12 S.E. 1024 | N.C. | 1891
The defendants were found guilty. There was a motion in arrest of judgment on the following grounds: *531
"First. It appeared that the offense was committed in May, (761) 1889, and the indictment was found at Fall Term, 1889, and the Superior Court did not have jurisdiction of the offense when the bill was found, or when judgment was to be pronounced.
"Secondly. That there were two statutes in reference to the same offense — section 1062 of The Code, and the Act of 1889, ch. 516 — and the one of subsequent date changes the punishment of the same, and the indictment does not by proper averment refer to the statute under which is was found, so that the court can see the measure of punishment to be inflicted."
Motion in arrest allowed, and the court gave judgment discharging the defendants, and the State appealed. The General Assembly of North Carolina passed an act (Laws 1889, ch. 516) which took effect 1 June, 1889, and contained the following provisions:
"Section 1. That any person who shall willfully destroy, cut or injure any part of a wire fence situated on the land of another shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be imprisoned not exceeding thirty days or fined not exceeding $50.
"Sec. 2. That a fence composed partly of wire and partly of wood shall, for the purpose of this act, be deemed and taken to be a wire fence."
The Code, sec. 1062, contains the provision that "any person who shall unlawfully and willfully burn, destroy, pull down, injure or remove any fence, wall or other enclosure, or any part thereof, surrounding or about any yard, garden, cultivated field or pasture, or any church, graveyard, factory or other house in which machinery is used, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor." By limiting the punishment as prescribed in the Constitution (Art. XIV, sec. 27) the offense created (762) by the former act was brought within the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, while that enacted by The Code, is cognizable in the Superior Court. This indictment was found in the Superior Court and charged that the defendants, "with force and arms at and in the county aforesaid, a certain wire fence (enclosing a pasture) several hundred yards long, the property of H. C. Lefler then and there situate, unlawfully, willfully and violently did cut and destroy for the space and distance of 200 or 300 yards, and that the said William Biggers, James Day, John Biggers and M. C. Biggers, the said wire fence above described, by the means aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully and willfully greatly injure, deface and damage," etc. *532
The rule laid down in this Court in S. v. Wise,
The indictment charges the cutting, destroying and injuring of a wire fence "enclosing a pasture," and the State was bound to prove the averment as made that the fence did enclose a pasture. On the other hand, no such averment is necessary in the indictment under the Act of 1889, and though it might lie in a case where a wire fence in fact surrounded a field or pasture, it would be as unnecessary to aver that as to set forth the fact that a wire fence enclosed a piece of woodland.
Where two statutes are not in conflict, it is familiar learning that an indictment is often so drawn that it may be sustained under either, just as it often happens that an indictment may be held good as a charge of the statutory offense, or the offense growing out of the same *533 transaction at common law. There is no conflict between the two enactments. The later act was passed to protect landowners against a wrong that the court had declared was not indictable under the previous act.
The principle (stated in S. v. Long,
We attach no importance to the fact that the Act of 1889 went into effect on 1 June, 1889, and that the indictment was found at the Fall Term, 1889, and the appeal being by the State from an order arresting judgment, we cannot look beyond the record and take notice of the testimony offered.
We think the indictment is good under section 1062 of The Code, which is not modified or repealed in whole or in part by the Act of 1889. The bill being otherwise in the usual form, or containing all that is essential of approved precedents used in indictments under the provisions of The Code referred to, it is not material that a particular kind of fence was specified instead of using the generic term. The words "enclosing a pasture," in the connection in which they appear in the bill, constitute a sufficient averment that the fence injured or destroyed surrounded and enclosed a pasture.
There was no ground for arresting the judgment, and, therefore, the judgment of the court below is
Reversed.
Cited: S. v. Parker,
(765)