42 P. 510 | Idaho | 1895
Defendant was charged, by information filed in the district court for Latah county, with the crime of forgery. To the information he interposed a demurrer, setting up several grounds, among others, “that the said information does not state facts sufficient to constitute an offense against this defendant, or at all.” Subsequently, the defendant withdrew his said demurrer, and entered his plea of guilty to the information. Thereafter, on September 6, 1895, judgment and sentence were pronounced against the defendant, from which judgment and sentence this appeal is taken.
It is contended by counsel for the appellant that, notwithstanding the withdrawal of his demurrer, and the entry of his plea of guilty, the defendant waived none of his rights, and that he is still entitled to raise in this court, upon appeal, for the first time, the question that the information filed against him ■did not state facts sufficient to constitute an offense. Counsel ■cite with a degree of confidence the case of People v. Du Rell, 1 Idaho, 44, in support of this contention. In that case Du Pell had been convicted before a probate judge, and sentenced to pay a fine for carrying on the business of a trader or merchant, without having first procured a license therefor, as required by statute. From the judgment of conviction by the probate court, Du Pell appealed to the district court, where, upon trial,the judg
The contention in this case bears the impress of an idea, the ■obtaining of which among the legal profession we have before been called upon to deprecate, and that is that the criminal law is enacted solely for the protection of criminals. In Territory v. Carland, 6 Mont. 14, 6 Pac. 578, the court, in passing upon this question, on a statute identical with that of Idaho, say: “In this case there was a motion in arrest of judgment. It does not, however, appear that this motion was ever acted upon by dhe court. The appellant did not therefore insist upon his motion, and will be deemed to have waived it. The statute having provided the method of procedure to take advantage of such •a defect, that method must be pursued. The objection that the facts stated in the indictment do not constitute a public •offense cannot be presented in this court for the first time.'7 And the same court, in a recent case (State v. Malish, 15 Mont. 506, 39 Pac. 739), reiterate and affirm this doctrine, adding the following language: “The ruling in the Carland case in upholding the statute cited does not hold that a judgment will be sustained upon an information which does not state an offense, nor that such judgment will be sustained upon an information where it appears that the court has no jurisdiction of the offense. The ■decision simply recognizes that the statute provides, as it has ■a right to do, in what court these objections should be made, and that they must be first made in the district court, rather than in the supreme court. Appeals are a matter of statutory regulation.” We are in accord with the Montana court in its ■construction and application of this statute. Other questions are raised by the record, but, as the decision of this disposes ■of the appeal, we do not feel called upon to go further in the -consideration of the caie. The judgment of the district court •as affirmed.