1 Abb. Pr. 268 | New York Court of General Session of the Peace | 1855
The defendant is before the court upon two indictments for false pretences. Counsel for the accused moves to quash both indictments, upon the ground that they •were found without any proofs of the commission of the ■offences preferred.
On the argument of the case by Mr. Graham for the prisoner, and the District Attorney for the people, it was conceded and agreed on the one side and on the other, that the preliminary affidavits of the complaining witnesses, which accompany the indictment, contained all the testimony given before the grand jury, and on which they acted in ordering these bills. I have read the complaining papers with care, and it is apparent that they not only fail to exhibit proof sufficient to indict, but are without any legal evidence whatever of a violation of the statute against false pretences. This being manifest, and having regard to the concession by the learned attorney for the people—that these primary depositions contain all and precisely the same facts, matters and things testified to by the deponents when before the grand jury, and that the grand inquest had no other evidence, knowledge or information in the premises than what is expressed by the affidavits in question—it is clearly certain that the defendant has been indicted for two criminal offences, each a felony, without legal proof, and therefore without any proof, of their •perpetration. And now, upon this state of facts, (given pre
An indictment, as defined in Jacob’s law Dicüona/ry upon several authorities cited, is a “ bill or declaration of complaint, drawn up in form of law, and exhibited for some criminal offence.” “It is,” says Chief Justice Holt, “a plain, brief and certain narration of an offence committed by any person, and of the necessary circumstances that concur to ascertain the fact and its nature.” An indictment, in the better language of Hr. Hawkins, (Hawk. P. C.) “ is an accusation made in a prescribed legal form, upon evidence, by a number of authorized persons, of some criminal offence against the peace of the people, and when preferred in court, becomes a record for purposes of criminal prosecution.”
The question recurs, may a “ bill of complaint drawn up in legal form” be impeached for any cause ? That it may, for some reasons, will not be disputed; and if for some, why not in all cases where it is manifest that the body indicting has no
An indictment is the foundation (so to speak) of a criminal prosecution, and if it is npt just and lawful in all its character, it ought to be broken. Touching the two under consideration, if there was any legal proof—no matter how little—I would not combat or criticise it for the purpose of granting this motion ; but as there was no lawful evidence whatever before the grand jury to negative the truth of the pretences alleged, I am without doubt of the power of the court to set them aside, and am convinced of -my duty in the matter. The motion to quash, is granted.
The District Attorney remarked, on the rendering of this decision, that his own views did not coincide with those expressed by the court, and therefore, as it was an important question, and ought to be settled by the court of last resort, he would' take the liberty of reviewing the decision upon a writ of error.