90 W. Va. 738 | W. Va. | 1922
The Circuit Court of Barbour County, having overruled a motion to quiash an indictment charging that the defendant did drive and operate' a motor vehicle, to-wit, an automobile around a curve in the public road of Union District, Barbour County, without having said automobile under control, and without reducing the speed to a .reasonable and proper rate, certifies the questions arising upon such motion to this court.
The indictment is based upon provisions contained in §96 of ch. 112 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1921, the pertinent provisions being found in sub-section K and sub-section
It will be observed that the indictment in this case charges the offense in the language of the statute, and ordinarily .an indictment for a statutory crime is sufficient if the offense be charged in the language of the statute creating it. There are exceptions to this rule, it is true. Where the language used in the statute creating the offense does not contain a statement of the facts which constitute the crime, then it is .necessary to amplify the statutory language by stating in the indictment all pertinent facts necessary to constitute the offense. The argument here is that this indictment is bad because it simply charges that the defendant operated his automobile around a curve in Union District in violation of the statute, without pointing out the particular curve around which he was operating the automobile at the time it is charged the offense was committed. If the offense could only be committed at a particular place, then, of course, the place of its commission would become an essential element of the crime, and would have to be alleged, but in this case the statute undertakes to inhibit the operation of automobiles
A more serious objection to the indictment is that based upon the unconstitutiomality of the statute so far as it undertakes to make the conduct interdicted a criminal offense. It is insisted that the definition of the offense in the statute is so indefinite and uncertain as to make it void because in violation of § 10 of article 3 of the Constitution forbidding anyone to be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law; and § 14 of the same article, which requires, among other things, that in (all criminal trials the accused shall be fully and plainly informed of the character and cause of the accusation against him. The argument is that the language used in the statute .undertaking to create this offense is so indefinite land uncertain that to allow one to be convicted under its terms would be to deprive him of liberty or property without due process of law, and also without informing him of the nature of the accusation against him. It is a fundamental principle of our jurisprudence that a statute creating a crime must be so certain and definite that one committing an act forbidden can tell when he does so that he has
We are clearly of the opinion that the act is invalid so far as it attempts to make it a criminal offense to drive an automobile around a curve without having the same under proper control, or without reducing the speed to a reasonable and proper rate. The motion to quash the indictment should therefore have been sustained, and we answer the question certified accordingly.
Motion to quash indictment sustained.