Hoover v. State

11 N.E. 434, 110 Ind. 349, 1887 Ind. LEXIS 65
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1887
DocketNo. 13,691
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 11 N.E. 434 (Hoover v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover v. State, 11 N.E. 434, 110 Ind. 349, 1887 Ind. LEXIS 65 (Ind. 1887).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

On the 4th day of February, 1886, an affidavit was filed with the mayor of the city of Anderson,' charging the appellant, Henry Hoover, with having, on that day, committed an assault and battery with intent to murder John Suman.

Upon a hearing of the charge thus made, the mayor ordered the appellant to enter into recognizance in the sum of' one thousand dollars for his appearance at the ensuing March term of the Madison Circuit Court, which was to convene on the 8th day of March, 1886, and, in default of his having entered into such a recognizance, committed him to the county jail.

On the 22d day of February, 1886, one Amos Coburn made before, and filed with, the clerk of such circuit court an affidavit charging the appellant with the same offence, and on the same day the prosecuting attorney filed in said clerk’s office an information against the appellant, based on [351]*351Coburn’s affidavit. During the ensuing March term of the circuit court, the appellant appeared to the affidavit and information, and pleaded not guilty to the charge preferred by them against him. A jury found him guilty as charged, fixing his punishment at a fine of one dollar and imprisonment in the State’s prison for the term of five years.

The appellant thereupon moved in arrest of judgment upon the ground that as the affidavit and information were both filed in vacation of the circuit court, that tribunal had no jurisdiction to try him upon such pleadings, claiming that the jurisdiction to try a felony without an indictment depends upon the filing of the affidavit and information while the proper court is in session.

Section 1679, R. S. 1881, provides that “All public offences, except treason and murder, may be prosecuted in the circuit and criminal courts by information based upon affidavit in the following cases:

First. Whenever any person is in custody, of on bail, on. a charge of felony or misdemeanor, except treason and murder, and the court is in session, and the grand jury is not in session or has been discharged.”

Second. When, in certain contingencies, an indictment has. been quashed.

Third. When the cause has boon appealed to the Supreme Court and reversed on account of some defect in the indictment.

Fourth. When a public offence has been committed, and the party charged is not already under indictment, “and the .court is in session, and the grand jury has been discharged for the term.”

“Fifth. Whenever, either in term or vacation, any competent and reputable person has knowledge of the commission of any misdemeanor not within the exclusive jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, he may make an affidavit before any person authorized to administer oaths, setting forth the offence and the person charged in plain and concise language, to[352]*352gether with the names of the witnesses, and file the same with the clerk, who shall thereupon notify the prosecuting attorney thereof. The prosecuting attorney shall at once prepare and file an information, in term or vacation, in every case against the person charged in said affidavit.”

Section 1733, of .the same revision of the statutes, which prescribes the form of an information, concludes : “And in a prosecution for a felony by information, it shall not be necessary to prove the facts showing the right so to prosecute by information, unless such facts are put in issue by a verified plea in abatement.”

There is some obscurity in the general structure as well as in some of the minor details of section 1679, above referred to, and we have already had considerable difficulty in giving to several of its provisions a practical and harmonious construction. Lindsey v. State, 72 Ind. 39; State v. Bunnell, 81 Ind. 315; State v. Frain, 82 Ind. 532; State v. De Long, 88 Ind. 312; Elder v. State, 96 Ind. 162; State v. Boswell, 104 Ind. 541.

The section, however, when taken in connection with section 1733, recognizes an obvious distinction between prosecutions for felonies and those for misdemeanors, as to the necessary existence of jurisdictional facts before a prosecution can be commenced by information under it.

As has. been seen, the fifth clause of the section expressly authorizes the filing of an affidavit and information for an •offence amounting only to a misdemeanor, at any time, whether in term time or in vacation, and no provision is made for raising the question as to any of the enumerated jurisdictional facts, in prosecutions for misdemeanors. On that subject, see the case of State v. Frain, supra.

This, as a practical result, leads to the conclusion that no question as to the existence of any of such jurisdictional facts can be raised in a prosecution for a misdemeanor upon affidavit and information. "When, however, a proper plea in abatement is filed in a prosecution for a felony, it becomes [353]*353incumbent on the State to establish the facts conferring jurisdiction before it is entitled to proceed to trial on the merits, or even to require the defendant to plead further to the charge against him.

In the very nature of things, therefore, the inquiry as to the existence of the necessary jurisdictional facts must be 'Confined to the time of the commencement of the prosecution.

When a person is arrested on a criminal charge without a warrant, the proceeding is, in a certain sense, the commencement of a prosecution. 1 Bishop Crim. Proc., sections 30, .31. But where the filing of an affidavit is necessary to obtain a warrant, the prosecution is deemed to have been commenced when the affidavit is filed. It is the affidavit which, in such a case, invokes the jurisdiction of the officer or tribunal before whom or which it is filed. Wharton Crim. Plead., section 1; Housh v. People, 75 Ill. 487.

In a case like the one before us, where the defendant is in custody, the prosecution necessarily dates from the time of filing the affidavit and information. • The information is based upon the affidavit, and when both are filed the prosecution must be said to have been commenced. If the court then has any jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the charge, that jurisdiction is thereby invoked. If it has not then any such jurisdiction, the proceeding is without avail. After-acquired jurisdiction can not be made to.relate back ■and cure the defect. To so carry back an after-acquired jurisdiction would be very much like sustaining a prosecution which was commenced before the alleged crime was committed. The requisite contingencies to confer jurisdiction had not, therefore, happened when the affidavit and. information in this cause were filed, and for that reason a plea in abatement would have constituted a good defence.

The original indictment, with all the indorsements required to be upon it, is a necessary part of the record when a prostecution rests upon an indictment, and the same may be said [354]*354of an information. Johnson v. State, 23 Ind. 32; Heacook v. State, 42 Ind. 393; Beard v. State, 57 Ind. 8; Moore Crim. Law, section 261; Cooper v. State, 79 Ind. 206; State v. Bowman, 103 Ind. 69; Strange v. State, post, p. 354.

Filed April 9, 1887.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E. 434, 110 Ind. 349, 1887 Ind. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-state-ind-1887.