24 Mo. App. 227 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
The defendant was indicted in the Jackson county criminal court, from which, on application of the defendant, the case was removed by change of venue to the Lafayette county criminal court.
The indictment charged that the defendant, ‘ ‘ on the twenty-third day of December, 1881, at the county oJ Jackson, state of Missouri, being then and there the drily elected and qualified collector of the revenues within and for said county and state, being then and there in the exercise of the functions of his office as collector aforesaid, by collecting and receiving taxes due upon the taxable personal and real property being and situate in Jackson county, Missouri, for the various purposes for which the same was liable to taxation for the year 1881, did then and there, knowingly, corruptly, wilfully, unlawfully and systematically, commit great fraud in his official capacity and under color of his office, in this : that he did then and there, knowingly, corruptly, wilfully, unlawfully and systematically, exact, demand and receive of and from divers tax-paying citizens of said county and state, various sums of money as taxes for year 1881, over and above the true amount of taxes due from said tax-paying citizens for the year 1881, to-wit: From H. Nevins, the sum of $10.00; S. M. Bauman, the sum of $2.50; from T. O. Defree, the ■sum of $2.00; from James M. Tyson, the sum of $2.50 ; from Samuel Machette, the sum of $5.01 ; from Ida Inger, the sum of $2.50,” and various sums from six
To this indictment the defendant demurred, assigning the following objections:
‘ ‘ 1. That the acts set out and described in said indictment are not such acts as constitute official fraud under the laws of this state.
“ 2. That the acts set out and described in said indictment do not constitute an offence under section number 1484, of the Revised Statutes of this state, under which said indictment is drawn.
“ 3. That the acts set out and described in said indictment do not constitute any single offence known to the laws of this state ; but if they constitute any offence whatever, they constitute a large number of separate and independent and distinct offences, and are all embraced in the same indictment and in a single count. Wherefore he prays judgment, and that by the court he may be dismissed and discharged from the premises in said indictment specified.”
The court sustained the demurrer; from this judgment the state has appealed.
It is quite obvious from the phraseology of the indictment that it was drawn under and in reference to the provisions of section 1484, of the Revised Statutes, which is as follows:
“Every officer, or public agent, of this state, or of any county, who shall commit any fraud in his official
It may, for the purposes of this appeal, be conceded that the indictment, in form, charges sufficiently an offence under said section.
But it is contended by respondent, and so the trial court held, in sustaining the demurrer, doubtless, that the offence in question is fully and specifically provided for in section 1487, same statute, which is as follows :
“Every collector of revenue who shall unlawfully collect taxes when none are due, or shall wilfully and unlawfully exact or demand more than is due, shall, upon conviction, be adjudged guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The penalty prescribed under these sections of the statute is quite different, that under the former being more severe. So it is of importance to the defendant under which he should be convicted. We are of opinion that the trial court was correct in its holding. A provision like that contained in section 1484, has been upon the statute books of this state since 1835. In 1843 the legislature enacted for the first time the substance of section 1484, of the present statute, which has been continued in every subsequent revision.
It is among the recognized canons for the ■ construction of statutes that, when the legislature resort in an enactment to much more special provisions respecting a given matter or offence, it must be taken and understood as an exception to the more general provision or general statute, especially so in the interpretation of criminal laws. This rests upon the doctrine that, “where the harmony of the law requires, one statute will be construed as cutting short, that is, curtailing the effect of another.” So that “a thing given in particular shall not be taken away by general words.” Bishop on Stat. Crimes, 126; Sedg. Const. of Stat., 360; State v. De Bar, 58 Mo. 395.
The legislatures by said section 1487, having made special provision for the punishment of the specific
II. The indictment is also obnoxious to the objection of uniting in one and the same count several distinct and independent offences.
The other judges concurring, the judgment of the ' criminal court is affirmed.