94 N.C. 918 | N.C. | 1886
(after stating the facts). The indictment was preferred under §2799 of The Code, which is as follows: “Every planter shall make a sufficient fence about his cleared ground under cultivation, at least five feet high, unless there shall be some navigable stream or deep water course, that shall be sufficient instead of such fence, and unless his lands shall be situated within the limits of a county, township or district, where the stock law may be in force.”
The statute, it will be seen, contains two exceptions, the.one that there is a navigable stream or deep water course that shall be sufficient instead of the fence, and the other, that the land is situated within the limits of a county, township, or district, where the stock law may be in force.
The exceptions are contained in the enacting clause, and therefore constitute a part of the description of the offence, and in every indictment under the statute, it is necessary that they should be negotiatived, in order that the description of the crime may in all respect correspond with the statute. 1 Bishop Cr. Pro., §376; State v. Heaton, 81 N. C., 542; State v. Lanier, 88 N. C., 658.
It is equally essential in a special verdict, that all the facts necessary to constituté the offence charged, should be fully and explicitly stated, to warraut the Court in pronouncing a judgment upon the verdict. State v. Blue, 84 N. C., 807 ; State v. Bray, 89 N. C., 480. Thus, in this case, it was necessary that the jury should have found the facts, whether the defendant came within the exceptions in the statute, and their having failed
It was contended, that in as much as the Legislature had not declared a violation of §2799 to be an indictable offence, it is not a criminal offence to violate its provisions. But this is a mistake. In State v. Parker, 91 N. C., 650, the Court held, “ if a statute prohibited a matter of public grievance, or commanded a matter of public convenience, all acts or omissions contrary to the prohibition or command of the statute, being misdemeanors at common law, are punishable by indictment, if the statute specifies no other mode of proceeding,” citing for the doctrine Arch. Cr. Law, 2; 2 Hawk., ch. 25, §4. But when the Statute mentions a particular mode of proceeding, as when it imposes a penalty for its violation, and says nothing more, that proceeding excludes that by indictment. State v. Snuggs, 85 N. C., 541.
There is error. Let this opinion be certified to the Criminal Court of New Hanover county, that a venire de novo may be awarded to the State.
Error. Reversed.