The bill of indictment is based on G.S. 90-106, which, in pertinent part, provides: “Fraudulent attempts to obtain drugs prohibited. — No person shall obtain or attempt to obtain a narcotic drug, or procure or attempt to procure the administration of a narcotic drug (a) by fraud, deceit, misrepresentation, or subterfuge; or (b) by the forgery or alteration of a prescription or of any written order; or (c) by the concealment of a material fact; or (d) by the use of false name or the giving of a false address.”
The quoted statutory provisions create and define four separate criminal oífenses: (1) obtaining a narcotic drug, (2) attempting- to obtain a narcotic drug, (3) procuring the administration of a narcotic drug, and (4) attempting to procure the administration of a narcotic drug, by the means and in the manner set forth in (a), (b), (c) and (d).
In
S. v. Williams,
In
S. v. Albarty,
While not the basis of decision on this appeal, we deem it appropriate to call attention again to this rule of pleading, in criminal cases: “The general rule is well settled that an indictment or information must not charge a person disjunctively or alternatively in such manner as to leave it uncertain what is relied on as the accusation against him. Two offenses cannot, in the absence of statutory permission, be alleged alternatively in the same count. As a general rule, where a statute specifies several means or ways in which an offense may be committed in the alternative, it is bad pleading to allege such means or ways in the alternative; the proper way is to> connect the various allegations in the accusing pleading with the conjunctive term ‘and’ and not with the word ‘or’.” 42 C.J.S., Indictments and Information Sec. 101;
S. v. Albarty, supra;
see also
S. v. Jones,
Decision on this appeal is based on the ground that the bill of indictment is fatally defective.
A bill of indictment that charges “in a plain, intelligible and explicit manner,” G.S. 15-153, the criminal offense the accused is “put to answer,” affords the protection guaranteed by Art. I, Secs. 11 and 12, Constitution of North Carolina.
The
essentials
of a valid bill of indictment and the underlying reasons therefor are fully stated by Parker, J., in
S. v. Greer,
It is noted that G.S. 15-143, concerning bills of particulars, relates expressly to “further information not required to be set out” in the bill of indictment.
Under G.S. 90-106, it is not a crime either to obtain or to attempt to obtain a narcotic drug; and it is not a crime either to procure or to attempt to procure the administration of a narcotic drug. To do so by the means and in the manner set forth in (a), (b), (c) or (d) constitutes the criminal offense. Thus, the means and manner are essentials of the crime.
It is apparent that the indictment alleges no facts tending to identify any particular transaction or the means and manner employed by the accused except in the “mere general or generic terms” of G.S. 90-106. There are no factual averments as to the nature of the alleged “fraud, deceit, misrepresentation, or subterfuge”; or as to the identity or contents of a prescription or other written order alleged to have been forged or altered; or as to what material fact is alleged to have been concealed; or as to what false name was used or what false address was given.
Whether by forgery or alteration of a prescription or other written order, or by concealment of a material fact, or by using a false name or giving a false address, the gist of all is “fraud, deceit, misrepresentation, or subterfuge.” In this connection, it is noted that even in civil actions “A pleading setting up fraud must allege the facts relied upon to constitute fraud . . .”
Calloway v. Wyatt,
It is noted further that in an indictment for forgery, the instrument alleged to be forged must be set forth,
S. v. Lytle,
*744
In
S. v. Farmer,
The basis of decision is set forth in this excerpt from the opinion of Avery, J.:
“The transaction on which the indictment was founded should also be sufficiently identified by its terms to insure to the accused the benefit of a plea of former acquittal or conviction, if indicted a second time for the same offense. S. v. Pickens,79 N.C. 652 ; S. v. Burns,80 N.C. 376 ; S. v. Stamey,71 N.C. 202 ; S. v. Watkins, 101 N.C. 702. We think, therefore, that all of the counts of the indictment were fatally defective in not charging that the prescription was false and fraudulent.
“It is of the essence of the offense created by the law (Sec. 4, Ch. 215, Laws 1887) that the prescription should be false or fraudulent. The indictment should set out distinctly not only that the prescription was either false or fraudulent, but in what the falsehood or fraud consisted, as that the prescription was intended to convey and did convey the idea that in the opinion of the defendant the person to whom the prescription was given was sick and was in need of the liquors prescribed as a medicine; whereas, in fact and in truth, the said person (prescribed for) was not sick and did not need the spirituous liquor as a medicine.”
In
S. v. Cole,
It is noted that, in the present case, we are concerned with a total absence of factual averments, not with the sufficiency or insufficiency of factual averments.
*745
A valid bill of indictment is an essential of jurisdiction.
S. v. Strickland,
Hence, the record disclosing that the bill of indictment is fatally defective, this Court, of its own motion, arrests the judgment.
S. v. Jordan,
Judgment arrested.
