60 Me. 410 | Me. | 1872
The R. S. of 1871, c. 127, § 7, provide, among other things, for the punishment of ‘ wilfully and maliciously ’ throwing down a gate.
The allegation in the indictment is that the defendant ‘ did unlawfully and maliciously throw down a certain gate,’ etc.
These words do not describe the statute offense. The indictment should charge the offense in the words-of the statute, or in words equivalent thereto. The statute uses the words ‘ wilfully and maliciously.’ It does not regard them as identical in meaning, as both are used. When the statute makes the doing of an act ‘ wilfully and maliciously ’ criminal, it will not be sufficient in the indictment to charge that it was done ‘ feloniously, unlawfully, and
It was held in Rex v. Davis, 1 Leach, 556, that ‘ unlawfully and maliciously ’ is not equivalent to wilfully and maliciously, and that as ‘ wilfully and maliciously ’ were both mentioned in the statute as descriptive of the offense, both must be stated in the indictment.
Exceptions sustained.