51 Miss. 464 | Miss. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court:
A statute of Mississippi, approved April 18, 1873, enacts “ that any state or other officer holding office in this state, under the laws thereof, found drunk, or in a state of intoxication from the use of intoxicating liquors during his term of office, shall, upon conviction, be deemed guilty of a high misdemeanor in office, and shall, by the judgment of the court and sentence, be removed from his said office, and the same thereby become vacant, to be filled as other vacancies are.” Laws of 1873, p. 84. At the September term, 1874, of the Clarke county circuit court, an indictment was presented under the above statute, in the words and
“ 1. Because it is not alleged or charged in the said bill of indictment that the said defendant held an office under the laws of the state of Mississippi.
“ 2. Because it is not alleged or charged in the said bill of indictment that the said defendant was the assessor of taxes, or that, he held any office under the laws of the state of Mississippi.
“3. Because the record does not show that the indictment was-presented to the court by the grand j ury.
“ 4. Because the record does not show that the indictment was returned into open court by the foreman of the grand jury in the-presence of at least twelve of the grand jury.
“ 5. Because it is not shown in and by said bill of indictment what office he held, or that he held any office under the laws of' the state of Mississippi.
“ 6. Because it is not alleged in the said bill of indictment, or charged by positive averment, that the defendant was a state officer, or that he held an office under the laws of the state of Mississippi at the time of the alleged int&xication.”
This motion was overruled, and the accused was tried, convict ed, and sentenced to removal from office. Hence a writ of error.
Two questions are presented for adjudication, viz : 1. The sufficiency of the return of the indictment into court; and, 2. The sufficiency of the indictment itself.
The return of the indictment into court is thus stated in the record: “ On the 9th day of September, 1874, being also a day of the present term of the court, the said grand jury came into open court, and through their foreman returned and presented to
After repeated perusals it is impossible to detect any- well founded objection to this record. Code, § 2794; Josephine’s Case, 39 Miss., 613.
With reference to the indictment itself, the objection is made that its allegations are insufficient; that it does not, in the language of the statute, allege that the accused was assessor of the county of Clarke, or that he held an office under the laws of the State.
The language'of the indictment is, “that John Shanks, assessor,” etc.; whereas counsel insists it should state “that John Shanks, then and there being constitutionally and legally assessor ; ” or, “ that John Shanks, under the constitution and laws of the state,-held the office of assessor of the said county ; ” or, “ that John Shanks, by virtue of an election and qualification according to law, was the legal and duly qualified assessor of said Clarke county; ” or, “ that said John Shanks was then holding the office of assessor of said county of Clarke and state of Mississippi.under the laws thereof;” or other form of positive averment, these being mere suggestions by way of illustration.
In other words, that the holding of the office is not, but should be, charged by positive statement. The argument as understood is that, as framed, the holding of the office is not averred, but that the words “assessor,” etc., which follow the name of the accused, are mere recital or description, descriptio personen, as in the
This is in accordance with the authorities and precedents from the earliest dates. 1 Bish. Crim. Pr., §§ 304, 305, 306; 2 id., § 781, et seq.; 2 Ch. Crim. L., p. 255; 3 id., 697, et seq.; 1 Am. Crim. L., § 285; How. P. C., 313, § 60; 1 Salk., 371; Rex. and Reg. v. Whitehead, Cro. Jac., 19; 5 Mod., 137; Cro. Car., 464; 3 Mod., 53; 1 Bur., 400; Ld. Raym., 1189; id., 1363; Roscoe’s Crim. Ev., 743; 3 Arch. Crim. Pr. and Pl., 578, etc.
Two early cases may serve to illustrate the rule under consideration. An overseer was indicted for disobeying an order of two justices. It was objected that the indictment set out the order by way of recital only, quocl cum, the two justices made the order. The motion to quash was sustained, and the court in rendering its judgment proceeded to point out the distinction between matter of inducement merely, and that which is matter of positive averment. The King v. Crowhust, Ld. Raym., 1363. Beference is made in that case to Rex and Regina v. Whitehead, 1 Salk., 371, which is thus reported : “ Mr. Northey moved to quash two indictments which were quod cum, an order was made that the parishioners should receive a bastard child; they in contempt did refuse to receive. And because it was not positively said that it was ordered that they should receive it, but only by recital with a quod cum, they were quashed.”
The rule indicated is believed to have remained unchanged to the present time.
Another general rule is that matters requiring affirmative proof must be positively charged. But it is the application of the rule and not the rule itself which is presented in the case at bar. The question then is, whether the indictment in this case as framed, avers and charges substantially that the accused, at the time of the alleged intoxication, was holding an office under^the laws of the state.
Judgment reversed and indictment quashed.