Commonwealth v. Scannel

Dewey, J.

We perceive no ground for arresting judgment in the present case, for either of the alleged causes. 1. It is not necessary in an indictment for rape, to allege that the defendant is fourteen years of age. It might as well be contended thai in all other cases, the indictment must allege that the party charged was above the age of seven years. The incapacity of a party, by reason of his tender years, to commit the crime charged upon him, may be a good defence on the trial,' as it may negative effectually the charge,* but this capacity is not required to be stated in the indictment, and its omission furnishes no ground for arresting the judgment, after a verdict against the accused.

2. Nor is there any defect in this indictment in not more particularly alleging that the person upon whom the rape is charged to have been committed, was not the wife of the defendant. The indictment, charging as it does, that the defendant did ravish one Mary Moran, a person of different name and without further description, corresponds to the usual precedents in this respect, and is well enough.

3.. The real omissions in this indictment, or departure from the more usual forms of charging this offence, are of a different kind. The omission to aver that the defendant, “ with force and arms,” made the assault, &c. is no longer a ground for a motion in arrest of the judgment; it being so declared in the Rev. Sts. c. 137, § 14. The omission to aver that the act was perpetrated “ feloniously ” would have been a fatal defect, but for the provisions of the very recent act of 1852, c. 37, § 3, wherein it is provided that “ no indictment shall be quashed or deemed invalid by reason of the omission of the words ‘ felonious,’ or ‘ feloniously.’ ” This act seems to obviate what would otherwise have been the great defect in this indictment, and leaves the indictment valid.

Motion in arrest overruled.