55 S.E. 722 | N.C. | 1906
The defendant was charged in the indictment with unlawfully, wilfully, and maliciously assaulting Floyd Brown, on 1 May, 1903, with a deadly weapon, towit, a certain pistol and knife with a four-inch blade, with intent to kill and murder the said Floyd Brown and to his great damage, contrary to the form of the statute and against the peace and dignity of the State. The defendant moved to quash the indictment. Motion overruled, and he excepted. There was evidence that the assault was made more than two years before the finding of the indictment. The defendant, in apt time, requested the Judge to charge the jury that, if the assault was committed (672) more than two years before the bill was found, they should acquit. This instruction was refused, and the defendant excepted. The jury returned a special verdict to the effect that the assault occurred on 12 April, 1903, and the indictment was found 4 August, 1905, or more than two years after the offense was committed, and asked the opinion of the Court upon the facts so found. If the indictment is not barred by the statute of limitations, they found the defendant guilty; but if it is barred, they found him not guilty. The Court adjudged the defendant guilty, and from the judgment upon the verdict, the defendant excepted and appealed. The Revisal, sec. 3147, provides *527 that all misdemeanors, except the offenses of perjury, forgery, malicious mischief and other malicious misdemeanors, shall be presented or found by the grand jury within two years after the commission of the same, and not afterwards, unless any of said misdemeanors shall have been committed in a secret manner, when it may be prosecuted within two years after the discovery of the offense. If the crime alleged in the indictment to have been committed by the defendant is not a malicious misdemeanor, he was improperly convicted.
There was no such distinct offense at the common law as a malicious assault, for all assaults were but misdemeanors, punishable by fine and imprisonment, and the circumstances of aggravation could be taken into account by the Court only in fixing the punishment. Clark Cr. Law (2 Ed.), p. 229; 1 McClain Cr. Law, secs. 255, 262 and 280; 1 East Pl. of Crown, 436; People v. Petit, 3 Johns., 511;Commonwealth v. Barlow,
It is to be noted that there are a class of malicious misdemeanors known to our law which will satisfy the words of the statute referring to them generally by that name. But assaults are not among them, even though they may be committed with malice.
Upon the special verdict, judgment should have been entered for the defendant, and he is entitled to an acquittal and (676) discharge, as the alleged crime was barred by the statute. S. v.Morris,
Error.