3 Ga. 534 | Ga. | 1847
delivering the opinion.
The bill of indictment in this case charges the defendant with a misdemeanor, “for that the said "William Locke, (the defendant) of the county of Washington aforesaid, on the sixteenth day of J une, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty-seven, with force and arms, in the county of Washington aforesaid, was arrested, by virtue of a warrant issued by one Green Andrews, a justice of the peace in and for the county aforesaid, having lawful and competent authority in the premises; which was issued upon the affidavit of one Nancy, alias Ann Wells, (a free single white woman,) charging the said William with being the father of a child with which she was pregnant, and which was likely to be born a bastard and to become chargeable to the county ; and that the said William was taken by virtue of said warrant before the said Green Andi-ews, justice of the peace aforesaid, and by him required to give bond and security in terms of the law, for the maintenance and education of the said child, which the said William then and there, to wit, in the county and State aforesaid, refused and failed to do, and so the jurors aforesaid Sec.”
Upon the trial of this indictment the defendant was found
The a.ct “respecting bastardy and other immoralities,” passed in 1793, (Prince 140,) provides, that any justice of the peace, upon his own knowledge or upon information, of any free white woman having a bastard child, or being pregnant with one which it is probable will become chargeable to the county, may cause the offender to be brought before him by warrant, and require her to give bond and security for the support and education of the child until it arrives at the age of fourteen, or to discover on oath the father. If the mother discovers on oath the father, it is then made the duty of the magistrate to cause such reputed father to be brought before him upon warrant, and upon his refusal to give bond and security for the maintenance and education of the child until the age of fourteen years, for the lying-in expenses and the board, nursing and maintenance of the mother whilst she is confined, to bind him over in a sufficient recognisance, to be and appear at the next Superior court of the county. It further makes it the duty of the prosecuting officer at that court, to prefer a bill of indictment against the reputed father, to answer such complaint as may be then and there alleged against him. The character of the complaint is not prescribed in this act, that is, the offence is not defined; but it is defined in the penal code subsequently adoptéd, in these words, to wit: “If any putative father of a bastard child or children, shall refuse or fail to give security for the maintenance and education of such child or children, when required to do so in terms of the law, such putative father shall be indicted for a misdemeanor, and upon conviction of the fact of being the father of such bastard child or children, and of his refusal or failure to give such security,he shall be punished by a fine of $700 for each child;” and if he is unable to pay the fine, the penal code declares that he shall be punished by confinement in the county jail for the space of three months. Under this clause of the penal code the defendant was indicted. The act of 1793 is referred to as a clue to the meaning of the code, although without it, its meaning would not be difficult of ascertainment. The primary object of the act of 1793, Was to protect the county from the charge of bastard children; this it seeks to accomplish by requiring the mother, at her option, to give bond and security for the education and maintenance of the child, or disclose its father on oath. If the former is done, then there is an end to the whole matter; if the latter,
Now, if the offence consists in the refusal or failure to give the bond according to the act of 1793, then this indictment is sufficient, for, in addition to the recitals in it, it expressly charges such refusal. We think the offence does n'ot consist in the refusal, or failure to give bond — that is, the offence is not complete by reason of such failure. The option allowed the reputed father, to give the bond or appear and answer, is for his benefit. It is in the nature of an appeal from the judgment of the magistrate, that he shall give the bond. That judgment is founded on the oath of the woman. The act of 1793 seems to be imperative upon the magistrate to arrest the reputed father, upon her oath revealing his name, and equally imperative when he is arrested, to exact the bond, or hind him over. Whether he has the right to traverse the oath of the woman, and show that he is not in fact the father, before the •magistrate, has been questioned. By the act of 1S02, it would seem that this right is given. But if he has the right, still it is only before the magistrate; it is no trial by a jury upon indictment found and setting forth distinctly the nature and grounds of his offence. His guilt or innocence is made to depend upon the discretion of the magistrate. For, if the offence consists in the failure or refusal to give bond, then upon the trial before the Superior court, the case is made out by proof that he did so fail or refuse. Upon this construction he is deprived of his day in court, of the right of trial by jury, and of all its incidents. Upon the oath of a lewd woman and a judgment of a justice of the peace, he is found guilty of being the father of a bastard child. We cannot believe for a moment that this offence is complete upon the reputed father’s refusing or failing to give bond. Whilst we admit that he can in no case he put upon trial, much less convicted, if he does give the bond, and that there can he no offence unless he does refuse or fail to give it, and whilst we hold that such refusal or failure must be averred in the bill of indictment and proved upon the trial, yet we hold that ihefaci of being the father, constitutes the misdemeanor, and that that fact must be distinctly
His punishment is made to depend upon the fact of his being the father — upon conviction of the fact; without conviction, that is, without the finding of that fact by the jury, he cannot be punished. The necessity of his being convicted of that fact, is not weakened by the further necessity that he must be convicted of a refusal or failure to give bond. I believe that this meaning of the legislature is as plain as if they had said, this misdemeanor shall consist in being the father of the child and in refusal or failure to give bond for its maintenance and education. If, then, the offence consists in part or in whole of being the father of the child, is it necessary to charge it in the indictment 1 As to this we are all clear; we think it ought to be charged, not by inference or implication, but distinctly and substantively charged.
This indictment would be bad at common law. Before proceeding, I premise that greater strictness is required in criminal than in civil proceedings. 1 Chitty Crim. Law, 172; 1 Leach 134, 145. The rule at common law is, that indictments should be framed with sufficient certainty; for this purpose the charge must contain a certain description of the crime of which the defendant is accused, and a statement of the facts by which it is constituted, so as to identify the accusation. Cowp. R. 682, 683; 5 Term R. 611, 623; 1 Leach 249; Fost. 194; 2 Term R. 586; 3 Inst. 41; 2 M. & S. 386; 1 Chitty Crim. Law, 168, 169, 170. The reasons for this rule are, that the defendant may not be put upon his trial for an offence different from that which the grand jury have found; that the defendant may know what crime he is called upon to answer ; that the jury may know what issue is presented to them to find, and may he warranted in their verdict of guilty or not guilty; that the court may see such a definite offence on
íhe next question is, is the indictment sufficient under our own
This indictment was, no doubt, held sufficient in the Court below, upon the ground that the charge that the defendant was the father of the child, was to be inferred or implied from the statements made — that such was the intendment of the law. We hold that in criminal pleadings, both under our statute and at common law, defective allegations cannot be helped by legal intendment. “ The charge (says Mr. Chitty) must be sufficiently explicit to support itself; for no latitude of intention can be allowed to include any thing more than is expressed.” 1 Chitty Crim. Law, 172.
In the case of The King vs. Wheatly, 2 Burrow R. 1127, Lord Mansfield holds the following language: “ But after a verdict they (the court) are obliged to arrest the judgment if they see the charge to be insufficient. And in a criminal charge there is no latitude of intendment to include any thing more then is charged. The charge must be explicit enough to support itself.” See also, 2 M. S. 381.
In the case of The United States vs. Clark, 1 Gallison C. C. R.
Admitting every thing to be true which this bill charges, the defendant is not guilty of any offence for which he can be punished. The judgment therefore must be arrested.
Judgment arrested.