Hummel v. State

8 Ohio N.P. 48

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 48 (Hummel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hummel v. State, 8 Ohio N.P. 48 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

EVANS, .1.

The plaintiff in error was tried, convicted and sentenced in the police court, upon an affidavit which charged the offense as follows: to-wit, “that one Mary Hummel, on or about the 15th day of June, 1899, at the county of Franklin and state of Ohio, being over fourteen years of age, did unlawfully and willfully, utter and use, obscene anu licentious language unfit for allegation herein in the presence and hearing of certain females whose name are unknown to affiant.”

The prosecution was under section 702fi, Revised Statutes, which provides as follows:

“ Whoever being over fourteen years of age willfully * * * utters or uses any obscene or licentious language or words in the presence or hearing of any female, shall be fined”, etc.

Does the affidavit charge any offense known to the laws of Ohio?

It is a well settled rule of criminal pleading, that an indictment must aver, with reasonable certainty, all the materia] facts which are necessary to be proven, to procure a conviciion, and this rule has not been changed by the code of criminal procedure (25 O. S., 388). This rule of pleading applies to prosecutions in the police court, based upon adffiavits. If there is any relaxation of the rule as to magistrates generally, it is as to matters of form only, and not as to matters of substance. The charge, whether in affidavit or indictment, must allege, in some form, with reasonable certainty, every material fact necessary to be proven to procure a conviction — and this includes every fact essentially necessary to a description of the offense.

The averment that the language was “obscene and licentious” characterizes [49]*49the offense: it is merely the opinion or conclusion of the affiant. It can not dispense with a statement of the constituent facts, which must be alleged. They are always indispensable — but the conclusion may be omitted. The facts descriptive of the crime must be alleged so that the accused may have notice of what he is to meet, and of the act done which it behooves him to controvert; and so that the court, applyling the law to the facts charged against him, may see that a crime has been committed. (Lamberton v. The State, 11 O., 282, 284.)

[48]*48

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Related

Dillingham v. State
5 Ohio St. 280 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1855)
Oregon Railway Co. v. Bridwell
11 Or. 282 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummel-v-state-ohctcomplfrankl-1899.