The indictment in this case charges the defendant with stealing “the sum of sixty-five dollars, of the follow- “ ing description: two twenty dollar gold pieces, and one live “ dollar gold piece, and two ten dollar United States currency “ bills, and one money purse.” We think the indictment bad for uncertainty, both as to the description and value of the articles charged to have been stolen. The coin is alleged to be of certain denominations, but it fails to state that they are of the current coin of the United States or of any other country, and the universally established rules for criminal pleadings will not authorize the indulgence in presumptions and inferences to aid an indictment defective in so material a part of its charge. (Bishop on Criminal Procedure, Vol. II., pp. 698 et seq.) The coin described in the indictment may have been the coin of this or a foreign country, or it may have been no legal coin of any country, and, as an illegal coin, not the subject of theft. Hor is the description of the two United States currency bills frefe from objection. There is quite a variety of bills of that general description, which relates to the.denomination only, all or nearly all of a different value and standing, and, for aught that appears in the bill of indictment, they may have been counterfeit or ■canceled bills, and, if so, the taking could not have been felo-nious’in contemplation of law.
But the indictment fails to allege that the gold pieces or the ■bills had any value whatever. An allegation of value is very *361material in two respects: in the first place, there can be no theft of an article unless that article has either intrinsic or relative value, and no value could be proven unless alleged in the indictment; again, under our statute the degree of punishment for theft depends upon the value of the thing stolen. It therefore becomes material to prove the value of the property stolen, in order to affix the character and degree of punishment. (Bishop on Criminal Procedure, Vol. II., p. 713.)
The general allegation, that the defendant “ stole sixty-five “ dollars,” cannot aid the defective description or allegation of value of the particular articles charged to have been stolen, as that. allegation is itself as objectionable for uncertainty as the one intended to be made specific by it. It gives no idea of the measure of value, whether of this or some other country, and if we were permitted to presume that it referred to sixty-five dollars, as generally understood in this country, yet that would not obviate the necessity of an allegation of value. Had the indictment alleged the separate value of each article charged to have been stolen, or had it alleged that they were of the lawful currency of the United States or of the State of Texas, it would have been sufficient to support a judgment; or, had the pleader added to the description of money charged to have been stolen that they were of the aggregate value of sixty-five dollars, the indictment might then be held sufficient to support a verdict of guilty of the whole charge. But, considering the indictment as it is presented in the record, we feel called upon to declare it insufficient to support a conviction for a felony.
The court, therefore, erred in overruling the defendant’s motion in arrest of the judgment, and for this cause the judgment is reversed; but, as the Statute 3145, Paschal’s Digest, authorizes the District Court, upon the arrest of judgment, at its discretion to remand the party into custody to await another indictment, we will not dismiss but remand the case for further proceedings, in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.