60 Miss. 260 | Miss. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
In every indictment for a felony the use of the word “ fel-oniously ” is essential.
It is urged that inasmuch as perjury was a crime both at
The position seems plausible, but it was decided in Bowler’s Case, 41 Miss. 570, under a statute of which sect. 3099, of our present Code is a reprint, that the statute would not apply in a case where the act charged was a misdemeanor at common law and a felony by statute, and that in such cases it must be charged to have been done “ feloniously,” no matter what form of indictment was pursued.
The crime of perjury was a misdemeanor at common law and is made a felony by statute.
It follows, therefore, under the case cited, that in every indictment it must be charged to have been “ feloniously ” done.
Judgment reversed, indictment quashed, and appellant held to await further action of the grand jury of Grenada County.