Johnson v. State

Powell, J.

The defendant was charged in a county court with the manufacture of intoxicating liquor. The accusation as originally filed charged that the defendant and another committed the offense. Before arraignment the name of the other person was *49stricken, and the defendant alone was called to trial. The acensa-' tion, which was dated August 3, 1909, originally charged that the offense was committed on July 16, 1909. Some time during the trial (whether before ox after arraignment is uncertain, because the judge answered in one place admitting the allegation of the petition that it was after arraignment, and in another said that it was before), the date appearing in the accusation was changed by amendment. The figure 16 was stricken and figure 11 inserted. The prisoner refused to waive arraignment, and the solicitor read the accusation to him and inquired whether he was guilty or not guilty. Upon advice of his counsel, he stood mute. The court construed this to be a plea of not guilty and ordered the trial to-proceed. It is unnecessary to set out the evidence adduced on the trial, further than to say that if the witnesses were credible, the proof of his guilt was clear, and that he made no statement whatever. Certain exceptions xo the testimony appear in- the record, but the judge does not verify the exceptions so taken. A verdict of guilty was returned; and a motion in arrest of judgment was filed, on the ground that the accusation set out no offense., The defendant brought the case by certiorari to the superior court, and the judge sustained the certiorari and ordered a new trial. The order was general, no specific reason being assigned. The defendant excepted to the judgment, on the ground that he ought to have been discharged, and not merely granted a new trial.

The judge of the superior court on certiorari,- in a criminal case, has broad control over it. See Johnson v. Atlanta, 6 Ga. App. 780 (65 S. E. 810). However, his action will not be reversed when he sustains a certiorari and orders a new trial in the court below, unless there is some controlling question of law by reason of which the conviction of the defendant, on another trial, either with or without amendment of the pleadings, is legally impossible. Of course, in the sentence just used, the word “amendment" means such amendment as may be made legally. We are led to believe that the judge granted the new trial on account of the amendment which/was allowed to the accusation. Accusations may be amended in form or in substance at any time before there has been a plea to the merits. Whether they may, after arraignment, be amended in form alone, it is unnecessary for us to -decide; of course they can not be amended in substance. It may be noted, however, in *50the present case, that the amendment was wholly immaterial, inasmuch as both dates, the one stricken and the one inserted, were within the statute of limitations. Usually the time alleged in an accusation or indictment is immaterial, provided the date named is within the statute, for the solicitor may prove the crime as having been committed on any date within that period; but, as we have just said, it is unnecessary to decide this question, because the judge did grant a new trial. The defendant could not ask for more. If the amendment was permissible, he certainly could not complain of the grant of a new trial. If the judge of the county court erred in allowing .the amendment, the effect of sustaining the certiorari containing the exception to the allowing of the amendment was to strike the amendment and to leave the accusation as it stood originally. Therefore, in any view of the case, it’ was proper to order the new trial, to the end that the defendant might be tried upon the accusation as it legally stood. The new trial having in fact been granted, and the accusation being freely subject to amendment at any time before the new arraignment takes place, the question becomes academic. The fact that the defendant remained mute, and that the clerk failed to record this upon the minutes, is not even ground for a new trial, much less ground for an absolute discharge. Sections 948 and 949 of the Penal Code fully cover this matter. The headnotes make the other points involved in the case sufficiently clear without further elaboration.

Judgment affirmed,.