23 Ind. App. 207 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
It is objected to the sufficiency of the affidavit upon which the information is based that it charges no misdemeanor under the statute, and that there is an attempt to charge appellee in the same affidavit with the commission of several misdemeanors. The affidavit upon which the information is based, omitting the formal part, is as follows: “That on the 23rd day of April, 1898, in said county of Lake and State of Indiana, one "William Hilgendorf, who was then and there over the age of twenty-two years, and of sound mind, and who was then and there and for more than two years prior thereto a resident and taxpayer of North
The above affidavit is drawn under §2271 Bums 1894, which is as follows: “Whoever when requested by the assessor, state, county or municipal, or any of his deputies, fails to give a true list of all his taxable property, or to take and subscribe any oath in that behalf, as required by law, or shall fix a fraudulent value, where an oath is not required, on such property, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined,” etc. The offense charged in the affidavit is a statutory one,
In Stribbling v. State, 56 Ind. 79, the Supreme Court say: “The sufficiency or insufficiency of an indictment may be tested by the answer to the following question: Can the facts, properly alleged in the indictment, be true, and the defendant innocent of the offense intended to be charged against him? If the answer must be in the affirmative the indictment is bad; if in the negative the indictment is good.”
If we apply this test to the affidavit in question we cannot help but conclude that it is good. If the facts properly alleged in the affidavit are true, appellee is guilty of the offense defined by the statute as charged against him in the affidavit. "We think the words in the affidavit “as required by law” might be entirely omitted and the indictment still charge the offense intended under the statute. It cannot be contended that there is not sufficient matter alleged in the affidavit in question to indicate the crime and person charged. §1824 Burns 1894.
The lower court erred in sustaining the motion to quash the affidavit and information. The appeal of the State is therefore sustained at the cost of appellee.