Moynahan v. People

3 Colo. 367
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Colo. 367 (Moynahan v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moynahan v. People, 3 Colo. 367 (Colo. 1877).

Opinion

Wells, J.

In the indictment upon which the plaintiff in error was arraigned, the deceased, where first mentioned, is designated as Patrick Pitz Patrick; the three words composing the name being written separately, and each with a capital initial. In the two succeeding allegations in which the injured person is mentioned he is described as “the said Patrick Fitzpatrick”; the syllables composing the name being divided into two words only. In all the allegations which follow, he is described as in the first instance.

Assuming for the present that the differences which have been noticed in the orthography of the name are to be regarded ; that the indictment, therefore, is to be understood as designating the deceased person variously, the question first presented is, by which of these variant descriptions is the prosecutor concluded ? Upon one or the other it is supposed he is bound to stand; for certainly it would be [369]*369an unprecedented departure from the precision which has been regarded as requisite in criminal accusations, to support a conviction of felonious homicide of one person charged, as ensuing the assaulting and wounding of another.

The case of Commonwealth v. Hunt, 4 Pick. 252, is somewhat analogous to the present. The indictment charged that the defendant, in and upon one Peddy Harvey, did make an assault, and her the said Peddy Hunt, did beat, wound and ill-treat, with intent, her, the said Peddy Harvey, to ravish and carnally know; and for this repugnancy objection was taken. But the court were of opinion that the whole clause containing the misnomer was surplusage, and might be rejected without impairing the residue.

In Greeson v. The State, 5 How. (Miss.) 42, indictment for robbery, — the assault and putting in fear was charged as done upon the person of Richard Gaines, and certain money obtained by the robbery was described as the property of the said Richard Gaines ; in a subsequent recitation it was referred to as “of the property of the said Robert Gaines.”

On error, the latter recital was rejected as surplusage, and the conviction had below was affirmed.

In Rex v. Morris, 1 Leach (4th Ed.), 109; 1 Bish. Cr. Pro., § 481, the indictment contained an averment as follows: “ that Prancis Morris, the goods and chattels above mentioned so as aforesaid feloniously stolen, taken, etc., feloniously did receive and have, he the said Thomas Morris, well knowing the said goods and chattels to have been feloniously stolen, etc.” It was objected that the only person to whom the indictment imputed the guilty knowledge requisite to make the receiving criminal was another than the receiver; and therefore the indictment could not be supported. But, held that without the words “ the said Thomas Morris,'1'1 the indictment would be sensible and sufficient; and that, therefore, the misnomer should not vitiate what was otherwise certain.

In the State v. Hand, 1 Eng. (Ark.) 165, the indictment described the defendant, where first mentioned, as “Haw[370]*370kins --late of, etc.; ” wherever mentioned subsequently he was described as “the said Hawkins Hand.” Plea in abatement, that his name was “Hawkins Hand,” and not Hawkins, and demurrer thereon. The court were of opinion that the relative ‘said’ accompanying the full name where first shown, must be understood to refer to the name Hawkins, previously given, and that the reference could neither add to, nor diminish the antecedent allegation. It was therefore concluded that if any one was presented, it was “Hawkins,” and not Hawkins Hand; the demurrer was accordingly overruled.

These cases countenance the propriety of applying the maxims against surplusage, and false demonstration to criminal indictments; and establish the proposition, that when the name of the accused, or injured person, is given variantly, in different parts of the indictment, the first allegation shall control; and the variant allegation appearing subsequently, shall be rejected, if thereby repugnancy is avoided, and the indictment made sensible.

In the present case the deceased person having been once described by a full Christian and surname, it would have sufficed to refer to him afterward by the Christian name only. State v. Pike, 65 Me. 118. The surname, Fitzpatrick, therefore, which, according to the hypothesis, varies from the name previously given, may everywhere be rejected, and the indictment read as if in those places, it had mentioned the defendant as “the said Patrick,” only. According to this interpretation, the indictment everywhere describes the deceased person as Patrick Fitz Patrick.

But the evidence sufficiently indicates that the surname of the deceased was Fitzpatrick; and the question next presented is, whether the name so proven is fatally variant from that ascribed to the deceased in the indictment.

To enlarge upon the propriety and humanity of requiring the officer charged with the pleas of the people to distinctly inform the accused of the name of the person whose private injury mingles with the public offense would be but a waste [371]*371of words. It is sufficient to say the law requires it. Those cases where the name is unknown, or the person injured is an unchristened infant, are, it is believed, the only exceptions to the rule ; and in these cases, the fact which excuses the averment of the name must be both alleged and proven.

In all civilized communities, for many centuries past, at least, it has been found necessary to the convenient identification of individuals, that every person should bear both a family or surname, and a name of baptism. Even in ordinary discourse, no one would venture to designate a third person by the Christian or surname alone, unless of the same family with the speaker or person addressed, or an intimate friend of one or the other.

The same reasons which seem to have dictated the common form of appellation apply with greater force in the case of a criminal accusation. The indictment ought, therefore, to set forth both the Christian and surname; and while neither the grand jury nor the prosecuting officer are bound to observe the proper orthography, it seems very manifest that the Christian and surname must be so inscribed in the indictment, that by inspection they may conveniently be distinguished. To dispense with this measure of precision is in effect to dispense altogether with alleging the name of the inj nred person, as may easily be illustrated.

In the State v. Kean, 10 N. H. 351, McKusic was held properly written with the abbreviation Me. The conclusion probably would have been the same if the prefix had assumed the- other abbreviated form, of the capital followed by the apostrophe. In either case the abbreviation indicates a prefix merely, and must be taken as part of the name which follows. But if, instead of the abbreviation, the word had been written at length, and in a form in which as a surname it is frequently found, and separated by a consider-' able space from the residue of the name, we think it must have been regarded as constituting a part of the Christian name. So if the capital M alone had been used, followed by a- period, and separated as before supposed, it must have been taken to be the abbreviation of some middle name, and [372]*372not as a prefix to the surname.

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Related

John Deere Plow Co. v. County of Phillips
97 Colo. 196 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1935)
Sullivan v. People
6 Colo. App. 458 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Colo. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moynahan-v-people-colo-1877.