [for her fine] from a loan company, and he would make the monthly payments”; Slipka so testified.
One of the alleged errors of which appellant complains is refusal to direct a verdict of not guilty on the ground that the only evidence against appellant was uncorroborated testimony of accomplices — and members of Slipka’s family who admitted having testified falsely at her trial. Without elaborating the testimony beyond the above outline, it is clear that Slipka’s circumstantially full testimony is amply corroborated by appellant’s statement to the police lieutenant and by her bail’s testimony.
By motion to dismiss (the equivalent of a demurrer)' appellant attacked the sufficiency of the conspiracy count in the indictment (a.) as failing to state an offense, (6) as alleging not' facts but a conclusion of law, and (c) as charging only necessary concert of action and plurality of agents to effect the object of the “conspirary”, whereas such concert and plurality do not constitute an indictable conspiracy.
It must be admitted that ordinarily the words “unlawfully violate the lottery laws of the State” do not so definitely describe acts done as to charge an offense; they even seem too indefinite to charge acts contemplated as the object of a conspiracy. In
United States v. Cruikshank,
In
Blum v. State,
In
Lanasa v. State,
The legislature has in fact simplified the form of indictments for conspiracy. By Chapter 87 of the Acts of 1945 (Code of 1951, Art. 27, sec. 48), it is provided that in any indictment for conspiracy it shall be sufficient to use a formula substantially to the following effect: “That A-B and C-D on the......day of........19...., at the County (City) aforesaid unlawfully conspired together to murder X-Y (or other conspiracy here stating briefly the object of the conspiracy) against the peace,” etc. This form of indictment for conspiracy to murder is briefer in statement of the object of the conspiracy than the statutory short form of indictment for murder. Code of 1951, Art. 27, sec. 710.
The legislature has also authorized abbreviated forms of indictments “for violation of the law prohibiting the drawing of lotteries or the selling of lottery tickets or other devices in the nature thereof”. Code of 1951, Art. 27, sec. 696; Code of 1860, Art. 30, sec. 85. Section 435 of Article 27 of the Code of 1951 provides: “The courts shall construe the foregoing provisions relating to lotteries liberally * * Section 438 [s«pra] provides exemption from prosecution for any person compelled to testify against any person “who may have committed any of the offenses set forth under the subtitle ‘Lotteries’ ”. The subtitle “Lotteries” comprises sections 423-438, inclusive. “The lottery laws of the State” in the instant indictment is identical in scope with sections 423-438.and with the laws referred to in section 696 and (in part) in section 435. The words “to violate the lottery laws of the State” have a promiscuous sound, but by comparison with.sections.423-438, mean in substance, to participate in the conduct of a lottery, as broadly defined. Sections 423-438, with considerable tautology, *589 prohibit drawing a lottery, selling a lottery ticket (sec. 423), keeping or permitting to be used a house as a place for selling lottery tickets (secs. 427-428), bringing into the State or having in possession (sec. 429) lottery tickets, — in short, practically every incident of the conduct of a lottery except buying a lottery ticket. We express no opinion as to whether any provision of the lottery laws makes it a criminal offense for a customer to buy a lottery ticket.
On the authority of State v. Buchanan and later cases in this court, and in view of the evident meaning of “the lottery laws of the State”, we hold that the first count of the instant indictment validly stated an offense and not a mere conclusion of law. In so holding we limit our decision to the case before us, and do not approve as a general formula for the statement of the object of a conspiracy, “to violate the......laws of the State.”
In support of his motion to dismiss the indictment appellant also contends that a conspiracy to violate the lottery laws cannot be established by mere concert of action and plurality of agents which are necessary elements of the substantive offenses of violating the lottery laws. In
Wharton
on
Criminal Law,
(12th Edition), § 1604, it is said,
“Where concert is necessary to
offense,
conspiracy does not lie.
When to the idea of an offense plurality of agents is logically necessary, conspiracy, which assumes the voluntary accession óf a person to a crime of such a character that it is aggravated by a plurality of agents, cannot be maintained. As crimes to which concert is necessary
(i.e.,
which cannot take place without concert), we may mention dueling, bigamy, incest, and adultery; to the last of which the limitation here expressed has been specifically applied by authoritative American courts. * * * Of course when the offense is not consummated, and the conspiracy is one which by evil means a combination of persons is employed to effectuate, this combination is of itself indictable. And hence, persons combining to induce others to commit
*590
bigamy, adultery, incest, or dueling, do not fall within this exception, and may be indicted for conspiracy.” The principle invoked by appellant is “that where it is impossible under any circumstances to commit the substantive offense without cooperative action, the preliminary agreement between the same parties to commit the offense is not an indictable conspiracy either at- common law [citing cases] or under the federal statute.” [Citing cases, including a number in which “the conspiracy was * * * deemed criminal where it contemplated the cooperation of a greater number of parties than was necessary to the commission of the principal offense.”]
Gebardi v. United States,
,
Appellant contends that - his sentence óf five years .was “conditional, cóercivé, ■ uncertain, indefinite, and -constituted ’cruel arid- unusual punishment' and Was .an abuse' of discretion.” The 'sentence of five years is Well within' the statutory 'maximum for conspiracy. Wé find nothing in the record^ which indicates any such .'abuse of ’ discretion as would justify us hi 'pronouncing This .sentence “cruel and unusual punishment” and-re
*591
viewing it as such.
Reid v. State,
When the original sentence of seven years was imposed, the judge made a statement, including inter alia: “I would say this. The amount of time this man does will rest somewhat with him. I am convinced he wasn’t alone in this operation, and I would be willing to consider again my sentence if he is cooperative in exposing those who were in this operation with him. I say that to you as a sort of preface to what I am going to say.” Appellant took exception to, and moved to strike out, the judgment and sentence on the grounds now urged against his resentence. Ten days after the first sentence, that sentence was stricken out and appellant was sentenced to five years and a fine of $2,000. At the time of resentencing, the judge said, inter alia, “That is about all I have to say in reference to this matter, except to say this, and let me impress it upon the accused, the defendant and his counsel and the State: This sentence that I impose today is not conditional in any respect whatsoever, nor is it predicated on any future event or events except such as may be set forth in a mandate of the Court of Appeals or in a court of some greater appellate jurisdiction.”
If the original sentence had not been stricken out, we should have been compelled to hold it conditional and uncertain.
Heyward v. State,
Appellant’s remaining contention is that the court should have directed a verdict of not guilty on the ground that the State had granted immunity to the co-conspirators, Garonzik'and Slipka, which action was tantamount to acquittal, and left appellant as the sole conspirator to be convicted. Again, appellant invokes a sound principle unsupported by facts. The evidence does not show any grant of immunity to Garonzik and Slipka, but it may be assumed as a matter of law that under the statute they automatically obtained immunity by testifying. As one person alone can not be guilty of a conspiracy, when all but one conspirator are acquitted, conviction of the remaining conspirator cannot stand. This does not mean that more than one conspirator must be convicted or prosecuted. Grant of immunity is not equivalent to acquittal.
Berry v. State,
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
