delivered the opinion of the court.
Thе accused was found guilty of a second offense under the prohibition law (laws 1918, chapter 388), and was adjudged to pay a fine of $500.00 and to be confined in jail six months.
There were a number of assignments of еrror, but they were all waived at the hearing except those hereinafter considered.
The accused demurred thereto and also moved to quash it. On the motion of the prosecuting attorney, he was allowed to amend it, over the objection оf the accused, by substituting the word “acts” for the word “transportation” which we have italicized, and by inserting аfter the words, “a second offense,” the words, “under the statute.” After the amendment, the accused аgain demurred and moved to quash, but the court overruled the demurrer and motion to quash both before and after the amendment, and this action of the court is assigned as error.
There was no error in the ruling of the trial court, the words, “and the jurors aforesaid, on their oaths aforesaid, do charge that thе transportation heretofore set out in the first part of this indictment is a second offense,” may bе stricken from the indictment as meresurplusage, and there remains a complete indictment for thе present offense and a complete allegation of the ormer conviction of unlawfully transporting ardent-spirits. Surplusage does not vitiate an indictment-
It is assigned as error that the indictment is fаtally defective because, being for a felony, it failed to allege that the act chargеd was done “feloniously.” Several Virginia cases are cited to support the assignment. The objection is purely technical, and in Jolly v. Commonwealth,
It is assigned as error that the indictment states on its face that it was found by the “jurors” instead of the “grand jurors.” Only grand jurors can find an indictment, and if there were any merit in the assignment, it is cured by statement in the record introducing the indictment, in the following words and figures: “On the first day of December term, 1922, that being Monday, December 4, 1922, a regular grand jury of inquest in and for the aforesaid county of Albemarle, duly sworn as suсh, after an examination of the witnesses sworn in open court and sent before it to give testimony, rеturned as a ‘true bill’ an indictment against the said Charles E. Staples for a felony, charging a second offense in the violation of the prohibition laws of Virginia, which said indictment is in words and figures following, to-wit:”
' [5] After the jury had found their verdict, the ae
We find no error, however, in anything that occurrеd prior to the verdict. The verdict, therefore, will not be disturbed, but the judgment of the trial court will be set aside and the case remanded to that court with direction to cause the accused to be brought personally before it, and, unless good cause can be shown to the contrary, to enter judgmеnt against the. accused on the verdict aforesaid.
Reversed and remanded..
Notes
The jurors of the Commonwealth of Virginia, in and fоr the county of' Albemarle, and now attending the said court, upon their oath present that Charles E. Stаples, within one year next prior to the finding of this indictment, on the------day of.-----------------------, in the .year one thousand nine hundred and twenty-two, and in the said county, did unlawfully offer, keep, store, and expose for sale ardent spirits; and the said grand jurors do on their oath present that the said Charles E. Staples, on the 16th day of April, 1919, in the Circuit Court of Albemarle county, was duly and lawfully convicted of transporting ardent spirits under an indictment duly fоund at the December term, 1918, of the said Circuit Court of Albemarle county; and the jurors aforesaid, on their oaths aforesaid, do charge that the transportation heretofore set out in the first part of this indictment is a second offense, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Upon the evidence of J. N. Wood and J. Mason Smith, witnesses sworn in open court and sent to the grand jury to give evidence.
“R. T. W. Duke, Jr.,
for the Commonwealth.
“Upon the reverse side of the aforesaid indictment appears the following endorsement:
“A True Bill, W. R. Duke, Foreman.”
