FIRST WARRANT — ASSAULT CASE.
Margáret Matthews, mother of the children' Linda, Dorothy and Joanne Matthews named in the second warrant, testified as a witness for the State that on 18 May 1959 in the yard of her home the defendant, C. S. Barnes, Jr., pointed a gun at her.
The word gun is a generic term and includes pistol. According to Webster’s New International Dictionary,' 2d. Ed., the. word “gun”, is defined, “6. A revolver or pistol.
Orig., Western U. S.”
In common usage the words' ) “pistol” and “gun” are used interchangeably.
*714
Muse v. Interstate Life & Accident Co.,
SECOND WARRANT — OBSCENE PICTURES.
Defendant, in apt time, moved orally to quash the second warrant before pleading to it.
S. v. Perry,
Defendant challenges the sufficiency of -the second warrant to inform him of the accusation against him. A motion to quash is a proper method of testing the sufficiency of a warrant or an indictment to charge a criminal offense.
S. v. Greer,
The Constitution of North Carolina, Article I, § 11, guarantees that in all criminal prosecutions every person has the right to be informed of the accusation against him.
Similar provisions in the U. S. Constitution (which are not a restriction on the States in this respect, 42 C.J.S., Indictments, p. 957), and in the Constitutions of the various States, which are a substantial redeclaration of the common law, are one of the chief glories of the administration of the criminal law in our courts, for they are in strict accord with our inherited and “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
This Court said in S. v. Greer, supra: “The authorities are in unison that an indictment, whether at common law or under a statute, to be good must allege lucidly and accurately all the essential elements of the offense endeavored to be charged. The purpose of such constitutional provisions is: (1) such certainty in the statement of the accusation as will identify the offense with which the accused is sought to be charged; (2) to protect the accused from being twice put in jeopardy for the same offense; (3) to enable the accused to prepare for trial, and (4) to enable the *715 court, on conviction or plea of nolo contendere or guilty to pronounce sentence according to the rights of the case.”
“It is an essential of jurisdiction that a criminal offense shall be sufficiently charged in a warrant or an indictment.”
S. v. Strickland,
“An indictment or information for having in possession, exhibiting, or offering for sale an obsence drawing or picture need not particularly describe in what the obscenity consists, and the obscene matter need not be set up; but good pleading requires that if a copy of the pictures is not given, such a description as decency permits should be given, and then the indictment should contain an averment that the pictures are too obscene, lewd or lascivious for further description or recital.” 67 C.J.S., Obscenity, § 11, b. Pictures, p. 36.
“The rule requiring that the article or matter shall be so described as to be capable of identification does not require that the indictment shall go into detail in describing a picture, or that it must set out the substance of an obscene article. To do this would be as objectionable as setting out the article or matter itself, the placing of which on the records the indictment seeks to excuse on account of its gross obscenity. All that is required is that the article shall be so described as to render it capable of identification.” 33 Am. Jur., Lewdness, Indecency and Obscenity, § 18, In Prosecution for Obscenity, p. 26. To the saíne effect see Joyce on Indictments, 2nd Ed., Sections 421, 422 and 423.
Commonwealth v. Sharpless,
In
Reyes v. State,
In
Vannoy v. State,
In
Thomas v. State,
Commonwealth v. Wright,
In
State v. Zurhorst,
In
State v. Miller,
(W. Va. — 1960),
The following cases support the rule that the warrant or indictment shall, at least, so describe the alleged obscene matter or pictures, as to render them capable of identification.
People v. Hallenbeck,
(N. Y.),
In
S. v. Bobbins,
A bill of'particulars will not supply any matter which the warrant must contain.
S. v. Cox,
This Court said in
S. v. Cox, supra:
“Moreover, while it is a general rule prevailing in this State that an indictment for a statutory offense is sufficient if the offense be charged in the words of the statute,
S. v. Jackson,
We held in
S. v. Scott, supra,
that an indictment charging defendant with resisting an officer in the language of G.S. 14-223 is insufficient. The Court said: “The allegations in a bill of indictment must particularize the crime charged and be sufficiently explicit to protect the defendant against a subsequent prosecution for the same offense.” In
S. v. Cox, supra,
the warrant charged in the language of G.S. 14-204(7) that defendant did unlawfully “aid and abet in prostitution and assignation.” The Court held the warrant was insufficient and overruled on that point
S. v. Johnson,
The second warrant here has no description of, and has no allegation or reference of any kind whatever to the alleged obscene photographs and pictures, so as to render them capable of identification. It affords no means at all which would distinguish the alleged obscene photographs and pictures from any other photographs and pictures of their class. The second warrant could refer to any obscene photographs and pictures. It is not sufficiently explicit, though it uses the relevant words of G.S. 14-189.1, to inform defendant of the accusation against him, and to protect him against a subsequent prosecution for the same offense. The trial court erred in not quashing the second warrant.
Like every other person on trial in the criminal courts, defendant is entitled to the full benefit of the constitutional provisions devised to protect the safety of all. To quote the language of
Taylor, J.,
in
S. v. Owen,
Though the second warrant is fatally defective, it will not serve to bar further prosecution on a valid warrant.
S. v. Miller,
Assault Case — No error.
Obscenity Case — Reversed.
