1 — The indictment charges that the offense in question' was committed as follows: “The said George Debolt and Walter Smith on or about the tenth day of October, A. D. 1894, in the county of Guthrie and state of Iowa, as aforesaid, the said George Debolt and Walter Smith acting together and in concert, did then and there, with malicious intent to extort money from one T. J. Simcoke, did then and there, maliciously and feloniously, verbally threaten to accuse the said T. J. Simcoke of the crime of sodomy,"(describing the particular act of which the defendants threatened to accuse Simcoke). The indictment does not charge that Simcoke was not guilty of the act thus described, and the appellants insist that in that respect the indictment is defective'. The statute upon which this prosecution was founded is section 3871 of the Code of 1873, which contains the following: “If any person, either verbally or by any written or printed communication, maliciously threatens to accuse another of any crime or offense, * * * with intent thereby to extort any money or pecuniary advantage whatever, * * * he shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not more than two< years, or by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars,” Nothing in *107this statute makes, it necessary, in order to constitute the offense defined, that the.per,son threatened shall be innocent of the crime of Which he is threatened to be accused. It is said that the threat to accuse, in order to constitute an offense, must 'be made maliciously; that the court charged the jury that “ ‘malice/ in a legal sense, denotes a wrongful act done intentionally, without just cause or excuse,” and that, if Simeoke was guilty of the act of which the defendants threatened to accuse him, tire threat could not have been without just cause or excuse. It is further urged that it is the duty of every citizen to* accuse the perpetrators of a crime, before the proper tribunal, and that to* declare an intention to do 'an act which it is the duty of the declarant to perform cannot be a crime. All that may be conceded without admitting that the indictment is defective in the respect claimed. The crime for which the statute provides is not the declaration by a person of an intent to bring an offender against the law to justice, but the malicious threatening to accuse a person of a crime or offense, “with intent thereby to extort any money or pecuniary advantage whatever.” Whether the person against whom the threat is directed be guilty or inno’cent of the crime or offense specified in the threat is wholly immaterial to the commission of the crime by the making of the threat. State v. Waite, 101 Iowa, 377. The threat may he to accuse by instituting judicial proceedings. 1 McClain, Criminal Law, section 737. But it may also refer to accusation by newspaper publication, or other means. State v. Lewis, 96 Iowa, 286. It follows from what we have said that in our opinion the indictment is not defective in the respect claimed by the appellants.
5 III. The evidence submitted on the trial in the district court has not been abstracted, and it is. said we must presume that it justified the charge given. It is true that we must indulge in every reasonable presumption to sustain the charge, 'but we are unable to.imagine any evidence which could have justified the erroneous statement of law contained in the charge. For the error in 'the charge given, tlie judgment of the district court must be, and is', reversed.
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