The defendant was indicted for criminal libel, and was tried and convicted. The case comes before the Law Court on the defendant’s exceptions to the exclusion of testimony, and to the overruling of a motion in arrest of judgment. We think the latter
The definition and prosecution of a criminal libel are in this State matters of statute. The statute defines the crime, declares the responsibility and regulates the proceeding. Section 1 of Chap. 130 of the Revised Statutes, after defining a libel, provides that ‘ ‘nothing shall be deemed a libel unless there is a publication thereof.” In Section 2 it is declared that “whoever makes, composes, dictates, writes or prints a libel; directs or procures it to be done; wilfully publishes or circulates it, or knowingly and wilfully aids in doing either shall be punished,” etc. No other statutory provisions are material to the present discussion.
It is clear that the language of Section 2 constitutes three separate and independent classes of offenses. To make, compose, dictate, write- or print a libel is one offense. To direct or procure the making, composing, dictating, writing or printing a libel is another. Both of these are subject to the limitation in Section 1, that nothing is to be deemed a libel unless published. To wilfully publish or circulate a libel, or to knowingly aid in doing either, is a third offense.
One may be indicted and convicted of making or printing a libel in the county where it was made or printed, though the publication may have been elsewhere. And one may be indicted and convicted of wilfully publishing or circulating a libel in the county where it was published or circulated, though it may have been made or printed elsewhere.
The indictment in this case charges that the defendant “did” . . . . at Waterville in the County of Kennebec “unlawfully, maliciously and wickedly compose, write and print . . . and did ... at Portland in the County of Cumberland, publish and circulate and cause to be published and circulated ... a certain false, scandalous, malicious and defamatory libel,” etc. Two contentions are made under the motion for arrest of judgment. First, that the indictment is bad for duplicity, because it sets forth one offense for composing, writing and printing a libel in Kennebec County, and another offense for publishing and circulating it in Cumberland County; and, secondly, that it does not charge in the language of the statute that the defendant wilfully published and circulated, etc. The statute word “wilfully” is omitted.
But if this be the proper view, and it is the only view that can avail the State on the question of duplicity, we are brought face to face with the other contention, namely, that it is not alleged that the publishing and circulating were wilfully done. The statute declares that whoever “wilfully publishes or circulates” a libel shall be punished. The statute does not make the publishing and circulating of a libel an offense, unless wilfully done. The word “wilfully” in the statute is descriptive of the offense. In an indictment founded on a statute which describes the offense, the offense should be charged in the words of the statute, or in words equivalent thereto. State v. Hussey, 60 Maine, 410; State v. Gove, 34 N. H., 511; Rex v. Cox, 1 Leach, 71; Rex v. Davis, 1 Leach, 556; Bishop on Criminal Procedure, 2nd Ed., Sec. 614, 615, 617; same author, Vol. 2, Sec. 917.
We do not, however, understand that the learned attorney for the State seriously questions the correctness of the foregoing statement of the rule. But he does insist that although the word “wilfully” was omitted from the indictment, a word of equivalent signification was used, namely, “maliciously.” And he relies upon State v. Robbins, 66 Maine, 324, in which case it was said that where a word not in the statute is substituted in the indictment for one that is, and the word thus substituted is equivalent to the word used in the statute, the indictment will be sufficient. And it was further said that in an indictment for libel the word “maliciously” might be substituted for “wilfully.” In that case an indictment which charged that the
But the case of Stale v. Robbins is wholly unlike this. In that case the charge was for maliciously composing and publishing a libel. The word “maliciously” clearly and grammatically qualified both the words “compose” and “publish.”
Not so in the case at bar. Here the indictment avers that the defendant did “maliciously compose, write and print” at Waterville. It does not aver that he either maliciously or wilfully published and circulated at Portland. The indictment does not describe the ‘ ‘composing, writing, printing, publishing and circulating as a series of connected acts, but as separate and independent acts, done at different times and places, in fact in different counties. By no stretch of grammatical construction, as we think, can the adverb “maliciously” in this indictment, be properly held to qualify “publish and circulate.” Therefore we must hold that no equivalent was used for the word “wilfully,” and that the omission of “wilfully” was fatal.
It is suggested that the point should have been raised by demurrer, and not having been so raised, it is not open on a motion in arrest of judgment. In some States such a practice has been fixed by statute. See State v. Monahan, 170 Mass., 460. Whether such a practice would be advisable 'here is for the legislature to say.' Here at present such a motion lies when all the facts alleged do not constitute an offense. State v. Godfrey, 24 Maine, 232. Such is the common law practice. 1 Bishop on Criminal Procedure, Sec. 1108; 1 Chitty on Criminal Law, 661-664. We think such a motion is proper in a case like this one.
Exceptions sustained.
Indictment quashed.