64 S.E. 949 | N.C. | 1909
Appeal by the State. *659 The defendant was tried, on appeal from a justice of the peace, for violation of the Revisal, sec. 3366, which makes it a misdemeanor in certain counties "If any tenant or cropper shall procure advances from his landlord to enable him to make a crop on the land rented by him, and then willfully abandon the same without good cause and before paying for suchadvances." The statute further provides the same punishment for the landlord if he shall willfully fail to make the advances promised.
The court quashed the proceeding on the ground that the statute contravened the Constitution, Art. I, sec. 16: "There shall be no imprisonment for debt in this State, except in cases of fraud." This is in effect decided in S. v. Norman,
In S. v. Torrence,
S. v. Robinson,
But the warrant was properly quashed, in any view, because it simply charged abandonment of the crop, without alleging that this was done "without cause" and "before paying for such advances" Unless those things were alleged and shown, there could be no conviction under the statute.
Affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Mooney,
(805)