Since the warrant charged the commission of a felony under the statute (C. S., 4214), the defendant could not be put to answer but by indictment. Constitution, Art. I, see. 12;
S. v. Hyman,
In the case at bar, after this defendant had been put to trial in the Superior Court on the original warrant without a bill of indictment and over his objection, the solicitor was permitted to amend the warrant by striking therefrom the words in which the charge of felony under the statute were contained, thereby changing the offense charged from a felony to a misdemeanor. There was no waiver by defendant of bill for a misdemeanor. While amendments to process and pleading, under our procedure, in both civil and criminal causes, are liberally allowed (C. S., 547; C. S., 1500; Eule 12), this does not imply that the court has power to change the nature of the offense intended to be charged so as to charge a different offense in substance from that at first intended.
S. v. Vaughan,
Neither of the cases cited by the State sustains the action of the court below in permitting the amendments objected to. In
S. v. Davis,
In
S. v. Mills,
Tbe defendant’s objection to the amending of tbe warrant as permitted in this case seems to have been well taken, and tbe court below was in error in ruling tbe defendant to trial without a bill of indictment duly found. Tbe cause is remanded with directions that tbe verdict and judgment be set aside, and that upon tbe warrant issued tbe defendant be held under bond pending action by tbe grand jury, or until tbe case is disposed of according to law.
Error and remanded.
