Tarlor v. State

Bell, J.,

dissenting. I dissent only from what is said in the second division of the decision, and from the judgment of reversal.

This case arose by a special presentment in the nature of an indictment which was returned on May 29, 1930, and which alleged that the offense was committed on March 1, 1923, but that the crime was "unknown” until May 22, 1930. Bribery is an offense against society in general and strikes at the very foundation of government. It bears a similarity to the offense of vote buying, and the remarks of Judge Bussell, formerly a member of this court, but now Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in regard to a case of that character is apropos: "If there is any law which should be more zealously enforced than another, it is that which protects the purity of the ballot-box; and if there is one point which should be more especially guarded against than any other, it is the corrupt use of money in elections. There is no safety for the State when money, and not men, does the work. Our law justly abhors the degraded bribe taker, and the no less degraded, though more opulent, bribe giver. . . The State should be required to properly charge and clearly prove the commission of the offense; but 'where a jury finds that the .evidence establishes the charge as made, neither hair-splitting distinctions nor refined subtleties should be more effectual in setting aside the jury’s finding than in those offenses more generally considered of greater import. Homicide generally destroys a single life; bribery at the ballot-box destroys the very foundation of the whole State.” Lepinsky v. State, 7 Ga. App. 285, 291 (66 S. E. 965). The same may be said of any other form of bribery as defined by the penal laws.

The offense is not against an individual or individuals. It may 'be true that one to whom a bribe is offered receives a personal offense, as an affront, which is not shared by the general public, but from a legal standpoint no one citizen, other than the offenders, is more affected by or interested in the offense of bribery than any other citizen or citizens. In Fall v. H. S., 49 Fed. (2d) 506, the Circuit Court of Appeals, quoting from People v. LaFaro, 250 N. *79Y. 336 (165 N. E. 518), said, “The gist of the crime of bribery is the wrong done to the people by corruption in the public service.”. (Italics mine.) See also C. J. 402. In Cohen v. State, 2 Ga. App. 689, (supra), this court, again speaking through Judge Russell, said: “In those cases where the offense is against society in general and there is no prosecutor, the return by the grand jury of a presentment containing the exception will presumptively establish that the offense or offender was unknown, until the statement is denied by evidence on the part of the defendant.” This statement was apparently a mere dictum in the Cohen case, but in the opinion of the writer it expresses a perfectly sound and wholesome rule of law. In Mangham v. State, 11 Ga. App. 427 (3), 438 (75 S. E. 512), it was said: “The indictment alleged that the offense as described therein was ‘unknown until on or about the first day of January, 1911.' and this allegation was sufficient to make an issue, and evidence relating to this issue was submitted to the-jury, and there was sufficient evidence to show that the offense was not known until 1911, when an audit of the books of the mills was made. Besides, this was a special presentment by the grand jury, and the allegation that the offense charged therein was unknown was sufficient to cast upon the defendant the burden of showing that it was not true.”

Here was a direct application of the principle stated in the Cohen case, supra. The statement was not an obiter dictum in the Mangham case, although, as indicated in Williams v. State, 13 Ga. App. 338, 340 (79 S. E. 207), it involved an additional reason for the court’s judgment. Unless this court .will overrule or repudiate the- ruling in the Mangham case, there is no escape from the proposition that, as regards the instant special presentment, the allegation made therein by the grand jury that the offense was unknown should be taken as prima facie true and sufficient to cast upon the defendant the burden of showing that it was not true.

A further contention of the defendant is, however, that the evidence for the State established without dispute that the offense was in fact barred, and for this reason it is insisted that the verdict of guilty was unauthorized and should have been set aside on the general grounds of the motion for a new trial. The evidence showed that the councilman to whom the alleged bribe was offered was at the time a member-- of the police committee of the City of *80Atlanta, and, being a member of this committee, was sworn in as a policeman with power to make arrests. He was also commissioned as a deputy sheriff of Fulton county, and, in addition to all this, he served several times as a member of the grand jury between the date of the alleged offense and the return of the indictment. It is further claimed that he had a special interest in the offense alleged to have been committed, being the officer to whom the alleged bribe was offered and the person whose honor was thus directly assaulted. It is therefore insisted that the knowledge of the person to whom the offer was made was knowledge of the State, since, according to the same contention, it was his public duty, in any one of several capacities, to discover the offense and bring about a prosecution.

It seems that my colleagues are of the opinion that the knowledge possessed by the councilman in any one of the several capacities named should be imputed to the State so as to make the offense known and to render the statute of limitations applicable. On the contrary, it is my opinion that the knowledge of the councilman was not necessarily and as a matter of law the knowledge of the State, no matter in which of the several capacities such knowledge may have been possessed or acquired by him. For the convenience of any one who may happen to read this dissent, I will follow the .outline adopted by the majority in dealing with these .questions:

(1) Duty in private capacity. Section 921 of the Penal Code, which provides that a private person may arrest an offender, if the offense is committed in his presence or within his immediate knowledge, has no bearing whatever upon the question at issue. Certainly it would never do to say that an offense is known to the State merely because some one private citizen happens to know of it and might have arrested the offender as for an offense committed in his presence. If such were the law of this State, it would be a practical impossibility for the State ever to prove that an offense was "unknown,” notwithstanding the law contemplates that an exception to the statute of limitations may be raised and established by allegation and proof of such fact.

Nor did the councilman occupy the position of one interested in the prosecution or injured by the offense. In Brown v. State, 6 Ga. App. 329 (2) (64 S. E, 1001), it was held that the statute of *81limitations does not begin to run in favor of the offender until the offense is known to the prosecutor or to one interested in the prosecution or injured by the offense. The councilman did not institute, and was not interested in, the prosecution; in fact there was no prosecutor, but the ease arose upon a special presentment. Upon the question of injury, as I have endeavored to show above, the offense of bribery affects all the innocent citizens alike, and, in a legal sense, there was no special injury to the councilman, although, being the officer to whom the bribe was offered, the transaction, as to him, may have amounted to a personal insult and aroused a moral indignation not experienced by any other person or persons. The implication that he could be purchased doubtless made him angry, but it did not constitute any offense upon his person, property, or reputation, and he was not in a legal sense injured thereby.

The rule that knowledge of a person interested in or injured by an offense is knowledge of the State can be applicable only to private offenses such as those affecting the person, property or reputation of an individual, as assault or assault and battery, theft, robbery, libel and the like. In the majority opinion the case of Bishop v. State, 86 Ga. 329 (12 S. E. 641), is cited for the purpose of showing that a person may be injured under the rule stated in the Brown case, although he has sustained no physical or financial injury. The Bishop case involved a prosecution for the offense of assault, a crime which could be perpetrated in no other way than by an attempt to commit a violent injury upon the person of another; while the present case was a prosecution for the offense of bribery, which in its essential character is not directed at a particular individual but is aimed at the institution of government through an individual as a mere incident of its perpetration. Ibvo cases could hardly be more different or unlike in principle.

The fact that Beall as a private individual knew of the commission of this offense did not make it known to the State within the meaning of the exception to the statute of limitations.

(2) Duty in an official capacity.

(a) Councilman. In the majority opinion the case of Williams v. State, 13 Ga. App. 338 (79 S. E. 207), is cited as authority for the proposition that knowledge of the councilman, in his official character as such, was imputed to the City of Atlanta, and in turn became the knowledge of the State, within the meaning of *82the statute of limitations. The Williams ease was a prosecution for the offense of cheating and swindling, in the defrauding of a commercial corporation. The crime was therefore one of a private nature and the corporation was the injured or aggrieved party.' The ruling in that case to the effect that the State did not carry the burden of proving the allegation that the offense was unknown,' in the absence of evidence that it was unknown to all the officers whose knowledge might be imputed to the corporation, can have no relevancy as authority on the question of whether in a prosecution for the offense of offering a bribe to an officer of a municipal or public corporation the knowledge of the officer should be imputed to the State.

The fact that the person attempted to be bribed was a councilman or officer of the municipal corporation did not make the corporation the aggrieved party within the reasoning of the Williams ease. The offense was not against the City of Atlanta as a person or as a corporate entity, but was essentially one of a public nature and against society in general. The City of Atlanta was not more concerned than any citizen, and, as stated above, the councilman himself was not 'in a different situation. If the defendant had been guilty of a larceny or embezzlement of the city’s money or property, a very different question would have been presented, and the Williams case might have been in point.

It seems to me that a crime of this nature could have become known to the State within the meaning of the statute of limitations only by a common notoriety, or by the knowledge of some officer whose duty it was to represent the-State in initiating a prosecution, or by the actual commencement of such a prosecution by some private individual or citizen. Neither the councilman nor the City of Atlanta represented the State, and neither was interested in or aggrieved by the offense in question. Hence, it could not be said that either was the instrument or agent of the State for the purpose of acquiring or possessing knowledge of such offense. If the councilman had reported the transaction to the legislative body of which he was a member, this circumstance might have bound the State as by common notoriety, but not otherwise. Upon his failure to do so or to take other steps towards making the offense known, it remained a matter of secrecy within his own breast, as a private citizen. I have already' dealt sufficiently with the effect of his knowledge in this capacity.

*83In practically all that I am saying in this dissent I consider and treat the offense of bribery or of offering a bribe as a public offense, affecting all the citizens alike, and in which no individual or entity is more interested than .another. This is a distinction which my colleagues either decline altogether to recognize or else regard as having no substantial bearing upon the legal questions presented. In my own opinion it is of very great importance, and I think that I am not without authority for this view, although in a sense all crimes are offenses against the State or society, and as such may be classed as.public offenses.

(b) Policeman. The evidence showed that Beall as a member of the council was made a member of the police committee, and that in virtue of such position he was sworn as a police officer and had power to make arrests. In the majority opinion it is held that Beall's knowledge as a policeman was imputed to the State so as to fix a.time from which the statute of limitations began to run. Can it be the law that the knowledge of any one of the several hundred or thousand policemen in the cities, towns, and villages of this State may in every case be imputed to the State of Georgia, for the purpose of setting off the statute of limitations, no matter with what secrecy or concealment the knowledge may be kept by the particular policeman who happens to possess it? It seems to me that merely to ask this question is a sufficient argument for a negative answer. I am certainly unwilling to hold that it should be answered in the affirmative. My associates have quoted from the decision in Payne v. State, 153 Ga. 882 (113 S. E. 446), for the purpose of showing the powers of police officers in enforcing the laws of the State within their jurisdiction. The question presented for decision in the Payne case was whether a policeman is <can officer of this State” within the meaning of section 271 of the Penal Code having reference to the subject of bribery. See Payne v. State, 29 Ga. App. 156 (114 S. E. 226). The Supreme Court was not called upon to decide, and doubtless did not have in mind, any question as to the authority of a police officer to acquire and possess knowledge and information for the State of Georgia to the extent of fixing a time from which a statute of limitations would become operative, and, notwithstanding the broad language of that decision, I can not subscribe to the proposition that a police officer is invested with such power to initiate prosecutions in behalf of *84the State, or is such a keeper of the public conscience, that his knowledge shall, in all circumstances, be imputed to the State for the purposes of the statute of limitations.

The power of a police officer thus to bind the State might perhaps exist in particular circumstances, but such could not be true as a matter of law under the facts of the present case, in which the evidence authorized the inference that Beall was a police officer only for a special purpose, relating to the more adequate discharge of his duties as an officer of the City of Atlanta, to wit, as a member of the police committee of the board of councilmen. I will refer again briefly to this matter in the next subdivision of this opinion.

(c) Deputy sheriff. A more difficult question arises in connection with Beall’s duty and authority as a deputy sheriff, but even here I am of the opinion that the question of whether his knowledge should be imputed to the State was dependent upon an issue of fact, the solution of which was a matter for the jury.

A deputy sheriff may be charged with the same duties and responsibilities as the sheriff under and by whom he is appointed and commissioned, and, hence, may be invested with a very large and comprehensive authority as the alter ego of the State in the preservation of the public peace. Section 4914 of the Civil Code, after enumerating the several statutory duties of sheriffs, declares that they are “to perform such other duties as are or may be imposed by law, or which necessarily appertain to their offices.” Since Georgia is a common-law State, a sheriff of this State may have the same duties which devolved upon this officer at common law, except where such duties have been modified by statute. At common law a sheriff had the power and duty to apprehend and commit “all traitors, felons, and other misdoers,” and his authority was perhaps of such degree and character that his knowledge of the commission of an offense might have been imputable to the State, where the question of the State’s knowledge was a material issue. 1 Cooley’s Blackstone (4th ed.), 343; 24 R. C. L. 916; State v. Reichman, 135 Tenn. 653 (188 S. W. 225, Ann. Cas. 1918B, 889). But the evidence here authorized, if 'it did not indeed demand, the inference that Beall was only a nominal deputy sheriff, in that he was appointed merely in virtue of his office as a member of the police committee of the city council and that he was not expected either by the sheriff or other authorities to assume the general *85duties of an arresting or peace officer. There is no evidence Lhal he ever made an arrest of any sort, or ever attempted to do so, or that he ever served or executed any writ or process oJE any kind whatsoever, but the evidence well warranted the conclusion that he became a deputy sheriff; only for the purpose of enabling him the more effectively to discharge the duties of his office as a member of the police committee of the city council, by adding and exercising the powers of a deputy sheriff, where necessary for this purpose. It is inferable that he intended to assume the authority of a State officer only in so far as he might be aided thereby in the discharge of his duties as a municipal officer, and that to all other intents and purposes he was a deputy sheriff in name only.

Is the State to be bound as a matter of law by everything that a deputy sheriff may know, merely because the sheriff has appointed and commissioned some person as a special deputy for a particular purpose, and without any intention or expectation that such person shall assume the general duties of a State officer ? I do not think so. In the circumstances stated it is my opinion that the jury were authorized to find that knowledge possessed by Beall was not imputable to the State as through a deputy sheriff so as to render the statute of limitations operative.

What I have just said as to the official character of Beall as a deputy sheriff will apply equally to his authority and responsibility as a police officer.

(d) Grand, juror. Nor should the previous knowledge of a single grand juror be accounted as information to the body of which he was a member, where he failed for any reason to disclose the facts to his fellow members. The oath of a grand juror as prescribed by section 829 of the Penal Code binds the juror to make inquiry and presentment only of such matters as shall be given in charge or as shall come to his knowledge “touching the present service;” and section 834 provides that “whilst grand jurors are bound only to notice or make presentments of such offenses as may or shall come to their knowledge or observation after they shall have been sworn, yet they have the right and power, and it is their duty, as jurors, to make presentments of any violations of the laws which they may know to have been committed at any previous time, which are not barred by the statute of limitations.”

The decision in the ease of Groves v. State, 73 Ga. 205, as quoted *86in the majority opinion, carries no implication that the State would be bound by the private knowledge off a single grand juror as to the previous commission off some offense, notwithstanding he may have failed to perform his duty to “tell his fellows what he knows.” The principal question in that case was whether, as to the prosecution of certain officers for malpractice, the law which provided that the officers should first be given a hearing before the grand jury contemplated that the power of the grand jury should be limited to cases in which there was a prosecutor.

Where a citizen happens to have knowledge of an offense, but elects not to make it public or to present it to some officer of the State having the power and duty to institute a criminal prosecution, it is unreasonable to say that the State becomes possessed of such knowledge merely in virtue of the fact that the citizen is thereafter selected and sworn as a grand juror. Cf. In re Lester, 77 Ga. 143, 147. The evidence in the present case showed without dispute that the councilman did not disclose his knowledge of the defendant’s offense during any of his service as a grand juror. The offense therefore did not become known to the body of grand jurors or to any official whose knowledge should be imputed to the State, in consequence off the service of the councilman for several terms as a member of the grand jury.

But in view of other evidence in the record, everything that I have said above in this dissent may be cast aside as so much chaff, and there is still ground upon which to sustain the. jury’s finding on the question of limitation. Reference is here made to the testimony to the effect that the defendant, upon receiving a cold response from the councilman, immediately sought a compact of secrecy based upon friendship and a common membership in certain fraternal orders. According to the evidence of the councilman, the defendant immediately said to him, “Don’t get on your ear; we are your friends here at the city hall and we trade with you, and there is no use to cause a great big commotion. . . I will say no more about it, and you need not say anything.” The councilman then promised him that he would not, and the defendant said, “Put it there,” and they shook hands. The councilman in further explaining his reason for not disclosing the offense stated that he agreed with the defendant to be bound in secrecy by the “Shrine and Masonic pin.” The jury were authorized to *87accept the testimony of this witness as to the truth of the transaction, and 'it must be so treated by this court, in view of the verdict.

The defendant contends that this evidence fails to show any valid excuse for the failure of the councilman to make known the offense or to institute a prosecution. This is doubtless true, but the dereliction in this respect was the result of an agreement sought and obtained by the defendant, and he can not now take.advantage of a secrecy for which he was directly responsible. The fact that the crime was concealed for a long period of time was the result of a covenant which the" defendant himself proposed, and upon this point he ought to be satisfied that the agreement worked well as long as it did; at least after thus taking active and successful steps to conceal the offense, he can not take advantage of his own wrong in this respect. Estoppels are not entirely unknown to the criminal law. Howard v. State, 115 Ga. 244 (4), 253 (41 S. E. 654); Quattlebaum v. State, 119 Ga. 433 (2) (46 S. E. 677); Hill v. Nelms, 122 Ga. 572 (2), 573 (50 S. E. 344); Matthews v. State, 125 Ga. 248 (54 S. E. 192); Price v. State, 137 Ga. 71 (5) (72 S. E. 908); Partee v. State, 19 Ga. App. 752 (3, 4) (92 S. E. 306); Hamilton v. State, 24 Ga. App. 694 (102 S. E..43).

There is another view of the same evidence, in consideration of which we are led to the same conclusion. With no intention to reflect needlessly upon the character or reputation of the councilman who became involved in the transaction with the defendant, I think it clear that the jury were authorized to find from his evidence that instantly upon the commission of the offense he entered into a virtual conspiracy with the defendant "to prevent the offense from becoming known. Although the combination was an improper and illegal one, it appears to have been kept as if sacredly inviolate, in that all the subsequent silence on the part of the councilman was inferably due to the pledge which he had thus taken with the defendant. As a private citizen and as a member of the council of the City of Atlanta he kept the offense secret. As a police officer and a deputy sheriff he refrained from making an arrest and preferred no charges. Sworn and rendering service several times as a member of the grand jury, he made no presentment and did not divulge the facts to his fellow grand jurors.

If knowledge on the part of the councilman in any capacity could *88be said to be the knowledge of the State, in the sense that the offense was not unknown within the meaning of the exception to the statute of limitations as contained in section 30 of the Penal Code, the imputation of such knowledge must be founded, in the last analysis, upon the theory of principal and agent, for if the councilman was in no sense the agent and representative of the State for the purpose of instituting a prosecution, it could not be said that the State would be bound by the information concealed within his breast. Cf. Deariso v. Mobley, 38 Ga. App. 313 (2), 322 (143 S. E. 915). The State is bound by the acts of its officers only upon the theory of agency, and in the instant case it can not be said that the knowledge of the councilman was the knowledge of the State, without holding that the councilman was the agent of the State for the purposes in question.

The Code provides that “where an agent conspires with the other party, his principal is not bound thereby, nor charged with knowledge of facts thus acquired by his agent.” Civil Code (1910), § 3600. See also, in this connection, Pursley v. Stahley, 122 Ga. 362 (50 S. E. 139); Faircloth v. Taylor, 147 Ga. 787 (4) (95 S. E. 689); Loflin v. Great Southern Home Benevolent Asso., 9 Ga. App. 121 (2) (70 S. E. 353). Although the principle here alluded to is one generally applicable in civil cases, I am unable to perceive any good reason why it may not be applied with equal force in the case of an offender against the criminal law who is seeking to charge the State with the knowledge of another who might otherwise be regarded as the agent of the State, but with whom the defendant has successfully colluded against bringing the offense to light.

In 2 C. J. 871 it is said: “The rule charging the principal with his agent’s knowledge is established for the protection of those who deal with the agent in good faith. If, therefore, the third person acts in collusion with the agent to defraud the principal, the latter will not be chargeable with any information which the agent receives pertaining to the transaction, and this applies with greater force where the third person instructs the agent, or enters into an agreement with him, not to communicate his knowledge to the principal.”

In case of private offenses, the fact that the aggrieved party may have entered into an agreement with the- offender to .conceal the *89crime would undoubtedly be inoperative to toll Llie statute. But tlie rule should be otherwise as to an offense against society in general, such as an offer to give a bribe, since in the latter case the person to whom the bribe was offered would not be so injured by the offense, and would have no such special interest in the prosecution, that his knowledge should be imputed to the State, notwithstanding his infidelity in conspiring to keep the offense hidden.

In the instant case the evidence showed without dispute that the councilman was the only person or official who had any knowledge of the offense until shortly before the return of the special presentment, and it thus appears that the allegation that the offense was unknown until that time was abundantly if not conclusively established by the evidence. So, the verdict as to this feature of the case should be upheld even regardless of the rule as laid down in Cohen v. State, 2 Ga. App. 689 (supra), and as reaffirmed in Maugham v. State, 11 Ga. App. 427 (3) (supra), to the effect that in those cases where the offense is against society in general, and there is no prosecutor, the allegation that the offense was unknown is within itself sufficient to cast the burden of evidence upon the defendant as to that issue.

I can not agree with the statement of counsel for the plaintiff in error that the clock of the statute of limitations began to say “ticktock, tick-tock” instantly upon the happening of the transaction in question. The defendant effectually stopped the clock of the statute when he colluded and intermeddled with the State’s agent, if Beall was such, and obtained a pledge of secrecy which prevented the machinery of the law from becoming operative. My associates deny that Taylor stopped the clock, and say that Beall himself stopped it. They suggest also that the clock belonged to Beall, and not lo Taylor. This last statement is inconsistent with their principal theory, because they have based their entire decision upon 'the proposition that the clock belonged not to Beall but to the State, in that the mind and knowledge of Beall were the instruments and agencies of the State so far as the question of limitation was concerned.

To continue the figure, whether it be apt or ever so inapt, it is true that Taylor himself did not actually stop the clock, but he procured it to be done by the influence which he positively and affirmatively exercised over the person upon whose information and knowledge depended a prosecution.

*90My associates have cited a line of civil cases from this and other jurisdictions to the effect that a mere request for indulgence to a date beyond the expiration of the period of limitation would not estop the defendant from pleading the statute, where no fraud was perpetrated on the plaintiff, and that to prevent the statute from operating as a bar there must be an agreement express or implied on the part of the debtor that the statute will not be pleaded. In each of these cases the parties were apparently dealing with' each other as principals, and none of such cases involved a situation where one of the parties overreached the agent of the other and prevented the principal from acquiring knowledge of the existence of the cause of action. If the defendant here had in some way become civilly liable to the City of Atlanta, and the only person having knowledge of the cause of action was Beall, the councilman, would the statute of limitations run against the city, where the defendant had by persuasion and collusion obtained a bond of secrecy from the councilman, as a result of which the existence of the cause of action was unknown for sometime to other officials of the municipality ? I hardly think so; and the answer would not be different if the question should more accurately carry the name of the State of Georgia instead of the City of Atlanta as the person in whose favor the liability accrued. Such conduct of the defendant would consist of a concealment by more than mere silence, and would amount to a fraud on his part. American National Bank v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 131 Ga. 854, 859 (63 S. E. 622, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 962); Walker v. Walker, 25 Ga. 76 (4); Hoyle v. Jones, 35 Ga. 40 (2) (89 Am. D. 273); Civil Code (1910), § 4380. In Walker v. Walker, supra, the Supreme Court held: “If a trustee collude with a third person to defraud his cestui que trust, the statute of limitations does not begin to run until after the fraud is discovered.” The facts of the Walker case show that the trustee referred to was an administrator, and that the cause of action was against one who held under the third person with whom the administrator colluded. The decision in that case is direct authority for the position which I take in the case at bar.

With all deference to my colleagues, it seems to me that each and all of the cases to which I have just referred are without the slightest relevancy in the solution of the present case.

I am also of the opinion that the majority have added noth*91ing whatsoever to the strength of their position by the argument that the time limitation in which a criminal prosecution must be instituted is one of the essential elements of the offense, which, as they say, consists not alone in the commission of the acts condemned by law as a crime, but also in the commission of these acts within the statutory period of limitation. Cf. Atlantic Log & Export Co. v. Central of Georgia Ry. Co., 171 Ga. 175 (4), 180 (155 S. E. 525). I do not agree that this is a correct definition of a crime, or a proper construction of the statute of limitations. Penal Code (1910), §§ 30, 31. Neither the decision in McLane v. State, 4 Ga. 335, 340, which is the principal case cited, nor the language of the statute which fixes the periods of limitation, can, to my mind, reasonably lead to such a conclusion. Judge Bussell did not so view the law in the Cohen case, reference to which I have heretofore made. In the decision in that case he said: “In the opinion of the writer one reason why the same particularity is not required [in the indictment] in the statement of the exception is that the exception which brings the defendant to trial is not a part of the State’s case. It does not involve the question of guilt or innocence. It is not a plea to the merits. It can exist with admitted guilt.” But even to grant, for the sake of the argument, that the time element is ordinarily an essential ingredient of the offense, it is. yet provided by law that allegation and proof that the offense was unknown will constitute a good substitute for such ingredient, and according to my own opinion this element was sufficiently supplied by the allegation and the evidence in the present case.

In the. motion for a new trial other questions were raised by the plaintiff in error which my colleagues did not find it necessary to deal with, in the view which they took of the question of limitation. I have carefully examined all grounds of the motion for a new trial, and would hold that no reversible error was committed. I am therefore dissenting not only from the conclusion reached by my collagues in the second division of their opinion, but also from the judgment of reversal. It is my opinion that the evidence authorized the verdict of guilty, that no error of law was committed, and that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed.