34 N.J.L. 368 | N.J. | 1871
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was indicted for libel, and on the trial the paper containing the alleged defamation was objected to because of certain variances between it and the indictment. These variances are occasioned, in the main:, by words being abbreviated in the indictment, although there are some words so imperfectly written that their ascertainment is entirely conjectural.
. The general rule of criminal pleading, when the tenor of a writing is required to be set forth, as in forgery and in libel, is, that the indictment should contain an exact copy. From the older cases it appears that this requirement was originally enforced with great strictness. But in the more modern practice this severity has been, in several instances, somewhat moderated, so that now we find the law stated in
But in the present instance, if wo sustain these proceedings, we must go much beyond this bound. In the libel recited in the indictment there are between twenty and thirty abbreviations, which do not exist in the original. Frequently two letters, and sometimes three, are omitted in one word. By the statute of amendments (Nix. Dig. 10, § 17,
Upon the argument before this court it was insisted that in trials for libel, the jury, by force of the constitution of this state, were made the judges of the law and the faet, and-that, as a consequence, all matters of variance must be adjudged by them. This position is not well taken. This clause of our constitution has never been judicially expounded, and therefore the question is an open one, whether or not the jury, on the case being submitted to> them, can decide the law for themselves, disregarding in this particular the instructions of the judge presiding at the trial. According to my present understanding, the jury have not been clothed with any such right, the sole effect of the provision being to place prosecutions for libel on the same footing with other criminal proceedings, so that the jury can, in this class of cases, not only settle the facts, but also make the proper application of the law, as expounded by the court, to such facts. But the inquiry is an important one, and no settled opinion is intended to be expressed on the subject. But whatever doubts may surround this point,.
The question of variance in this case is addressed, for, decision, to the court, and not to the jury,
The Court of Oyer and Terminer should be advised in accordance with the view above expressed.
Rev., p. 12.