State v. Gallimon
State v. Gallimon
Opinion of the Court
The principal question in this ease arises on the motion in arrest of judgment. The -indictment sets forth, that, at a Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, held for the county of Cabarrus, on the third Monday of April, 1841, before John Stile, Junior, B. W. Allison, William Bar-ringer and James Young, Esquires, justices qualified by law to hold the said court, “ a certain issue, in due manner
It is a general rule,, that every indictment should charge explicitly all the facts and circumstances, which constitute the crime, so that, on the face of the indictment, the court can with certainty see that the indictors have proceeded upon sufficient premises, and afterwards, when these facts and circumstances are confessed or found to be true, can behold upon the record an undoubted warrant for awarding the judgment of the law. According to this rule, the indictment in this case should have averred, as a fact, the finding of an indictment in the County Court of Cabarrus, against Benjamin Erwin, and should have set forth that indictment or so much thereof, as to shew that it charged an offence committed within that county, and of which said court had cognizance; and also have set forth the traverse or plea of the said Benjamin, whereon the issue was joined. Had it done so,
We believe, therefore, that at common law this indictment must be held insufficient, and the next and chief enquiry is, whether the defects be cured by any statutory provision.
The necessity at common law, in indictments for perjury, of shewing the proceedings, wherein the false oath was taken, caused these indictments to be drawn out frequently with great prolixity, and, by reason of inaccuracies in them, the guilty were occasionally enabled to escape with impunity. To remedy these inconveniences, the British Parliament passed the Statute 23rd George the 2nd. This Statute, though enacted before the Revolution, was not in force in North Carolina; but in 1791 our Legislature incorporated its provisions into the act then passed, entitled “An Act for the punishment of such persons as shall procure or commit any wilful perjury,” (Revised Code, ch. 338, sect. 3d.) By this act it is enacted “that in every presentment or indictment to be prosecuted against any person for wilful and corrupt perjury, it shall be sufficient to set forth the substance of the offence charged upon the defendant, and by what court or before whom the oath or affirmation was taken, (averring such court or such person or persons to have a competent authority to administer the same.) together with the proper averment or averments to falsify the matter or matters wherein the perjury or perjuries is or are assigned, without setting forth the bill, answer, information, indictment, declaration or any part of any record or proceedings, either in law or equity, other than aforesaid, and without setting forth the commission or authority of the court or person or persons before whom the perjury was committed.” The
Since that act, the' compendious form thereby authorized has been generally adopted, and if that act were yet in force we should have no difficulty in overruling the objection to this indictment. But by the act concerning the Revised Statutes, ratified the 23rd January, 1837, it is declared that all acts and parts af acts theretofore passed, the subjects whereof are revised and re-enacted in the Revised Statutes, are repealed from and after the first-day of January, 1838, with certain exceptions not applying to this matter. The subject of crimes and punishments, and the subject of criminal proceedings are revised in those Statutes, and the first and second sections of the act of 1791 are re-enacted with modifications; but the third section, containing the enactment in question, is omitted. It therefore ceased to be a part of the law of North Carolina, before the present indictment was preferred.
But it is insisted on the part of the State, that the insufficiency or defect in this indictment is cured by the act of 1811, ch. 809, which is re-enacted in the Revised Statutes, ch. 35, sect. 12. This act provides with respect to all indictments that “ it shall be sufficient that an indictment contain the charge against the criminal, expressed in a plain, intelligible and explicit manner, aud that no indictment shall bequashed or arrested for or by reason of any informality or refinement, when there appears sufficient to the court in the face of the indictment to induce them to proceed to judgment.” After the very many adjudications, which have been had on this Statute, it must be regarded as being now completely settled, that it does not supply nor remedy the omission of a distinct averment of any fact or circumstance, which is an essential constituent of the offence charged [See State v Haddock, 2 Hay. 152. Same v Owen, 1 Mur. 152, com
But this defect ought not to be called an informality or refinement. By an informality is understood a deviation, in charging the necessary facts and circdmstances constituting the offence, from the well approved forms of expression, and a substitution in lieu thereof of other terms, which nevertheless make the charge in as plain, intelligible and explicit, language. Such a deviation is always dangerous, but, by means of such a substitution, it may be rendered a mere informality, which is cured by the statute. A refinement is understood to be the verbiage, which is frequently found in indictments, in setting forth what is not essential to the constitution of the offence, and therefore not required to be proved on the trial. The defect here complained of is a defect in the substance of the indictment, in omitting the facts, which shew the oath to have been taken in a judicial proceeding before a competent authority, and substituting there-: for the conclusion of the grand jury that it was so taken.
It has been argued, however, that the act of 1791, although repealed, furnishes a legislative exposition of what is substance, and of course what is informality or refinement in an indictment for perjury, and, therefore, we should recur
Per CuftiAM, Ordered accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. JAMES GALLIMON
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