169 Ind. 662 | Ind. | 1908
This is a proceeding by writ of habeas corpus against the superintendent of the Marion county workhouse for the discharge of appellant from said institution. On motion of appellee said writ was quashed and final .judgment rendered against appellant remanding him to the custody of said superintendent.
It appears from the application for said writ that appellant was on August 15,1907, arrested and brought before the Juvenile Court of Marion County upon an affidavit charging that appellant within Marion county, State of Indiana, ‘ ‘ did on or about August 15, 1907, cause and encourage one [naming her], a girl under the age of fifteen years, to commit an act of delinquency, as defined in the statute in such case made and provided in this, to wit, that he, said Edgar Tullis, held illicit sexual intercourse with said [naming her], that he also aimed to assist said [naming her] to make her escape from the Indiana Girls’ .School, of which institution she is an inmate,” etc. Said affidavit was signed and sworn to August 15, 1907.
Appellant was arraigned upon said charge, and entered a plea of not guilty. Said cause was tried by the court, and on August 26, 1907, the court found appellant guilty, and sentenced him to pay a fine in the sum of $500 and to be imprisoned in the Marion county workhouse for 180 days. Judgment was rendered upon the finding. Appellant is restrained and imprisoned by virtue of said judgment, and the commitment issued thereon.
It is alleged in said application “that the Juvenile Court of Marion County is a court of limited jurisdiction, and has by law no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the offense charged in the affidavit, for which reason said judgment was and is absolutely void.”
It is insisted by appellant that said affidavit charged him with the commission of a felony under that part of section 361 of the “act concerning public offenses,” as amended by the act of 1907 (Acts 1907, p. 85, §2250 Burns 1908), which reads as follows: “Whoever unlawfully has carnal knowledge, # * * of a female child under sixteen years of age # * * jg guilty of rape, and on conviction shall be imprisoned in the state prison not less than two years nor more than twenty-one years; ’ ’ that as the Juvenile Court of Marion County has under said act of 1907 only the power of an
It is evident that said affidavit did not attempt to charge appellant with the crime of rape on a child under sixteen years, the age of consent, for the reason that the allegation concerning her age is in connection with that part of the affidavit which purports to charge appellant with a misdemeanor—that is, causing and encouraging her to commit an act of delinquency as defined by §§1641, 1648, supra. Said sections are for the protection of girls “under the full age of seventeen years.” The allegation in that connection, that she was under the age of fifteen years, was, in effect and substance, that she was “under the full age of seventeen years.” If she was under said age of seventeen, what her age really was, or how much it was under seventeen years was immaterial. State v. Newton (1876), 44 Iowa 45, 47; State v. Fetterly (1903), 33 Wash. 599, 602, 74 Pac. 810; People v. Gardner (1893), 98 Cal. 127, 32 Pac. 880; Inman v. State (1898), 65 Ark. 508, 47 S. W. 558.
It is said in 19 Ency. PI. and Pr., 251: ‘ ‘ The natural and proper use of either a scilicet or a videlicet is to particularize that which has before been stated generally, and to explain that which is indifferent, doubtful, or obscure. However, it sometimes may work a restriction of the preceding allegations when tliey are not express and special, but are so indifferent that they are capable of being restrained without apparent injury to them, though by construction of law they would have had the larger sense if there had been no videlicet. It cannot, as a general rule, be used to preface anything contrary or repugnant to the premises, nor can it increase or diminish the precedent matter; and if it attempts to do either the statement made under it will be rejected as surplusage.” Armstrong v. Jackson (1822), 1 Blackf. *210, 12 Am. Dec. 225; Blackwell v. Board, etc. (1828), 2 Blackf. 143, 147; Groves v. McCabe (1846), 8 Blackf. 88; State v. Brown (1883), 51 Conn. 1; Dakin’s Case (1671), 2 Saund. 291, and notes. See, also, Wharton, Crim. Pl. and Pr. (9th ed.), §§122, 158a; Gould, Pleadings (4th ed.), §§36-41; 19 Ency. Pl. and Pr., 251-257; Clark, Crim. Proc., 173; 8 Words and Phrases, 7319; 1 Bishop, Crim. Proc. (4th ed.), §406.
The part of said rule, that when the matter laid under a videlicet is material and impossible or repugnant to what precedes the videlicet it will vitiate the pleading as an entirety, has been somewhat modified in this State by §2063 Burns 1908, Acts 1905, pp. 584, 625, §192, which provides: “No indictment or affidavit shall be deemed' invalid, nor shall the same be set aside or quashed, nor shall the trial, judgment or other proceeding, be stayed, arrested or in any manner affected for any of the following defects: * * *
Said Juvenile Court of Marion County was given complete jurisdiction to hear and determine all charges of misdemeanor under the act of 1905 (Acts 1905, p. 440, §1641 Burns 1908), and section two thereof as amended in 1907 (Acts 1907, p. 266, §1648 Burns 1908), and as said affidavit purported to charge a misdemeanor under said act of 1905 and the amendment of 1907, said court had full and complete jurisdiction of the subject-matter thereof, and also, as the record shows, of the person of appellant. Having such jurisdiction said court was bound to act, and decide all the questions heretofore mentioned and all other questions going to the sufficiency of the facts alleged in said affidavit to charge a misdemeanor under said acts of 1905 and 1907.
If the court had jurisdiction to decide these questions correctly, it also had jurisdiction to decide them erroneously
The Juvenile Court of Marion County, by convicting appellant of a misdemeanor, and assessing his punishment under section three of the act of 1905 (Acts 1905, p. 440, §1649 Burns 1908), determined and adjudged that said affidavit only charged appellant with a misdemeanor under said act of 1905 and the amendment of 1907.
Judgment affirmed.