The defendant, after his arraignment and plea, moved to strike out portions of the indictment, which alleged that the defendant had served a sentence in the county jail in Jackson County for a misdemeanor, also that he had served a term of ten years in the United States penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia, upon a charge of conspiracy in violation of the Interstate Commerce laws. The court sustained that motion, and proceeded to trial upon the indictment as it then stood, charging the defendant with robbery in the first degree, and stating that the defendant was sentenced and duly served a term of two years in the State penitentiary of Missouri under the charge of possession of burglar's tools.
The claim is that the striking out by the court of portions of the indictment rendered the same a nullity, and deprived the court of jurisdiction to proceed further with the trial. In support of that position appellant cites cases from the Federal courts, quoting the following passage from the case of Dodge v. United States, 258 F. 300: "The rule is almost universally recognized, both in this country and in England, that an indictment cannot be amended by the court, *Page 843 and that an attempt to do so is fatal to a verdict upon the count." No doubt it is the rule in the Federal courts that an indictment cannot be amended by the court. An amendment can be made only by consent and concurrence of the grand jury. [Stewart v. District Court, 16 F.2d 863.] In that case it was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals that the attempt by the district court to amend the indictment by striking out portions did not destroy it; that the district court could rescind its order striking out and defendant could go to trial upon the indictment as returned by the grand jury.
The reason for ruling that an indictment cannot be amended is that a defendant has a right to be tried upon the indictment as the grand jury returns it. To amend it in any particular would be to bring him to trial on an indictment different from that returned by the grand jury. There is no statute by Congress authorizing a court to amend an indictment in form or substance, but in most of the states there are statutes which authorize an amendment of an indictment as to matters of form. [See in 7 A.L.R. 1516 to 1557, long annotations citing numerous cases.] It is held in nearly every state that an indictment may be amended as to names, dates, ownership of property, or other defects ofform. Often such amendments are allowed, though no statute provides for it.
In this State no statute permits the court to amend an indictment. In the present case, was it an amendment to permit the court to strike out the allegations mentioned? It has been held in several instances that matters defectively charging a crime, or matters which are not relevant to the crime charged are surplusage and to be disregarded. [State v. Lawler, 220 Mo. l.c. 33; State v. Adams, 300 S.W. 738, l.c. 742.] Under Section 3908, Revised Statutes 1919, an indictment shall not be deemed invalid "for any surplusage or repugnant allegation, when there is sufficient matter alleged to indicate the crime and person charged." If the defendant had gone to trial upon the indictment as it stood, containing the matter which was irrelevant, it would not have been a ground for a reversal under that statute, because, in addition to the superfluous matters, there was a perfect and complete charge of the crime on which the defendant was tried.
In United States v. Munday, 211 F. 536, a statement by the prosecutor in open court was entered of record to this effect: "The Government does now and here abandon for all time the charge in the indictment of the foreign or alien character of the Pacific Coal Oil Company, as an element of the crime sought to be charged in the indictment" (l.c. 538). The court held that such an abandonment was not an amendment of the indictment. If it was not error as held by that court to abandon such superfluous allegations, how can it be error to strike them out? If to amend in matters of form is not an amendment of the charge, how can striking out matters on *Page 844 which evidence may not be admitted be called an amendment? If the case had gone to trial with those allegations in, the defendant's remedy would have been ample by objecting to evidence upon them, and the trial would have proceeded as if they were not in.
In Indiana, in case of Good v. State, 61 Ind. 69 (which apparently arose before there was any statute permitting amendments), the indictment contained an improper charge against the defendant, without which it was sufficient. The defendant moved to quash the indictment. The motion was overruled; the court held that the ruling was not error, and said, l.c. 71: "The indictment contained a valid, legal and sufficient charge of grand larceny against the appellant, and, therefore, his motion to quash the entire indictment was properly overruled. If, however, he had moved the court to quash only so much of the indictment as charged in his former trial and conviction of petit larceny, we have no doubt that the court would have sustained his motion, and the decision would have been right and proper." There we have the Supreme Court of Indiana approving exactly the same ruling that was made by the trial court here.
It was held by this court in State v. Schricker, 29 Mo. 265, that where the defendant was indicted under the wrong name and pleaded the misnomer, the court permitted the true name to be entered upon the minutes and the trial to proceed upon the indictment. It was held not erroneous.
The Statute of Jeofails, Section 3908, provides that no indictment shall be deemed invalid for any other defect or imperfection, which does not tend to the prejudice of the substantial rights of the defendant upon the merits. That, it is held, means a defect or imperfection similar to those enumerated before. The defect here is very similar in kind to the provision that an indictment shall not be held bad for any surplusage. That stricken out here was surplusage. Its presence in the indictment under this section would not make the indictment invalid, and then the court's action in striking it out could not make it invalid. The indictment was perfectly good without it, whether those allegations were in or out of it.
It is for the court, and not for the grand jury, to determine whether an indictment states an offense. It is for the court to determine what allegations of the indictment are sufficient to constitute a charge of crime. If the court determines that an indictment charges a crime sufficiently with certain parts of its allegations, and that the other parts of the indictment charge no facts which are an element of the offense, then what difference does it make to the defendant or to the grand jury whether the court, in trying the case, disregards the surplus matter orstrikes it out? The grand jury intended to charge a crime, which the court holds is sufficiently charged without the redundant matter which the grand jury puts into the charge, and the defendant is in exactly the same fix whether such surplus matter is *Page 845 stricken out or remains in. It is argued that the grand jury might not have returned the indictment except for that redundant matter. But the offense charged in this case has nothing to do with that redundant matter. The indictment was brought under the habitual-criminal statute; the grand jury could not have indicted the defendant unless they had found him guilty of robbery, the offense charged. The matter stricken out was no part of that offense, but merely matters that would determine the degree of his punishment.
In McCorkle v. State, 14 Ind. 39, the defendant moved to quash the indictment on account of the date at which the offense was alleged. It seems that the date was of the essence of the offense. The State proposed to return the indictment to the grand jury for correction. In order to obviate that necessity, the defendant withdrew his motion to quash and consented to a correction in open court of a mistake in the date, and to an entry of record to that effect; he waived all objections and pleaded not guilty. Later he moved to quash the indictment on account of that correction. The court held that the motion was properly overruled.
The part stricken out was on the motion of the defendant. If that was error, the defendant cannot complain, because Section 3908 provides that the indictment shall not be deemed invalid for any error committed at the instance or in favor of the defendant.
The indictment cannot be held by us to be a nullity. It could only be so held when an attack is made for the first time here if it charges no offense. It sufficiently charges an offense with the matter stricken out. If the indictment was defective or mutilated and not as it appeared as it came from the grand jury, it was for the defendant to bring it to the attention of the trial court. All defects in an indictment, which might formerly have been raised by a motion in arrest, abolished by the Act of 1925, must now be raised by a motion for new trial.
What occurred at the trial was this:
The defendant objected to the reading by the prosecutor of those parts of the indictment stricken out and also another passage not stricken out. The prosecutor then read to the jury only those parts not objected to. Defendant did not at any time in any manner object to the sufficiency of the indictment as it then stood and as it was read. It was not mentioned in the motion for new trial.
Section 3908a (Laws 1925, p. 195) provides that when an indictment shall be held insufficient as to form or substance, an information charging the same offense charged or attempted to be charged in such indictment may be substituted therefor. That does not reach a case like this, where the indictment was not held to be insufficient, nor claimed to be insufficient. An information could not have been filed. The court pursued the only course it could pursue. *Page 846
Where is any error of which defendant can complain?
Not the striking out of parts, for he induced it.
Not in any defect in it as it stood, for it perfectly alleged the crime for which he was tried.
Not for failure to contain the charge which the grand jury made, because the matter stricken out was irrelevant, or so claimed by defendant.
The change was an advantage to him and he so treated it. He permitted the trial to go through to verdict and appeal to this court. He cannot now be heard to say that the trial court erred in giving him the advantage which he sought.
This court can only affirm the judgment. Blair, P.J., concurs; Walker, J., absent.