23 Iowa 304 | Iowa | 1867
We cannot concur in the ingenious suggestion of the attorney-general, that an officer thus acting is, under section 4548, executing a legal order within the meaning of section 4296. There is an important-- principle involved here, viz., the inadmissibility of constructwe offenses. To make the law, by construction, what the State asks, might be well enough in this case, but bad in the next one, when the application of a similar principle (for causes must be decided by some rule, or all is afloat) - might undermine the liberty or invade the rights of the citizen. It were better to stand by the law as it is written. The administration of criminal jurisprudence by the common law courts is, indeed, badly blemished. by over-technical niceties, but these have been generally im, favorem vitae ; for, rather than against, the prisoner.
But the' faults of the common law tribunals in this regard, are more than redeemed by their stern determi
How striking the contrast between the course of these courts and their administration of the criminal law, and what is observed in other countries not less enlightened.
How it is, or at. least has been, in France, is vividly illustrated by the. exclamation of the French advocate^ who declared that he would fly if accused of stealing the steeples of Notre Dame. See 3 Benth. Jud. Ev. 175. A fall length picture, though perhaps somewhat colored, is memorably drawn in Les Miserables. "We have adverted to these considerations, the more fully to exhibit the reason why we are not disposed to stretch the statute so, as to cover the case made by the indictment, however deserving of punishment it may be.
Aflirmed.