delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was convicted of “knowingly, willfully, and maliciously cutting and removing for the purpose of marketing timber from the lands of another, without the consent of the owner of the timber so cut and removed,” in violation of the provisions of chapter 106, p. 257, of the Acts of 1897. The jury fixed the punishment of the prisoner at two years confinement in the State prison. He appealed, and has assigned errors. No part of the testimony has been preserved by the bill of exceptions, and the cause is here only upon the technical record, showing, among other things, the indictment, verdict of the jury, judgment of the court, etc.
Counsel for the prisoner insists that the judgment should be arrested, and the prisoner discharged, for the reason that the indictment fails to charge that the removal of the timber “was without the consent of the owner,” which is an indispensable ingredient to constitute the crime charged by the statute. It deos not appear from the record that any motion was interposed on behalf of the prisoner either to quash the indictment or in arrest of judgment; but it will be conceded that, if no crime denounced by the act of 1897 is charged in the indictment, this court should not affirm the judgment.
It is said in Bishop’s New Criminal Procedure, secs. 1991-2: “On an indictment bad in substance, there should be no sentence, though there was no motion in arrest” — citing Younger v. State, 37 Ark., 116; State v. Smalls, 17 S. C., 62.
The same author, however, in the latest edition of his New Criminal Procedure (section 700a), says: “At common law, the verdict cures some things as to which the rule is the same in criminal cases as in civil. It is that, though a matter either of form or of substance is omitted from the allegation, or alleged imperfectly, yet if, under the pleadings, the proof of it was essential to the findings, it must be presumed, after verdict, to have been proved and the'party cannot for the first time object that it has wrought him no harm.”
Mr. Chitty, in treating of this subject in his work on Pleading (volume 1, p. 673), says: “The general principle upon which it depends appears to be that where there is any defect, imperfection, or omission in any pleading, whether in substance or in form, which would have been a fatal objection to the demurrer, yet if the issue be such as necessarily required in the trial proof
This rule was recognized and applied in Cannon v. Phillips, 2 Sneed, 211, and in Memphis Gayoso Gas Co. v. J. M. Williamson et al., 9 Heisk., 314, and Fowlkes v. State, 14 Lea, 14.
It will be observed, moreover, that the indictment avers in the language of the statute that the removal of the timber was done maliciously, which ex vi termini imports that it was done without the consent of the owner. It was necessary, moreover, in support of the averment that the timber was maliciously removed, to show by proof that the act was committed without the consent of the owner. If, therefore, the indictment is conceded to be defective, we are of opinion the infirmity is cured by the verdict of the jury.
The judgment must, therefore be affirmed.