The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion.
The defendant is indicted for an alleged violation of the statute (The Code, sec. 2482) which provides as follows: "If any person shall wilfully overdrive, overload, wound, injure, torture, torment, deprive of necessary sustenance, or cruelly beat, or needlessly mutilate or kill, or cause or procure to be overdriven, overloaded, wounded, injured, tormented, tortured, or deprived of necessary sustenance, or to be cruelly beaten, needlessly mutilated, or killed as aforesaid, any useful beast, fowl or animal, every such offender shall for every such offense be guilty of a misdemeanor."
The indictment charges that the defendant "did then and there knowingly and wilfully and unlawfully torture, torment, and act in a cruel manner towards a certain animal, to wit, a hog, the property of," etc. *Page 545 The defendant pleaded not guilty. Upon the trial there was a verdict of guilty and judgment against the defendant, and he, having assigned error, appealed to this Court. It seems that no motion in arrest of judgment was made in the court below, but that court should, in the absence of such motion, have refused to give judgment upon the ground that the offense was not sufficiently charged in the indictment. The court cannot properly give judgment unless it appears in the record that an offense is sufficiently charged. It is the duty of this Court to look through and scrutinize the whole record, and if it sees that the judgment should have been arrested it will, ex mero motu, direct it to be done.S. v. Wilson, Phil., 237; S. v. Wise, 67 N.C. 281; S. v. (704)Bobbitt, 70 N.C. 81; Thornton v. Brady, 100 N.C. 38; Morrison v.Watson, 95 N.C. 479.
It is sufficient and proper, ordinarily, to charge statutory offenses in the words, or substantially in the words, of the statute creating them, and especially is this so when the statute defines the offense in words that have a technical or precise meaning, such as in themselves imply the offense, or the character and quality of the act or acts, or things that constitute it or an essential part or essential parts of it.
This is so, because the court can in such case see and determine that an offense is charged in the indictment, and the accused will have such information in respect to it as will enable him to understand it, and make preparation for his defense, and as will enable him to plead former acquittal or conviction in case of subsequent prosecution. Thus in the statute recited above the words "beat," "cruelly beat," "wound" and "kill," of themselves respectively, taken in the proper connection, imply sufficiently the act forbidden and the offense charged.
It is otherwise, however, when the words of the statute are not precise, but are uncertain and indefinite in their meaning, implying a multiplicity and variety of acts or things that may or may not constitute the offense in whole or in part. In such cases it is necessary to charge the facts that give special character and significance to the acts charged to have been done, and as designated, with reasonable certainty in the statute cited, the animal abused, in order that the court may see that the offense is charged and the accused may prepare for his defense. Thus the words of the statute mentioned — "overloaded," "injured," "tortured" "and tormented" — do not imply or describe the acts charged to have been done with certainty: they each imply a variety of acts that may *Page 546 or may not constitute the offense or parts of it. The acts should be so specified and charged as to show that they mean what the statute (705) intends by overdriving, injury, torture and torment. The court must see that the offense is charged, and it and not the pleader must determine that the acts done constitute the offense denounced by the statute. S. v. Harney, 2 D. B., 390; S. v. Stanton, 1 Ired., 424; S.v. Harper, 64 N.C. 129; S. v. Sloan, 67 N.C. 357; S. v. Liles,78 N.C. 496; S. v. Hill, 79 N.C. 656; S. v. George,93 N.C. 567; S. v. Wilson, 94 N.C. 1015; S. v. Whiteacre,98 N.C. 753; S. v. Howe, 100 N.C. 449.
In the case before us the indictment charges that the defendant "did," etc., "torture, torment and act in a cruel manner," etc. These are the words of the statute, but they are not precise in their meaning; they designate rather than define the offense or suggest the acts that constitute it; they do not, of themselves, import what is meant by the statute; in pleading, they need to be aided by charging acts that certainly imply what is meant by the terms torture and torment, and they should be so charged as that the court can see that they do. If the charge contained in the proper connection one or more of the words beat, wound, shoot, kill, and the like, the court could then have seen that the offense was charged; such precise and pertinent words would have implied the offense forbidden. Such words were used in the indictments in S. v. Allison, 90 N.C. 733; S.v. Butts, 92 N.C. 784. See, also, Bishop on Stat. Crim., secs. 1098, 1102, 1113.
As what we have said puts an end to the present action, we need not advert to the assignment of error. The judgment must be set aside, and judgment arrested.
Error.
Cited: S. v. Farmer, 104 N.C. 889, 890; S. v. Bagwell, 107 N.C. 860;Rogers v. Bank, 108 N.C. 578; S. v. Marsh, 132 N.C. 1001; S. v.Ballangee, 191 N.C. 702.
(706)