25 Vt. 616 | Vt. | 1853
■The opinion of tbe court was delivered by
This case comes up upon' exceptions to the ruling of tbe County Court, upon a motion in arrest, for the insufficiency of the indictment. The seventh section of tbe act of 1850, (Comp. Stat. 506,) upon which 'this prosecution was grounded, makes it an offence to sell, or furnish intoxicating liquors, in a quantity less than twenty gallons, at any one time; the person doing it, not having a license therefor. Suppose that we hold, that either selling or 'furnishing without a license, constitutes a separate and distinct of-fence, and this probably is a true exposition of tbe statute, yet the penalty is the same, and in such case both offences may be charged in tbe same indictment, and should be charged in the conjunctive, as is done in this indictment.
The rule as laid down in Wharton’s Criminal Law is thus expressed, “ if the statute enumerates the offences disjunctively, the indictment should charge them conjunctively /” and this is not only the rule as established in .several of our sister States, which are referred to by Mr. Wharton, but is also the rule in England. 1 Burr. 399. 1 Salkeld 342, 371.
This rule is no doubt limited, in its application to cases where the offences created in a statute are not repugnant. In the case at bar there is no repugnancy in the offences or in the penalty. In the .case cited from, the New Hampshire Reports, there was a repugnancy, in tbe penalty. Our courts bave also decided, that you could not join in one count, the stealing of a horse, and a saddle and bridle. B.ut such .a case has no analogy to the one at bar.
■ It is further said in argument, that the legislature in tbe 12th section of the statute, have prescribed a form for the indictment, and that the statute is imperative, and requires that to be used, and will no.t allow .of any .other. The form is, “ that defendant became
"We think this objection cannot avail the party. I apprehend for one, that the form prescribed in the statute is not extended beyond prosecutions before a justice of the peace. The section provides that prosecutions may he had before any justice of the peace, &c., and the indictment, information, or complaint shall he in the following form substantially. The form is then given adapted to a justice of the peace, and it requires the justice to endorse on the complaint, the day it is filed in his office. But we think if the form given was designed for the County Court, this indictment is not had. The averment made in this indictment, beyond what .is contained in the prescribed form, may,'if necessary, be rejected as surplusage. The rule is, that all unnecessary averments may on trial, or on motion in arrest of judgment, be rejected as surplusage, if the indictment would he good upon striking them out. But we think, the specification of the acts of the defendant, which go to make up the offence charged, cannot vitiate the indictment. Indeed without this, the court could not see upon a general conviction, whether the penalty should be that which the statute prescribes for selling in a quantity of twenty gallons or more at one time, or that which is prescribed, where the sale is for a quantity less than twenty gallons. I take it, it is a well established principle, that every indictment should be so drawn, specifying the offence, that upon a general conviction the court may know what sentence should be passed..
The judgment of this court is, that the defendant take nothing; by his exceptions.