39 Kan. 412 | Kan. | 1888
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The main question raised by this appeal is the sufficiency of the information under which the defendant was prosecuted and convicted. He urges that it is indefinite, ambiguous, and fatally defective in failing to state the manner of publishing the alleged libel. It is expressly alleged that the defendant published the libel, but it is not explicitly stated by what means it was done. The prosecution states in the information that “Douglas V. Dowd, being the editor and publisher of a weekly newspaper known as The BskridgeHome Weekly, and which said newspaper is owned and published in the town of Eskridge, in said county of Wabaunsee and state of Kansas, did then and there unlawfully, willfully and maliciously write and publish of and concerning one Virgil C. Welch, a certain false, scandalous and malicious libel of the tenor following:” setting out the libelous language. In this-it is inferentially alleged that the libel was published in the-newspaper edited and published by the defendant. But, if we regard the information as failing to state the mode of publication, is the omission a fatal defect? It must be remembered that the offense charged is only a misdemeanor, and that, the same fullness and precision of statement are not required as in a case of felony. The essential ingredients of the offense- and allegations are, that at a certain time and place the defendant willfully made and published of and concerning another a libel, setting out a copy of the same. (Comp. Laws of 1879, ch. 31, §§270, 271; Maxwell, Crirn. Proc. 317.) While we think it is the better practice to state the mode of publication,, we do not regard it as indispensable to the validity of the information. Mr. Bishop, in his treatise on Criminal Procedure,, gives the material allegations in a charge of libel, and says-this in regard to the mode of publication: “Adding, if the-pleader chooses, ‘in the form of a book/ or ‘in the form of
In. Rattray v. The State, 61 Miss. 377, the prosecution was-for libel, in which it was alleged that the defendant did unlawfully and maliciously write and publish, and cause to be written and published, a certain libel, but failed to state the manner of publication, and a motion was made to quash the indictment upon the ground that it did not recite nor allege how the publication was made — whether in a newspaper, a book, in a letter, or otherwise. The motion to quash was overruled, and the supreme court sustained that ruling, and held the indictment to be sufficient.
In the case of The State v. Barnes, 32 Me. 530, an indictment charging a libel, recited that the defendant wrote and published a libel, and sent the same in an envelope in the form of a letter, or printed circular, or pamphlet. Although the mode of publication was alleged in the disjunctive, the court held that the allegation of sending the libel, and that the defendant thereby published it, was a sufficient averment of publication; that the allegation in respect to the letter, circular, or pamphlet, “is not of the essence of the offense, but is-only the mode of publication, namely, that the libelous matter was published in one or the other of those forms, and it is-quite unimportant which.”
The testimony in the case abundantly shows that the libel was written by the defendant and published in his newspaper. In fact, the making and publishing was admitted by the defendant on the trial, his defense being made upon other grounds;, and hence he is not in a good position to complain of the testimony offered by the state concerning the writing and publication of the libel. But the decision which has already been made relating to the sufficiency of the information, practically disposes of the objection to the evidence on the ground of variance.
An exception was taken to the ruling of the court allowing-the county attorney to indorse the name of a witness on the-information after the jury had been impaneled and sworn.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.