Commonwealth v. Wellington
Commonwealth v. Wellington
Opinion of the Court
The indictment charges the defendant with having wrongfully desecrated and disfigured a certain public burial-ground, situate in Swanzey in this county, which it describes by metes and bounds with minuteness and particularity. Evidence was introduced upon the tidal tending to show that
In the application of the general rule that it is sufficient if the substance of the issue be proved, there is a distinction between allegations of matters of substance and allegations of matters of essential description. The former may be substantially proved; but the latter must be proved strictly and with precision and exactness. Whenever a person or thing necessary to be mentioned in an indictment is described with unnecessary particularity, all the circumstances of the description must be proved; for they are essential to its identity. Thus, in an indictment for stealing a black horse, the animal is necessarily mentioned, but the color need not be stated ; yet if it is stated, it is made descriptive of the particular animal stolen, and a variance in the proof of the color is fatal. 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 56, 65. So in respect to the larceny of lumber, the special marks upon it need not be described; but if they are described, the omission or failure to prove them exactly as they are alleged would constitute an essential variance between the allegation and the proof, and would necessarily prevent a conviction. State v. Noble, 15 Maine, 476. And all the authorities affirm that where place is stated, not as venue but as' matter of local description,
This being the rule of law, it is quite obvious what proof was requisite in the present case to justify the conviction of the defendant. It was of course absolutely necessary that the indictment should mention the burying-ground, for the offence charged against the defendant consisted in its desecration; but it was not essential that it should be described by metes and bounds. But it having been so described, and it being impossible to strike out the whole averment without taking from the indictment the part essential to the allegation of the offence intended to be charged, it was necessary that the whole description should
This conclusion being apparently decisive against the maintenance of the indictment, it does not seem to be important to consider the other exceptions taken by the defendant. It is possible, however, that the same questions may arise upon a future trial, and therefore it is necessary to add that we do not think that either of the other exceptions can be sustained. It is competent to prove that a particular tract of land is a public burying-ground by showing its use and occupation for that purpose; Gen. Sts. c. 28, § 12; and the presiding judge was accurate in the directions which he gave upon this subject. The deeds offered in evidence by the defendant were rightly rejected, as being immaterial to the defence. Exceptions sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Commonwealth v. Lloyd Wellington
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- 1 case
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- Published