This is an appeal from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court denying petitioner's prayer for release by a writ of habeas corpus.
Seven errors are assigned but they may all be included in one, namely, that the court erred in failing to hold that the sentence and judgment were void because predicated upon an indictment which charges no offense against the defendant.
The indictment, so far as pertinent, charges that the petitioner "unlawfully and knowingly, falsely pretend, with intent to defraud, to one C. E. Lunsford, *Page 75 that he, the said L. R. Campfield had installed certain wiring and fixtures in the residence of the said C. E. Lunsford and that said house was ready for electricity to be turned on therein, by which such false pretenses, the said L. R. Campfield then and there did obtain from the said C. E. Lunsford money of the value of $122 of the personal property of the said C. E. Lunsford, with intent then and there to cheat and defraud the said C. E. Lunsford out of the same. Whereas, in truth and in fact said house had not been properly or completely wired for electricity and the said L. R. Campfield at the time so falsely pretended as aforesaid, well knew the false pretenses were false in fact and induced the said C. E. Lunsford to part with his money."
Unless the language of the indictment, that "in truth and in fact said house had not been properly and completely wired for electricity," negates the false pretense set up in the earlier part of the indictment, namely, "that said house was ready for electricity to be turned on therein," the indictment states no offense. Harris v. State, 125 Ohio St. 257, 181 N.E. 104, paragraph 2 of the syllabus.
We are satisfied that the later language of the indictment cannot, by any reasonable interpretation of its meaning, negative the false pretense set up therein. If the petitioner had admitted all the subject matter of the indictment with which he was charged it would not constitute the offense of obtaining money under false pretense or any other crime in Ohio. The petitioner may have represented that he had installed certain wiring and fixtures in the residence of the prosecuting witness and he may have done that which he represented although he may not have properly or completely wired the residence for electricity. Clearly the averment that the house had not been properly *Page 76 or completely wired did not negative the representation that he had installed certain wiring and fixtures. The indictment is as faulty in its effect as if no negation whatever had been attempted. Indeed it is more flagrantly defective than the indictment in Harris v. State, supra.
It is urged that, although the indictment is uncertain, ambiguous, and defective in substantial matters, the irregularity could be corrected by a bill of particulars and that the petitioner having failed to demand such bill could not be heard to deny the validity of the indictment.
In State v. Collett, 44 Ohio Law Abs., 225, 58 N.E.2d 417, a member of this court, at pages 232 and 233, quoted from 27 American Jurisprudence, 672, as follows:
"`The office of a bill of particulars is to supply the accused and the court additional information concerning an accusation that the defendant has committed an act or acts constituting a criminal offense.
"`It is designed to be used only where the indictment is sufficient on demurrer * * *.'"
We cited a number of cases which disclose that a bill of particulars does not serve the office of providing an essential element of the crime charged. The indictment itself must charge an offense. We concluded in the second paragraph of the syllabus of State v. Collett, supra, that "the bill of particulars * * * contemplates something over and above the mere essentials of the averments necessary to state an offense and something further and more specific than is set forth in the forms of indictments prescribed by the statute."
The infirmity in the indictment here is not that it is uncertain, vague, and irregular, but that it states no offense. *Page 77
We are cognizant of the nice distinction which is sometimes made between an act which does not constitute any offense known to the law and the determination by a court of general jurisdiction whether particular acts constitute a specific offense. This distinction is too nice to be given application here.
State v. Whitmore and State v. McNary, 126 Ohio St. 381,185 N.E. 547, are cited and particularly the language of Judge Stephenson in the opinion where he said, in substance, that an indictment which was insufficient to constitute an offense could be cured by demanding a bill of particulars wherein was set forth the facts which would constitute an offense. This language of the opinion is clearly obiter because the judgments were predicated upon the determination that the indictments under consideration did charge offenses, and, therefore, that bills of particulars were not required to accomplish that purpose.
In the Harris case, supra, the indictment was tested by an appeal from the judgment, and Judge Jones, who wrote the opinion, said:
"If one of the vital and material elements identifying and characterizing the crime has been omitted from the indictment such defective indictment is insufficient to charge an offense, and cannot be cured by the court, as such a procedure would not only violate the constitutional rights of the accused, but would allow the court to convict him on an indictment essentially different from that found by the grand jury."
The court not only reversed the judgment but ordered the defendant discharged.
Situations analogous to that presented here were held to support discharges by writs of habeas corpus in State, ex rel.Bailey, v. Henderson, Warden, 76 Ohio App. 547,63 N.E.2d 830, and In re Moreno, 83 Ohio App. 54, 82 N.E.2d 325. *Page 78
The errors assigned are well made. The judgment is reversed and the petitioner discharged.
Judgment reversed.
MILLER, P. J., and WISEMAN, J., concur.