State v. Blackwell

Indiana Supreme Court
State v. Blackwell, 3 Ind. 529 (Ind. 1852)
Perkins

State v. Blackwell

Opinion of the Court

Perkins, J.

At the September term, 1850, of the Ripley Circuit Court, the grand jurors for said Ripley county returned into Court the following bill:

“ The grand jurors,” &c., “upon their oath, present that James H. Blackwell, on the first day of February, in the year eighteen hundred and fifty, at the county of Ripley aforesaid, with force and arms, broke and entered in and upon the close and land of one John F. Acton there situate, to-wit, the north-west, &c., and then and there took and removed from said land a portion of the timber of one poplar tree, which timber so removed by said Blackwell was of the value of 10 dollars, without license,” &c.

This indictment was founded upon the 72d section, p. 975, of the R. S., and was objected to below because it omitted the words “ then and there,” in stating the value of said timber. It was insisted that the indictment should show the value of the timber at the time it was removed. It was quashed.

We think this indictment does so with sufficient certainty. It alleges that the timber was removed on a certain day, and was worth 10 dollars. That statement we understand clearly enough to be that it was worth 10 dollars when it was removed.

Per Curiam.

The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.

Reference

Status
Published