166 S.E. 384 | W. Va. | 1932
Defendants as members of the county court of Barbour county, prosecute error to the judgment of the circuit court by which defendants were fined $10.00 each under a conviction for violation of chapter
"The Grand Jurors of the State of West Virginia, in and for the body of the County of Barbour, and now attending the said Court, upon their oaths present that T. H. Lake, C. L. Phillips, J. N. Cutright, H. D. Cox, C. D. Gainer, Thurman Paugh, Earl Golden and Howard Teter, were, on the _____ day of March, 1931, the duly elected, qualified and acting members of the County Court of Barbour County, West Virginia, a corporation, and were, on said _____ day of March, 1931, regularly assembled in a legal session of said County Court, and that the said T. H. Lake, C. L. Phillips, J. N. Cutright, H. D. Cox, C. D. Gainer, Thurman Paugh, Earl Golden and Howard Teter, so assembled, as aforesaid, acted as the County Court of Barbour County, West Virginia, a corporation, and did then and there unlawfully allow and pay a claim for labor, in the sum of $58.00, upon a payroll for work, purporting to have been done on the Pleasant District Roads of said County, said claim and payroll for such labor, as aforesaid, not being then and there verified by the affidavit of the person making said claim, against the peace and dignity of the State."
Defendants attack the sufficiency of the indictment on the ground that it fails to describe, with particularity and precision, the offense charged. Under chapter
No brief was offered on behalf of the state; but presumably the prosecuting attorney, in preparing the indictment, had in mind the rule that, in an indictment for a statutory offense, it is generally proper to describe the offense in the terms used by the statute. (See State v. Constable,
Having so concluded, we do not deem it necessary to consider other alleged errors.
Reversed.