There can be no valid trial, conviction, or punishment; for a crime without a formal and sufficient < accusation. 42 C.J.S.,- Indictments and Informations, section 1. As a consequence, it is impossible 'to overmagnify the necessity of observing the rules of pleading in criminal eases.
The first rule of good pleading in criminal cases is that the indictment or other accusation must inform the court and the accused with certainty as to the exact crime the accused is alleged to have committed.
S. v. Cole,
The language of the criminal complaint underlying the original warrant discloses that it was intended to be drawn under G.S. 14-291.1, which makes it a misdemeanor for any person to “sell, barter or cause to be sold or bartered, any ticket, token, certificate or order for any number or shares in any lottery, commonly known as the numbers or butter and egg lottery, or lotteries of similar character, to be drawn or paid within or without the State.”
The words “barter” and “sell” are not used in this statute as synonyms. Barter is a contract by which parties exchange one commodity for another. It differs from a sale, in that the latter is a transfer of goods for a specified price, payable in money.
Speigle v. Meredith,
The criminal complaint involved in this action is drawn in the alternative or the disjunctive rather than the conjunctive, and charges the defendant with violating the statute by selling the illegal articles,
or
by bartering them,
or
by causing another to sell them,
or
by causing another to barter them, leaving the exact accusation against him shrouded in uncertainty. In so doing, the criminal complaint offends the first rule of good pleading in criminal cases. It is well settled “that an indictment or information must not charge a party disjunctively or alternatively in such manner as to leave it uncertain what is relied on as the accusation against him. Two offenses cannot, in the absence of statutory permission, be alleged alternatively in the same count. As a general rule, where a statute specifies several means or ways in which an offense may be committed in the alternative, it is bad pleading to allege such means or ways in the alternatrre.” 42 C.J.S., Indictments and Informations, section 101. See, also, in this connection:
S. v. Williams,
sThe verdict must be interpreted in the light of the criminal complaint because the jury found “the defendant guilty of lottery as charged in the warrant.” When this is done, it appears that the jury made this anomalous finding: That the defendant is guilty of selling lottery tickets,
or
that the defendant is guilty of bartering lottery tickets,
or
that the defendant is guilty of causing another to sell lottery tickets,
or
that the defendant is guilty of causing another to barter lottery tickets. This being true, the verdict is invalid for uncertainty. It is not sufficiently definite and specific to identify the crime of which the defendant is convicted.
S. v. Williams, supra.
In consequence, it will not support a judgment.
S. v. Lassiter,
Since the judgment is not supported by the verdict, the judgment and the verdict are set aside, and the cause is remanded to the Superior Court of Eorsyth County for further proceedings conforming to law.
We refrain from expressing any opinion upon the question of the constitutionality of the statutes extending the territorial jurisdiction of the Municipal Court of the City of Winston-Salem. This course is in keeping with the settled practice that courts do not pass on constitutional questions until the necessity for so doing has arisen.
S. v. Wilkes,
New trial.
