(dissenting). — The indictment charges defendant with the crime of nuisance, committed “ on the first day of January A. D. 1884, and on divers other days and times, between that day and the finding of this indictment,” etc., and was found on the fourth day of May, 1886. A demurrer to the indictment was overruled. Four witnesses testified to the procuring and drinking of liquor at defendant’s saloon. Of these one does not fix the dates of the acts concerning which he testifies. The others say the times of *502which they speak may have been after April 8, 1886. Among the instructions given to the jury was the following :
“If you find from the evidence that at any time between the first day of January, 1884, and the fourth day of May, 1886, and at the place charged, the defendant kept, used, or occupied the building as charged, and therein sold, or therein kept for sale, and with intent to sell, any whisky, then he would be guilty as charged ; or if he sold or kept for sale therein any other article of liquor, and you are satisfied from the evidence thut the same was an intoxicating liquor, then he would be guilty ; and a single sale of any such liquors above enumerated would constitute the crime of nuisance.”
Defendant duly preserved exceptions to the ruling on the demurrer, and to the giving of the paragraph of the charge. quoted, and properly presents these rulings for review.
The indictment is required to be direct and certain as regards “the offense charged.” Code, sec. 4298, par. 2 : l Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 543 ; 1 Whart. Crim. Law, secs. 299-304. It must charge the offense with such a degree of certainty as to enable the court to pronounce judgment, upon a conviction, according to the law of the case. Code, sec. 4305, par. 5 ; 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 77 et secq. “When, therefore, one stands before a court charged with particular acts, and the law has attached to them a specified punishment, or has made them in no degree punishable, the court cannot, without overturning fundamental justice, inflict on him a punishment not legally appropriated to them ; and it makes no difference that he is in fact guilty of more than is charged, or that more is proved.” 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 80. “The doctrine of the courts is identical with that of reason, namely, that an indictment must contain an allegation of every fact which is legally essential to the punishment to be inflicted.” 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 81. “Every indictment must distinctly set down *503each and every individual act and intent which, in matter of law, determines or influences the punishment; and not the least of the reasons for this is that it may guide the court in pronouncing the sentence.” 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 538 ; see, also, secs. 507, 541 ; Bish. St. Crimes, sec. 444. “Prom necessity, an information which is so uncertain that upon a plea of guilty the court cannot know what punishment it may inflict, is bad on motion in arrest of judgment.” Vogel v. State, 31 Ind. 66. The language used by the court in the case of Com. v. Maloney, 112 Mass. 284, is clear and pertinent, and is as follows: “If a statute changes the punishment of an existing offense by imposing a severer penalty, with a clause saving from its operation offenses already committed, the allegation of time is material. The nature and character of the offense, and the penalty affixed to it, depend upon the time when the act charged is committed. If, in such a case, an indictment alleges the act to have been committed before the passage of the statute enlarging the penalty, the offense charged, and the punishment annexed to it, are different from the offense and punishment if the act is committed after such time. They are different offenses, and an allegation of one is not sustained by proof of the other.” To the same effect is Grimme v. Com., 5 B. Mon. 263. Ordinarily, it is not necessary to state in the indictment the precise time at which an offense was committed. Code, secs. 4301, 4305, par. 4. But this court has held that the date, thus fixed, may determine the jurisdiction of the court (State v. Rollet, 6 Iowa, 535); and where perjury was charged to have been committed by means of a false oath taken before an officer named, but four days before such officer could have qualified under the statute, the indictment was held vulnerable to demurrer, and it was also held that such defect could not be cured by proving that the oath was in fact administered at a date later than that named in the indictment. State v. Phippen, 62 Iowa, 54.
It is said that the indictment charged the crime of nuisance, and that this offense was the same after that *504it was before the amendments in question took effect. This is true, but a statute which increased the punishment of an offense already committed would be void as ex post facto. Const. U. S., art. 1, sec. 10 ; Const. Iowa, art. 1, sec. 21 ; Bish. St. Crimes, sec. 176 ; State v. Squires, 26 Iowa, 346. Therefore it is as necessary to distinguish between the unlawful acts committed before and those committed after the amendment increasing the punishment took effect, as though they related to crimes of different kinds. For all practical purposes, they constitute separate and distinct offenses. An examination of the authorities cited, and a consideration of the principles involved, lead me to the conclusion that the majority opinion is erroneous. The indictment should have restricted the alleged offense to time prior to the date on which the amendment increasing the punishment took effect. But I am of the opinion that its defect in this respect was not necessarily prejudicial. The alleged offense is charged to have been committed “ on the first day of January, 1884, and on divers other days and times between that day and the time of the finding of this indictment.” An allowable construction of this is that all which charges unlawful acts after the taking effect of the amendment aforesaid is surplusage, which should be rejected. 1 Whart. Crim. Law, secs. 266, 622, 624; State v. Smouse, 49 Iowa, 636, and 50 Iowa, 45. But it was the duty of the district court to restrict the'evidence to the time properly covered by the indictment, and it therefore erred in giving the part of the charge quoted. It is a well-settled rule that no presumption can be created to aid in the conviction of a person on trial for a particular crime by showing that he has been guilty of other offenses. 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 1120 ; State v. Walters, 45 Iowa, 390. This case does nob fall within the exceptions to that rule. The jury were told, in effect, if not in terms, that proof of a single sale after the eighth day of April, 1886, would sustain a verdict of guilty. In other words, the jury were told that no evidence of the crime charged by *505the indictment was required, but thát they might convict of that crime if another crime of like nature was shown to have been committed, althoughat a later date. It is not a satisfactory answer to say that defendant was not prejudiced by the matters of which he complains, for the reason that the mildest punishment provided for the crimes proven was adjudged. That is only another way of saying that, although the defendant was put upon trial for an offense of which he was not properly charged, in connection with one of which he was legally accused, and although it cannot be told from the verdict of what offense he was convicted, yet it satisfactorily appears that he ought to be punished for something; hence he ought not to be heard to complain. It seems clear that such a method of administering justice is dangerous in the extreme, and that it ought not to be sustained. It is the right of every one on trial for an alleged crime to know of what he is accused, and to be. tried, and, if convicted, to be punished for that alone. I conclude that the case should be reversed.
Seevers, C. J., unites in tins dissent.