State v. Mattison

100 N.W. 1091, 13 N.D. 391, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 56
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 100 N.W. 1091 (State v. Mattison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mattison, 100 N.W. 1091, 13 N.D. 391, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 56 (N.D. 1904).

Opinion

Engerud, J.

The three defendants were arraigned on an information which was apparently designed to charge them jointly with the crime of shooting another with intent to kill, as defined in section 7115, Rev. Codes 1899. They demurred to the information, and [392]*392thereby challenged its sufficiency because it did not substantially conform to the requirements of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and charged more than one offense. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendants entered pleas of not guilty. The jury returned a verdict finding the three defendants “guilty of an assault with a dangerous weapon with intent to do bodily harm, without justifiable or excusable cause.” A motion in arrest of judgment having been denied, the defendants were sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for one year, eighteen months and three years respectively. The defendants have appealed from the judgment.

It is apparent from the foregoing that the sentences imposed are not warranted by the verdict for the reasons stated in the recent case of State v. Cruikshank, 13 N. D. 337, 100 N. W. 697. The verdict does not in terms find the act of shooting or attempting to shoot; neither does it set forth facts sufficient from which shooting or attempting to shoot must necessarily be inferred. If no other errors affecting the verdict appeared in the record, we would be constrained to allow the verdict to stand as one for simple assault, and remand the case for sentence in accordance with the verdict. The record, however, discloses error fatal to the validity of the verdict. We are of the opinion that the information is vulnerable to the objections made thereto by defendants, and that their demurrer thereto should have been sustained, or the motion in arrest of judgment granted. The information is too long for repetition in full. It is extremely prolix, and is replete with redundant and unnecessary averments. In our opinion, the information charges at least three offenses. The first part of the body of the information, after stating time and place, sets forth the complete offense of shooting under section 7115, Rev. Codes 1899, as follows: “That at the said time and place * * * the said Martin Mattison, Erik Mattison, and Lye Storby, having and holding in their hands a certain firearm, commonly called a shotgun, which shotgun was then and there loaded and charged with gunpowder and leaden shots, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully, feloniously, of their malice aforethought, without authority of law, and with a premeditated design to kill him, the said George Olson, discharge and shoot off said shotgun towards, against and upon the said George Olson.” Then follows an averment to the effect that the shot so fired from said gun by the defendants struck, penetrated and dangerously wounded said George Olson, and caused the loss of one of his legs. [393]*393We have up to this point of the information facts which may be sufficient to charge an attempt to commit murder in the first degree. The allegations show that the defendants feloniously, with malice aforethought, and with a premeditated design to effect death, inflicted a dangerous wound upon their victim with a deadly weapon, but failed, to consummate the intended murder because the wound was not mortal. ' Such attempt is punishable as a felony under sections 7693, 7694, Rev. Codes 1899. Further continuing the accusation, the information describes still another offense, which, after omitting many superfluous adjectives and redundant phrases, is set forth in the following language: “And at the time and place aforesaid, and by 'the means aforesaid, 'the said Martin Mattison, Erik Mattison and Lye Stonby, wilfully, * * * and with a premeditated design to kill him, the said George Olson, *' * "* did wound and destroy the leg of the said George Olson.” In plain English this part of the accusation alleges that the defendants unlawfully and wilfully destroyed George Olson’s leg, with a premeditated design to kill him. This is a sufficient charge of maiming under section 7101, Rev. Codes 1899, which defines that crime as follows: “Every person who, with premeditated design to injure another, inflicts upon his person any injitry which disfigures his personal appearance or disables any member or organ of his body or seriously diminishes his physical vigor, is guilty of maiming.” It is true that the information alleges that the injury was inflicted with a premeditated design to kill while the statutory definition requires a premeditated design to injure only. But it is obvious that a design to kill includes a 'design to injure, and hence that, although the statute requires merely an intent to injure as an essential to guilt, it is no objection to the accusation that it alleges an intent of a more atrocious degree in the commission of the offense which is otherwise sufficiently charged. Barbour, Magistrates Criminal Law, 290, 291; State v. Robbins, 66 Me. 324; Com. v. Carson, 166 Pa. 179, 30 Atl. 985. While under the common-law, an indictment for a felony might, under certain circumstances, allege in separate counts any number of distinct felonies, provided they were of the same general nature, or were connected with the same transaction, yet even under that system of criminal procedure no rule was hetter settled thán that which prohibited the joinder of two or more substantive offenses in the same count. The rule was necessary in order that the accused might not be in doubt [394]*394as to the specific charge against which he was called to defend himself; that the court might know what sentence to pronounce; and that the accused might be fully protected against any other prosecution for the same offense. State v. Burgess, 40 Me. 592. This common-law rule has been perpetuated by the provisions of our statute, and has been further, narrowed and restricted so as to exclude all those exceptions to the rule which were recognized by the common law in certain classes of crimes, such as burglary, etc. State v Smith, 2 N. D. 515, 52 N. W. 320. The practice of combining in one indictment under separate counts several distinct crimes has been abolished, so that separate counts can be used only to set forth the commission of the same crime in different forms and degrees. Under the provisions of our Code of Criminal Procedure the same offense may be set forth under different counts, but only one offense can be charged. Rev. Codes 1899, section 8042. The indictment or information must state the acts constituting the offense “in ordinary and concise language, and in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended.” Rev. Codes 1899, section 8039. It must be direct and certain as to “the offense charged.” Rev. Codes 1899, section 8040.

The information in the case at bar was framed in flagrant disregard of the requirements above stated. It is not couched in ordinary and concise language. It might be'difficult for a person of ordinary understanding to definitely determine what offense is charged; and it alleges facts constituting three distinct crimes. If this information directly and with certainty disclosed that it was intended to charge the crime of attempted murder, we are not prepared to say that it would be objectionable for duplicity. In that case it might be urged with much force that malice, premeditated design to kill, shooting and maiming, were all necessary facts to allege in order to show an attempt to murder, and hence that the information is not duplicitous. Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, vol. 10, p. 535. This information, however, does not present such a case. The information expressly purports to charge the crime denounced by section 7115, Rev.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.W. 1091, 13 N.D. 391, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mattison-nd-1904.