The bill of indictment has two counts: one for larceny, and one for receiving stolen property knowing it to have been stolen. The description of the property in the larceny count is a “quantity of meat of the value of fifteen hundred dollars, of the goods, chattels and moneys of one R & S Packing Company.” A similar description occurs in the receiving count. Are the descriptions of the property in the two counts of the bill of indictment sufficient?
It is an essential of jurisdiction that a criminal offense shall be sufficiently charged in a warrant or an indictment.
S. v. Thorne,
Art. I, Sec. 11, of the North Carolina Constitution, guarantees to every person charged with crime the right to be informed of the accusation against him. This constitutional guarantee is a substantial redeclaration of the common law rule requiring the charge against the defendant to be set out in the warrant or indictment with such exactness that the defendant can have a fair and reasonable opportunity to prepare his defense, can avail himself of his conviction or acquittal as a bar to subsequent prosecution for the same offense, and can enable the court, on conviction, to pronounce sentence according to law.
S. v. Jenkins,
G.S. 15-153 has abolished the requirement that the detailed particulars of a crime must be stated in the meticulous manner prescribed by the common law, but the requirement remains that in every prosecution by warrant or indictment the defendant shall be informed of the accusation against him, and this accusation must be set forth with sufficient certainty for the purposes above stated.
S. v. Gibbs,
As to the sufficiency of description of property in an indictment for larceny, this is stated in a note to
Jones v. State,
The case of
S. v. Patrick,
In the
Patrick case
the Court relied upon
S. v. Morey,
As was pointed out in
S. v. Patrick, supra,
in
S. v. Jenkins,
S. v. Oakley,
In
S. v. Allen,
Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2nd Ed., defines meat: “The flesh of animals used as food. . . . Commercially, in the United States, meat means the dressed flesh of cattle, swine, sheep or goats, except where used with a qualifying word, as in reindeer meat, crab meat.” It is common knowledge that we have different kinds of dried meat and canned meat. It is well known that horse meat is used extensively as a food for dogs.
Applying the principles of law above stated, we reach the conclusion that the description of the property in both counts of the bill of indict *103 ment is fatally defective. The defendant has a constitutional right to have the bill of indictment state the kind of meat he is alleged to have taken or received, so that he can know precisely what he is called upon to meet, in order to have a fair and reasonable opportunity to prepare his defense, and so that, in the event of a conviction, the record may show with accuracy the exact offense of which he was convicted. The use of the embracive word meat in the bill of indictment has deprived the defendant of this substantial constitutional right.
The defendant made no motion in the Trial Court to arrest the judgment because the description of the property in both counts of the bill of indictment is fatally defective. However, the defects in the bill of indictment are insurmountable, and this Court ex mero motu will direct the judgment to be arrested. S. v. Thorne, supra; S. v. Scott, supra.
The legal effect of arresting the judgment is to vacate the verdict and sentence of imprisonment below, and the State, if it is so advised, may proceed against the defendant upon a sufficient bill of indictment.
S. v. Faulkner,
Judgment arrested.
