It is believed that it was intended, in this case, to charge the defendant with the unlawful alteration, obliteration, and defacing of a certain receipt of the de
The facts constituting the supposed offense are not averred with sufficient certainty as to apprize the defendant of the offense alleged to have been committed by him. The
The offense intended to be charged in this case is a felony. The instrument might have been altered materially by erasing two letters, reducing the sum mentioned in the receipt from $60 to $6. This alteration, or any other, if in fact made, should have been averred; but it does not appear from the indictment.in this case that the receipt, for the alteration of which the complaint is made, has in fact been altered in any respect. To obliterate, in legal effect, would be “to deface, to efface, to blot out, to destroy.” Obliterate, in the law, may be to alter, but certainly to alter will not necessarily be held as an obliteration. This indictment is defective in not averring what acts were done by the defendant. It is not questioned that it is an offense to alter, to obliterate, or to deface certain writings which are mentioned; but, as has been said, the objection to this indictment is, that it is not averred with sufficient certainty what was done.
The grand jury must, of necessity, hear the testimony before returning a bill for a violation of law. The facts constituting the offense ought to be known to the officer who is to prepare the bills of indictment, and the offender should be charged with the particular offense which the evidence shows he has committed, and not with that offense and something else, when it clearly appears that he could not have committed the two or more offenses, as alleged. It is not perceived how the defendant could possibly have altered the receipt by adding a word to or erasing a word from the receipt, and by the same act obliterate, blot out, and destroy the entire receipt.
Part 7, Art. 895, Criminal Procedure, in prescribing what shall be deemed a sufficient indictment, says “ the offense must be. set forth in plain and intelligible words.”
The words in this indictment are not plain, for the reason that it does not appear whether the alteration of the
Affirmed.
