Neifeld v. State

13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 246, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 551, 1901 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 202
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 246 (Neifeld v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neifeld v. State, 13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 246, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 551, 1901 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 202 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

HULL, J.

The plaintiff in error is the same person in both of these cases (above entitled and Same v. Toledo), and they will be discussed, so far as possible, together, although they must be considered to some extent separately, first taking up the case of Neifeld against the state of Ohio.

Neifeld was prosecuted in the police court of the city of Toledo for the violation of Sec. 4413, Rev. Stat. A jury being waived, he was tried to the court and found guilty, and sentenced to pay a fine, and it is to reverse this judgment that this proceeding is prosecuted. He was charged with violating the provisions of Sec. 4413, Rev. Stat., requiring a junk shop keeper to retain in his possession, property fora period of thirty days after it has been purchased. The statute provides as follows :

“Any person who purchases, sells, exchanges, or receives secondhand furniture, second-hand articles of any kind, scrap iron, old metal, canvas, rope, junk or lead pipe; except plow irons and old stoves and furniture, shall put up in a conspicuous place, in or upon his shop, store, wagon, boat, or other place of business, a sign, having his name and occupation legibly inscribed thereon, and shall keep a separate book open to inspection by any member of any police force, city marshal or constable, or any other person, in which shall be written, in the English language, at the time of every purchase or exchange of any of the articles above mentioned, a description thereof, the name, description, and residence of the person from whom purchased and received, and the day and hour when such purchase or exchange was made; each entry shall be numbered consecutively, commencing with number one, and any and all of such articles so purchased or exchanged, shall be retained by the purchaser thereof, for at least thirty days before disposing of the same, and kept in an accessible place in the building where such articles are purchased or received, and a tag attached to such article in some visible and convenient place, with the number written thereon corresponding to the entry number on the book. And any such purchaser shall prepare and deliver every day to the mayor of the city in which such business is carried on, before the hours of 12 o’clock M., a legible and correct copy, written in English, from such book, a description of all such purchases, purchased or received during the preceding day, together [248]*248with, the hour at which the purchase or purchases were made, together with a description of the person or .persons from whom the same was purchased.”

The plaintiff in error was arrested upon an affidavit purporting to charge him with a violation of one of the provisions of this statute, and an information was thereafter filed in police court, and he was tried upon that information, and found guilty, and sentenced as stated.

There are various errors complained of by the plaintiff, in error. First, it is claimed that the affidavit and the information based upon the affidavit are defective, in that they do not charge an offense under this statute. The claim of counsel for plaintiff in error is that the affidavit and the information do not charge with sufficient definiteness that he did not retain the old metal. The language of the affidavit is this :

“ And said Jacob Neifeld did unlawfully fail and neglect to retain said lot of old metal, to-wit: said 82 pounds copper wire, thirty days before disposing of the same.”

And the language of the information is the same.

The statute provides, “And any and all of such articles so purchased or exchanged, shall be retained by the purchaser thereof for at least thirty days before disposing of the same.”

It is argued that the affidavit and information should negative the provision of the statute; that the charge should be plainly and distinctly made that he did not retain the articles in question; that that exactly, or. in substance, should be the language of the affidavit; and that the language used is not equivalent to charging the plaintiff in error with a violation of this provision of the statute, in that it charges only that he failed and neglected to retain. It is urged that he might have failed to do anything in the way of retaining this property, or might have neglected to retain it, or to do anything to retain it, and still that it might have been retained, and that therefore the affidavit and information do not charge a violation of this section.

We are of the opinion that this language does substantially charge the offense named in the statute; that to charge him with failing to retain the old .metal is in substance charging that he did not retain it-It was his duty under the statute to retain the metal for thirty days after its purchase. The affidavit and information charged that he failed to do this. It se.ems to us that to charge him with failing to retain the metal as provided by statute, is substantially charging that he did no* retain it. It-certainly was sufficient to notify the defendant below and his counsel of the offense with which he was charged. We cannot see that the .defendant could have been prejudiced by reason of the language not beiugi more definite; in advising him of the charge-that was made [249]*249against him. Section 7215, Rev. Stat., relating to indictments, applies as well to affidavits and informations. The title of Sec. 7215 is: “ What defects in an indictment are not fatal.” Then after reciting various things that are not fatal, the statute provides :

“ Nor for want of averment of any matter not necessary to be proved; nor for any other defect or imperfection which does not tend to the prejudice of the substantial rights of the defendant upon the merits.”

This statute was considered by the Supreme Court in Burke v. State, 34 Ohio St., 79, where there was a conviction for burglary. The Supreme Court say in the syllabus:

“ Where the charge is burglary by breaking into the car of a railroad company, designated by its corporate name, but the indictment contains no averment that the company was incorporated, the accused cannot avail himself of the defect, if defect it be, in view of the code of criminal procedure.”

And in the opinion, which was delivered by Judge Okey, on page 81, it is said : .

“A great advance has been made in the laws relating to crimes, punishments, and criminal procedure. The fact is unquestioned that there was a time when ielonies, which at common law were few in number, embraced, by parliamentary enactments, more than two hundred offenses; when acts were punishable with death, which, if committed in this state, at this daj', would not be punishable at all; when one charged with felony was not permitted to have a copy of or even to examine the indictment, to call witnesses in his defense, or to have the assistance of counsel ; when no instance could be found in which a jury, in a criminal case, had failed to render a verdict on the same day it was impaneled; when jurors were fined for refusing to return a verdict of guilty; when the ordinary course was to sentence as soon as a verdict of guilty was rendered, and cause the accused to be executed on the following morning. It is not strange that in such a state of the criminal law, humane judges, in favor em vites, would determine cases upon technicalities which at this day would be regarded as frivolous. But all this is changed.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 246, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 551, 1901 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neifeld-v-state-ohcirctlucas-1901.