The opinion of the court was delivered by
DüNBAR, J.This is a proceeding by information, on a charge of grand larceny for the stealing of ninety-three alleged railroad passenger tickets. The information alleged that “ the said J. C. McCarty, on the fifteenth day of October, eighteen hundred and eighty-nine (1889), at the county of Pierce and State of Washington, and within three years prior to the filing of this information, ninety-three railroad passenger tickets of the aggregate value of one hundred and twenty dollars, of the chattels and property of the Northern Pacific Bailroad Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of New York, and doing business in the State of Washington under and by virtue of the laws of said State of Washington, a more particular description of which said railroad *380passenger tickets is to the said prosecuting attorney unknown,feloniously did steal,take and carry away, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc. To this information the defendant interposed a demurrer, that the information did not state facts sufficient to constitute any offense, and that there was no authority for proceeding by information.
This crime is alleged in the information to have been committed on the 15th day of October, eighteen hundred and eighty-nine. Article 1, § 25, of the constitution of the State of Washington, provides for proceedings by information. The act of the legislature authorizing proceedings by information was passed January 29,1890. The constitution, by act of congress, as well as by its own terms, did not become operative until the presidential proclamation, which was not made until November 11,1889, so that the date of the alleged commission of the crime antedates' not only the enactment of the legislature, but also the vivifying of the constitution by the presidentialproclamation. The defendant would have been entitled to the United States constitutional guaranty of presentment by a grand jury on the 15th day of October, 1889. Having the right at that time, it could not be taken from him by any retroactive enactment of the state, even had it been the intention of the legislature to make the act retroactive in its operations. When a statute requiring an indictment is repealed,an information will not lie for an offense committed before the repeal. People v. Tisdale, 57 Cal. 104; Bishop, Statutory Crimes, 194. As tersely stated by Mr. Bishop, “ The rule for the construction of penal statutes is, that they are to reach no further than their words; no person can be made subject to them by implication; and all doubts concerning their interpretation are to preponderate in favor of the accused.” The effect of the adoption of the constitution, or admission into the union of states under that constitution, and the legislative enactment of January 29, 1890, was to repeal the law which guaranteed prosecution *381for criminal offenses exclusively by indictment. The right to be presented by a grand jury is not a mere change in the proceedings of the court, which does not affect the substantial rights of the accused, and to which he cannot object; it is a constitutional guaranty which rests upon a basis more secure than acts of the legislature which relate to mere matters of procedure. We do not think the defendant can be held to answer this charge unless on presentment of a grand jury.
We are also of the opinion that the information failed to state facts sufficient to constitute the crime of larceny. It is not sufficient to charge the taking of “ ninety-three railroad tickets,” of an aggregate value. Especially is this true when the degree of crime and the degree of punishment is determined by the value of the property stolen. In this instance, if the proof should show that only a portion of the number of tickets alleged to have been stolen were actually stolen, it would be impossible for the court or jury to determine what degree of larceny the defendant was guilty of. The value of each ticket should have been alleged, and the information should have shown that they were genuine, effective railroad tickets, as an unstamped, undated and unsigned railroad ticket is not the subject of larceny. 1 Whart. Crim. Law, § 879; People v. Loomis, 4 Denio, 380. Without these qualifications the so-called railroad tickets had no more value than the intrinsic value of the paper on which they are printed, with the cost of preparing them. As this information did not charge the value of the paper it could not be proven.
It follows that the judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded to the lower court with instructions to sustain the demurrer. And it is so ordered.
Anders, C. J., and Hoyt, Stiles and Scott, JJ., concur.