12 Ga. App. 91 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The plaintiff in'error was tried on an indictment which was as follows (omitting formal parts) : “For that the said John Walker, on the 2 day of Oct.•in the year nineteen hundred and-in the county aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully and with force and arms, play and bet for money and other things of value at a certain game played with cards, to wit: poker, skin,
The first, and really the only, question presented is as to whetfier the trial judge erred in.overruling the plea of autrefois acquit; and the determination of this question depends solely upon the character of the indictment under which he was first tried. If that indictment was defective in form, but.this' defect was cured by verdict, the plea should have been sustained, for it was conceded that the transaction covered by the indictment and the accusation was the same. If it was an indictment void on its face, upon which no valid judgment could have been entered, the accused was not in jeopardy thereunder, and his plea was not a good one, and there was no
There is some diversity in the decisions on this subject, some holding that where an indictment shows that the offense is barred by the statute and no statutory exception is alleged, the State will nevertheless be allowed on the trial to show that the offense was within the exception, and that the statute of limitations does not appty. But this is immaterial, as the decision in the McLane case, supra, approved in the Hansford case, is controlling on the subject, and under this decision it is clear that, upon the assumption that the time alleged in the indictment .when the offense was committed was the second day of October, 1900, the indictment was void on its face, since the offense was barred by the statute of limitations and the conviction was unlawful, and no valid judgment could be entered on the verdict of conviction. In discussing the
The fact that the accused went to trial on this indictment could not be construed as a waiver of the statute of limitations. Indeed, we do not think that the statute of limitations in a criminal ease can be waived by the accused. This is a matter of public concern, and is not left to the individual, and the fact that the accused went to trial could not give vitality to that which had no legal force
Thus far we have discussed the question on the contention of the ■State that the date when the offense was committed, as alleged in the indictment, was the second day of October, 1900; but we think that this assumption was not authorized by the allegation. We must assume that this indictment was written out, and that the writer, in using the words “on the 2 day of October in the year nineteen hundred and-” meant- to insert in the blank some number, and that the omission to do so was purely inadvertent. "What he intended to insert does not, of course, appear, but certainly we could not say that he intended to allege that this offense was committed in the year 1900. It would be a strained construction of the language used, in light of the manifest omission, and we must conclude that so far as the year was concérned the indictment did not allege any date when the offense was committed. If this is true, then the indictment was subject to special demurrer, and, under the repeated rulings of the Supreme Court, where the accused went to trial without a demurrer, the State could prove the time when the offense was committed, although not specifically alleged, and this formal defect was cured by the verdict. This being true, the indictment was not absolutely void on its face; the defect was cured by the verdict, and a valid judgment could be entered against the accused; and, therefore, his plea of autrefois acquit should have been sustained and the accused discharged, it being conceded that there was but one offense of gaming covered by the indictment and the accusation. As above stated, if the indictment be so defective as to be good cause for arresting the judgment, there is no jeopardy. Simmons v. State, 106 Ga. 355 (32 S. E. 339). But if the indictment is not so defective as that a defect therein is cured by the verdict, then the accused was in jeopardy, and the plea of autrefois acquit .would be good. In Jones v. State, 55 Ga. 625, it is held that the allegation that an offense was committed on an impossible date, or on a date subsequent to the trial, does not make the indictment bad. In Adkins v. State, 103 Ga. 5 (29 S. E. 432), it is held that a motion in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the indictment charged the offense to have been committed on a date subsequent to the finding of the indictment,
Indeed, we think the case of Conner v. State, 25 Ga. 515 (71 Am. Dec. 184), decides the question before us, where it is distinctly held that an indictment or presentment is good, “although an impossible day be stated as that on which the offense was committed.” Where the indictment fails to state the year in which the offense was committed, this brings it within the principle of cases where an impossible date is stated as that on which the offense was committed. In the present indictment no date was stated, and manifestly it was the intention of the pleader to add to the words “nineteen hundred and-” some specific year as the year of the commission of the offense. The error, therefore, on the trial of this indictment was in the judge’s refusing to permit the State to show that the date which the pleader intended to allege in the indictment was the second day of October, in the year 1911. There being no date alleged so far as the year was concerned, this evidence was admissible.
It being conceded that there was but one offense of gaming; that this offense was intended to be covered by the indictment and also by the accusation, and that, therefore, the accused had'been'prer viously tried under the indictment and acquitted, and that this indictment upon which the acquittal was had was not absolutely void, but that the defect in the indictment was cured by the verdict, the plea of autrefois acquit should have been sustained and the accused discharged. This view of the question makes it unnecessary for us to consider any other assignment of error. Judgment reversed.