Collins v. State
Collins v. State
Opinion of the Court
The indictment charges that the defendant, “who was at the time the agent or servant of the Western Union Telegraph Company, a corporation, did embezzle or fraudulently convert to his own use money to about the amount of $1,100, the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company, a corporation, which money came into his possession by virtue of his office or employment, against the peace,” etc.
“It is due to the circuit judge that we should say, the sufficiency of the indictment does not appear to have been brought to his attention. Still we feel bound to notice it.” Raisler v. State, 55 Ala. 64.
The contention is made by the state in the application for rehearing that one of the alternative averments in the indictment describes a person amenable to the statute (Code 1007, § 6828), and therefore the judgment of conviction, on authority of Hornsby v. State, 94 Ala. 55, 10 South. 522, must be referred to the good alternative averment, and the other treated as surplusage. The fault of this position is that the averment describing the defendant as a person amenable to the statute is not an unequivocal averment that the defendant is in a class covered by the statute, but that he is in, that class or in a class not within the purview of the statute. Brooms v. State, 73 South. 36, 38 ; 2 Raisler v. State, 55 Ala. 64; State v. Nix, 165 Ala. 126, 51 South. 754. The rule of pleading requires that the indictment, by unequivocal averments, charge every essential element of the offense. Noah v. State, 72 South. 611 ; 3 Ex parte State (Noah v. State), 197 Ala. 703, 72 South. 613.
That the defendant is an officer, agent, or clerk of an incorporated company is one of the essential elements of the offense sought to be charged by the indictment. Pullam v. State, 78 Ala. 31, 56 Am. Rep. 21. The defects in the indictment treated in Hornsby v. State, supra, and Gaines v. State, 146 Ala. 16, 41 South. 865, while defects of substance, did not involve the omission of an element of the offense charged, and this fact distinguishes these cases from the ohe presented here, as appears from the following expression in the case last cited:
“The means with which the offense charged was committed, however, is not, in an indictment for murder, a constituent element of the offense. The unlawful killing, with malice aforethought, regardless of the means employed, constitutes murder. Every constituent element of murder is averred in the indictment. The omission to aver the means employed, though in a sense a defect of substance, and not one of mere form, yet is such a defect as must he taken advantage of by demurrer.”
Reversed and remanded.
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