33 Kan. 708 | Kan. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a criminal prosecution under the prohibitory liquor law of 1881. The information was filed in the district court of Allen county, on October 15, 1884, by the county attorney, charging the defendant, Hiram Brooks, in four separate counts, with four separate violations of said law. Each offense was charged as having been committed on the-day of- 1884; and while it is charged that the defendant sold intoxicating liquors in violation of law, yet the kind of intoxicating liquors sold is not stated, nor is the name of the person to whom the liquors were sold given. The information was sworn to positively by J. C. Gilbert, a private citizen, and the county attorney did not verify the same by his own oath. The defendant made several motions, among which were motions to quash the information and to have himself discharged from arrest, which motions were overruled by the court, and the defendant excepted. The defendant was duly arraigned, but refused to plead, and the plea of “not guilty” was entered for him. A trial was had before the court and a jury. Evidence was introduced tending to show that the defendant had sold intoxicating liquors to various persons at various times in violation of law. The state then elected to rely for a conviction under the first count of the information, upon a sale of whisky made by the defendant to Oscar Dwindle, a sale with reference to which the prosecuting witness, J. C. Gilbert, had no-knowledge or notice, and the prosecution also made elections with reference to the other counts. The court instructed the jury, and the defendant duly excepted to the instructions as given. The jury found the defendant guilty under the first count of the information, and not guilty under
We think the information is sufficient. It states a cause of action in each count against the defendant, and although it is claimed to be an information, and it is in fact an information, yet in essence and in substance it is also a complaint within the requirements of the prohibitory liquor law. The offenses charged therein are misdemeanors in which the punishment for each offense cannot exceed a fine of $500, or imprisonment ninety days; and it has several times been held by this court that the district court has original and concurrent jurisdiction with justices of the peace to hear and determine cases of misdemeanor in which the punishment for each offense cannot exceed a fine of $500 and imprisonment one year. (The State v. Watson, 30 Kas. 281; Comp. Laws 1879, ch. 83, §1.) In justices’ courts the original pleading may be properly called a complaint, but in the district court it may properly be called an information or indictment; for in the district court criminal prosecutions can be conducted or carried on only upon information filed by the public prosecutor, or upon indictments found by the grand jury. (Crim. Code in general, and articles 6 and 7 especially; see also §§21 and 22 of the Prohibitory Act.) The information sets forth facts sufficient to constitute four separate offenses, and all the facts constituting the offenses are set forth in detail aud in full, except as heretofore stated ; and the information is duly verified by the positive oath of J. C. Gilbert, aud is sufficiently verified within the decision made by this court in the case of The State v. Gleason, 32 Kas. 245.
Under such circumstances, we do not think that it was necessary for the county attorney to also verify the information;
The information in the present case stated that the offenses were committed in the year 1884, and, as before stated, this information was filed on October 15, 1884. ' We think the information was sufficient in this particular. Authorities may be found, however, holding that it is necessary in charging criminal offenses to state a particular day and the particular month when the offense was committed; but as all the authorities agree that such allegations need not be proved, and that they answer no material purpose, it would seem that such allegations are wholly unnecessary and immaterial. Neither is it necessary in this state to state the kind of liquor sold, or the name of the person to whom sold; for the statute expressly and specifically provides that these things need not be stated. (Prohib. Liquor Law, § 21.) Of course the information in this case might have been made better than it was, and we think it ought to have been made better; but still we think it was and is sufficient. Taking the facts therein stated and the positive oath of Gilbert, it showed probable cause to believe that the defendant was guilty of the offenses charged against him, and authorized the issue of a warrant for his arrest; and it was not necessary for the clerk or any other person to make a finding that there was such probable cause. The information alone, verified as it was by the positive oath of Gilbert, was sufficient to show probable cause, and to authorize the clerk to issue the warrant. (Crim. Code, § 126.) And when the defendant was
We now come to a more serious question: Can the defendant be convicted of an offense of which the complaining witness, at the time when he verified the information, had no knowledge or notice, and concerning which he had never had a thought? Upon sound legal principles and in all common fairness, it would seem that he should not. If he should be convicted under such circumstances, he would be convicted of an offense not intended to be charged against him, and really not charged. It is true that he would be convicted of an offense of a similar character to the one charged against him, but he would not be convicted of the exact and identical offense charged. When the complaining witness verifies an information, he must do so positively and in such a manner as to indicate that he had actual knowledge of the facts to which he makes oath; and this he does, among other things, for the purpose that a warrant may be issued against the defendant for his arrest. (The State v. Gleason, 32 Kas. 245.) And it must be presumed, in the absence of anything to the contrary, that he has such actual knowledge. It cannot be supposed that he makes oath to an offense of which he has no knowledge or thought. Indeed, it has often been held by courts that where a person makes oath to a thing concerning which he has no knowledge, and where he does not know whether his statements concerning the thing are true, or not, he commits perjury, although his statements may in fact be true. ( 2 Bishop’s Crim. Law, § 1048; 2 Wharton’s Crim. Law, § 1247.) Besides, as the defendant in this class of cases and in this state may be convicted of selling any kind of liquor out of the entire catalogue of intoxicating liquors, although not one of such liquors is specifically mentioned in the information; and may be convicted of selling the same to any living person, although no person’s name is given; and may be convicted of selling the same at any time within two years next preceding the filing of the information, whether any particular time is mentioned in the information, or not, the defendant ought to have some other means of identifying the
We know of no decided case squarely in point on either side of this question, but there are cases upon, analogous questions which have some ’application. Some of such cases are those which hold that where a grand jury finds an indictment against a defendant, and alleges the offense with reference to some person unknown to the grand jury, the defendant can be convicted only of an offense concerning some person who was in fact unknown to the grand jury and whose name had not been disclosed to them. (1 Bishop’s Crim. Pro., §§ 546 to 553; Wharton’s Crim. Ev., § 97; 2 Wharton’s Crim. Law, § 1511.) The constitution of the state of Kansas provides, among other things, that—
“In all prosecutions, the accused shall be allowed to appear and defend in person or by counsel; to demand the nature and cause of the aeeusation against him; to meet the witness face to face; and to have compulsory process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf.” (Const., Bill of Rights, §10.)
Now if a defendant may be prosecuted for selling intoxicating liquors contrary to law, without setting forth any statement of the kind of intoxicating liquors sold, or when he sold the same, or to whom he sold the same, and for an offense of which the complaining witness had no knowledge or thought when he verified the information by his oath, it would seem that these provisions of the constitution would be of but little benefit. And in cases like the present, where the entire prosecution is based and founded upon the oath of the complaining witness, his knowledge of the offense is more important than the knowledge of prosecuting witnesses usually is. The principles running through the foregoing cases and through all the decided cases that have any application to this case, and the principles embodied in the constitutional bill of rights, are that an accused person must be given a fair notice of the exact offense charged against him ; that when tried, he must be tried for that offense only, and not for some other offense not charged; and that the charge, with its accompanying circumstances, must not be so uncertain and misleading as to beguile him into the belief that he is to be tried for one offense when in fact he may be tried for another.
In the present case, when the complaining witness verified the information, he had in contemplation at least four different offenses, of all of which, presumably, he had knowledge; but the defendant was not convicted of any one of such offenses, but was convicted of still another offense, and of an offense concerning which the complaining witness did not have the slightest thought or information. We think the prosecution should have been confined to the offenses which were in the mind of the complaining witness when he verified the information. If he had only four offenses in contemplation at that time, the state should have been confined to those four — one under each count of the information. If, however, he had in
We think the court below erred in permitting the defendant to be convicted of an offense which was not contemplated at the time of the filing of the information. This error pervaded the entire case — the introduction of the evidence, the instructions to the jury, the verdict and sentence, and the order of the court overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial. Both Gilbert and Dwindle were witnesses in this case; and it was shown beyond all controversy that Gilbert, the complaining witness, had no knowledge or thought at the time of or prior to his verifying the information of the offense of which the defendant was found guilty.
We also think that the court below erred in rendering judgment for costs. On three of the counts of the information the defendant was acquitted; and upon these three counts he .should not have been required to pay costs, but should have-recovered- costs.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.