State v. Perkins

88 Vt. 121 | Vt. | 1914

Taylor, J.

The respondent was informed against under P. S. Chap. 217 as amended by No. 170 Acts of 1910 for becoming a dealer in evergreen trees without first procuring a license therefor. There was trial by jury at the March Term, 1913, of Washington County Court and a verdict of guilty and judgment thereon with exceptions reserved by the respondent.

The information is in six counts and charges distinct offences, four in Waterbury in Washington County and two in Duxbury in said County, all alleged as having been committed in November, 1912. The statute on which this prosecution is based was repealed by No. 185, Acts of 1912, approved Feb. 21, 1913, and taking effect from its passage; but the repealing act excepted offences committed prior to Feb. 21, 1913, and “causes, proceedings or penalties based thereon. ’ ’

Before trial the respondent filed both a general and a special demurrer to the information. There was a hearing on the demurrers, which were overruled and an exception allowed the respondent. Thereupon a jury was empanelled and the trial proceeded.

The respondent’s exception to the action of the court in overruling his demurrer is available notwithstanding his pleading over. This being a criminal ease he has not thereby waived his right to insist upon his demurrer. State v. Bosworth, 74 Vt. 315, 52 Atl. 423. The case does not show how it happened that two demurrers were filed. No specification of the grounds of demurrers relied upon was filed with the general demurrer as required by the rules of the county court (rule 10, sec. 3); and the so-called special demurrer presents no ground that would not have been reached by general demurrer with specifications under the rule. The hearing below was on the grounds assigned in the special demurrer. It is probable that the so-called special demurrer was intended as a specification of the grounds of demurrer required by the rule and will be so treated.

The several counts of the information are identical except as to time and place. In each it is alleged that the respondent on a day named at a place named did become a dealer in evergreen trees without first procuring a license therefor. Six grounds of demurrer are assigned but all come to the same question, viz.: whether it is necessary to set forth the facts constituting this offence further than to charge that the respondent became a dealer in evergreen trees without license.

*124P. S. 5012, as amended, provided: “A person, firm or corporation that buys or sells in any year more than twenty evergreen trees less than seven inches in diameter at the butt as cut, not grown upon his own land, shall be deemed a dealer in evergreen trees.” P. S. 5013 provided: “A person, firm or corporation shall, before becoming a dealer in evergreen trees procure a license therefor as provided in this chapter.” In other sections the statute provided how the license shall be secured and the fees therefor. Sec. 5 of No. 170, Acts of 1910, provided: “A person, firm or corporation that becomes a dealer in evergreen trees without procuring a license therefor as provided in this act # * # shall be fined -not more than three hundred dollars, and each transaction of purchase or sale shall constitute a distinct offence.”

Thus it is seen that one section of the statute provided who should be deemed a dealer in evergreen trees and another section penalized the becoming such dealer without license. The State contends that the offence being statutory it is sufficient to charge the offence in the language of the section of the statute providing the penalty. While it is true that an indictment or information for a statutory offence is sufficient if it follows the lánguage thereof when every fact necessary to constitute the offence is charged or necessarily implied by following such language (State v. Bannister, 79 Vt. 524, 65 Atl. 586), the converse is equally true that it is not sufficient to pursue even the very words of the statute unless by so doing you fully, directly and expressly allege the fact or facts in the doing or not doing whereof the offence consists. State v. Higgins, 53 Vt. 191; State v. Fiske, 66 Vt. 434, 29 Atl. 633.

This information omits to allege the facts necessary to bring the respondent within the scope of the definition of a dealer in evergreen trees. He is left to refer to the statute to ascertain what constitutes such a dealer; and, even if he were to refer to the statuté for the definition, there is still nothing in the information to apprise him of the' transaction complained of— neither with whom nor whether a purchase or sale. .This clearly does not ‘ ‘ apprise him of the cause and nature of his accusation ’ ’ in a way that he has a right under the constitution to demand. The information wholly fails to satisfy the requirements of the law in that none of the facts necessary to constitute the offence *125except want' of license are charged, and the respondent’s demurrer should have been sustained.

Respondent’s counsel discuss in their brief on this exception the constitutionality of the statute, but the question is not before us. It was not urged as a ground of demurrer below and he was not granted leave to raise the question here. Supreme Court Rule 13 provides that when the demurrant is the excepting party he will.not, without leave, be heard upon any cause of demurrer not shown by the bill of exceptions to have been specially pointed out on the hearing below. In this case leave was not asked. The rules of this and the county court relating to hearings on demurrer are designed, among other things, to confine the inquiry here to a review of the question decided in the court below.

Other exceptions were taken at the trial, but they need not be discussed. Some of these are not briefed, and so are not for considérátíon; others are too plainly without merit to require notice; and still others are not likely to arise on a new trial. The exception to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the respondent “because the law is wholly unconstitutional” should be noticed. Such an exception is not available to raise the question. A motion for a directed verdict is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence (Bass v. Rublee, 76 Vt. 395, 57 Atl. 965) .and brings before the Court the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the allegations of the information. An exception to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict is not the appropriate course to raise, on review, the sufficiency of the information or the validity of the law on which it is based. State v. Rosenberg, 88 Vt. 223, 92 Atl. 145; State v. Louanis, 79 Vt. 463, 65 Atl. 532, 9 Ann. Cas. 194; Brattleboro v. Wait, 46 Vt. 689. The trial court may, as a matter of discretion, where the declaration or information is fatally defective so that a motion in arrest of judgment would have to be sustained, end the case by directing a verdict for the defendant or respondent. Wright v. Bourdon, 50 Vt. 494; Batchelder v. Kinney, 44 Vt. 150; Amidon v. Aiken, 28 Vt. 440; Dyer v. Tilton, 23 Vt. 313. But it being in the discretion of the court in such case whether to allow a verdict to be taken, leaving the question to be raised oh a motion in arrest, or to direct a verdict on that ground to save further expense, an exception to the court’s refusal to sus*126tain the motion does not lie. Baxter v. Winooski Turnpike Co., 22 Vt. 114, 52 Am. Dec. 84.

Judgment and sentence reversed and cause remanded.