On Application eor Rehearing.
The Attorney General applied for a rehearing, and presented a brief in support of his application, of which the concluding sentences are;—
This case, from its great importance, must become a leading one, not only at home but abroad. It is freighted with the most important interests, both of our State and country. Let it contain no assertion of principle which can not be defended by the candid jurist in every quarter of the civilized world. If the prisoner is entitled to his freedom upon the grounds of reason and of law, let an independent judiciary see to it that that freedom is secured to him. But if, on the contrary, he can only escape the penalty of his crimes by the application of principles not strictly consonant to the well-established rules of criminal procedure throughout the world, let it not be said that this high and honored tribunal defeated by hasty and ill-founded conclusions of law the great ends of justice.
From the commencement of this prosecution I have endeavored simply to discharge my duty, as I understood it, to the State, to the courts, and to myself. I have not thought that considerations of mere expediency or policy should exercise the slightest influence upon my conduct. I have tried to be just to the State and just to the accused. My duty is now done and I leave the matter in your hands for final disposition according to law.
The opinion of the court, on the application for a rehearing, was delivered by
Manning, C. J.The importance of the legal principles involved in this cause, and the grave and far-reaching consequences of our application of them, to the prosecution of the defendant, have induced us to reconsider the grounds upon which our decision is based, with the same *566circumspection with which we examined them on the hearing. We have given careful attention to the argument of the Attorney General for a rehearing, weighing each branch of it in its turn, and consulting each authority cited. In fulfillment of our manifest duty, of which he reminds us, to permit no considerations whatever to intervene between us and the proper discharge of our j udicial function, we shall proceed to review the reasons offered us to effect a change of our judgment.
It must be observed on the threshold of this inqüiry that a considerable part of the printed argument for rehearing is directed to the refutation of a dictum not made by us. Whether the instrument charged to have been uttered as forged is or is not a public record, susceptible of forgery — or whether, not being a public record without the clerk’s certificate, it would be one with it — are questions we not only did not decide, but we expressly and in unequivocal language announced that it was unnecessary in this case for us to decide. So too, of those portions of the brief which treat of the crime charged as being forgery (as, for example, this, “ the paper charged to have been altered or falsified is a paper which the Supervisor,” etc.,) it ought to be superfluous to say that the defendant was not charged with forging any record, public or private, nor for forging any paper of any kind whatever. That is not the crime for the perpetration of which he was tried, nor of which he was convicted.
A supplemental brief for rehearing has also been presented by the Attorney General, in which he suggests short notice of the setting of the cause as one of the reasons why he urges a rehearing, and says his reference to the action of the court in setting the case was made in no spirit of complaint of that action, and that he is informed by the Assistant Attorney General that the day assigned for the argument may have been fixed by the court with reference to his suggestion made on the day the cause was first called. Such was the fact. The cause was a second time set for argument, and was heard a day later than that on which the Assistant Attorney General was willing to take it up, and two weeks lacking one day after it was first called.
On the day for which it was first set, it went over, at the written request of the Attorney General, and it was then that his Assistant announced in open court that he had proposed to the counsel of the accused to take up the case on the following Monday. We ordered it set for Tuesday, to be sure of giving to the State all the time that was needed or desired. The clerk was instructed to give written notice thereof to both of the State’s counsel, and it was done. No further time was asked on the part of the State, and no intimation was given to us that further time was desired. On the contrary, we were given to understand that the Attorney General desired no further postponement. On the hearing, we had the assistance of oral arguments from the Attorney *567General and from his Assistant, the time being extended by the court beyond that allowed by the rules, and we also had the benefit of their elaborate printed brief, placed before us at the same time.
The first position taken by the Attorney General is, that what is a record is matter of fact for the jury exclusively to find, and not matter of law for the court .to decide.
A public record is a written instrument, made by a public officer-as directed by law, to serve as a memorial and evidence of something written, said, or done. Of necessity, the forms and verifications o'f these public instruments are prescribed by law. Evidence may be received to shew that a paper having the form and appearance of a public record was or was not in fact what it purports to be, of to shew its custody in a public office, or the like; but whether a given document possesses the form and character of a public record is to be determined by its conformity to the statute directing its confection, if it be a statutory instrument, or to the general law, if it be an ordinary legal instrument, and is from its nature a question of law. The proposition that when the general law or a special statute has prescribed the form and manner of making a public instrument, and has directed how it shall be verified, the question of its conformity to the general or special statute is one of fact to be decided by a jury, is destructive-of the distinction immemorially recognized between matters of law and fact, and subversive of fundamental principles. Under the operation of such a principle a court would be without power or authority to decide whether the form and substance of an indictment or information (for these are public records) were sufficient under the law. It would have been extraordinary if so high an authority as Chief Justice Parker had sanctioned such doctrine, and he is the only author or jurist cited to support it in the printed brief, and if his language had been given in full, as we shall give it, the identical case cited is shewn to be in accord with the well-established rule. It is Brier vs. Woodbury, 1 Pick, 362, and is cited with the observation that it is conclusive of the question, whether an instrument is or is not a public record, is a question of fact. The sentence quoted is: “ A record is conclusive evidence, but what is or is not a record, is matter of evidence, and may be proved like other facts; otherwise there would be no remedy.”
The words immediately following and not quoted are: “ On the plea of nul tiel record, the fact is to be judged of bij the court,” etc., p. 367.
It has been held time and again that the uttering and publishing a forged instrument, purporting to be a cheque, will, deed, bond or certificate, is not indictable unless the forged instrument, on its face, is clothed with the forms prescribed by law, and it has nowhere been held that the question whether the forged instrument has or has not the form and requisites of a cheque, will, deed, bond or certificate, is one of fact and not of law.
Thus; — a party was indicted for forging a bank cheque. The cheque on its face was not payable to bearer, or to the order of any person *568named. Held that the cheque was incomplete and could not defraud any one, and that therefore the prosecution must fail. Williams vs. State, 51 Ga., 535. In an indictment for forging a will, it appearing that the forged instrument had not the number of witnesses required for a valid will, a conviction can not be sustained. 2 Bishop Crim. Law, sec. 506. If a deed be void on its face, forgery of it is not indictable, nor the uttering it as forged. 14 Tex., 503. If a bond is not required by law to have an attesting witness, and the name of one is falsely subscribed thereto, it is not forgery, because the presence or absence of a witness’ signature does not affect the validity of the bond. State vs. Gherkin, 7 Ired, 206. An indictment for forging a certificate of the acknowledgment by one L. of a certain mortgage, when the certificate was by one IL, commissioner of deeds, and it had no venue, and there was nothing on its face to shew of what county K. was a commissioner, was held to be bad. Vincent vs. People, 5 Parker, 88. An indictment for forgery of an order for $48 is not sustained by an order offered in evidence of $49. State vs. Handy, 2 App., 81. In an indictment for forging a railroad ticket, expressed on its face to be “ good for this day only,” a description of the ticket, as signifying to the holder that it must be used continuously and without stopping at intermediate stations after once entering the cars, is a fatal variance. Com. vs. Ray, 3 Gray (Mass), 441. The special object and purpose of the law requiring the tenor or purport of a forged instrument to be set out in the indictment, is that the court may judge of its character and apply the law to it. Walton vs. State, 8 Yerg, 371.
It is then manifest that the question whether a forged paper possesses the legal requisites of any of these instruments is one of law, and not of fact. Authorities of the same tenor might be multiplied until the mere reading of the citations would be tedious. It will be sufficient to refer to collations of them in Archbold’s Crim. Prac. and Pl. Waterman’s Notes, 534 — 563; Hanes’ U. S. Dig. Crim. Cas. 192 et seq; Wharton’s Crim. Law, sec. 307, 607.
We must not omit mention of the case to which the brief on the part of the State has especially referred us, as establishing the doctrine that forgery may be committed of any writings of every description — a general proposition neither affirmed nor denied by us, and one not at all affected by our ruling in this case, and not the point at issue in that.
The case is the People vs. Fitch, 1 Wend. 198, the syllabus of which we transcribe entire, that it may be seen how fully and unqualifiedly it supports the doctrine elaborately discussed and approved in our first opinion: “Where an order for the delivery of goods was accepted and paid, and returned to the drawer,'and the date of it subsequently altered by him, such alteration held not to be forgery at common law, although manifestly done with a'fraudulent intent. To constitute forgery in such case, the act must have a tendency to effectuate the intended fraud. An order, satisfied by the delivery of the goods, in the hands of the drawer, in legal acceptation is no instrument, and an alteration of its date is no false making. It is what it purports to be.”
It is necessary to state anew what crime the prisoner is charged *569with. It is that of uttering and publishing as true a certain altered, forged and counterfeited public record, to wit: the consolidated returns •of the parish of Vernon, made by the supervisor of registration. It will also be useful to restate the election law quoad the two instruments or records provided for by it. One is the commissioners’ returns, viz: the returns of each poll in a parish made by the commissioners who held the election at that poll. The other is the consolidated returns made by the supervisor of registration of each parish from the commissioners’ returns of all the polls in the parish, and as consolidated, certified by the clerk of the District Court to be correct.
This last is therefore a document or record required by law to have ■a double verification, by two different officers, who are able and who are required to verify it from two different sources of information. Now in order to ascertain whether a certain paper possesses the form and requisites of this consolidated (statement or) returns of the supervisors, we must first see what form the statute prescribes for it, and what requisites' the statute says it must have, and the determination of the question whether the paper conforms to the statute, and has the form and requisites set forth in the statute, rests with the court, and is purely one of law.
We held that the paper, offered as the record which had been uttered as true, and which comes up to us as part of one of the bills of exception, did not conform to the description in the statute of a consolidated statement of votes — that it had not the form and verification required by the statute, as a paper purporting to be a will with only one witness would not be a will — that the paper produced, not having the certificate of the ■clerk of the district court, was not the paper described and charged in the information, and was not what was known to the law, and described In it, as the consolidated returns or statement of votes, and, therefore, the paper offered was not receivable in evidence under, and does not sustain the charge, as laid in the information, just as a cheque, deed, bond, or certificate, not having the legal form of such instruments, would not sustain a charge of uttering and publishing as true a forged cheque, deed, bond or certificate.
The amendment of the information in the present case is of itself an example of an attempt to conform to the rule we have been elucidating and enforcing. It is not the commissioners’ returns which are to be signed by them alone, and to be certified by no one, that the prisoner was tried for uttering as true. That was the instrument which he was charged with uttering as true, having been altered and forged, in the information as first drawn, but the State amended by striking out the 'description of that instrument, and inserting in its stead the consolidated ■statement of the supervisor, which is required to be made by that officer, and to be certified by the clerk of the court. When the document thus made the basis of prosecution, was offered in evidence, it turned out that it had not the clerk’s certificate, and thus lacked one of the insignia required by the statute, and it does not matter whether the document as *570thus offered was or was not a public record. It is enough, and it is conclusive, if the instrument offered is not the statutory instrument charged. And hence we said before, it is not necessary to decide whether the instrument charged is or is not a public record susceptible of forgery. The instrument offered to support the charge is not the instrument described in the statute. The statute describes a paper which shall have the supervisor’s signature, and the district court clerk’s certificate. The-paper offered in evidence has the former and has not the latter.
It is entirely beside our present inquiry whether the clerk’s signature-to the supervisor’s returns would have made it a public record, or whether it is not a public record without such certificate. Our opinion expressly pretermits the decision of that question in language designedly used. But we held that since the statute commands that these returns shall be certified by the clerk of the court, and the instrument offered had not that certificate, it was not the public record the defendant was charged with uttering as forged. And here applies with crushing force the doctrine universally maintained by all the writers on criminal law, that when a statute authorizes or creates an instrument not known to the common law, and prescribes its form and impresses upon it peculiar features, in order to support a prosecution for uttering as forged such an instrument, the paper actually forged or uttered as forged must conform to the statutory description. And Bishop says this is true even when the false statutory one is so like the genuine as to be liable to deceive most persons.
It would be an injustice to infer that the Attorney General was unaware of this provision of the statute. In the brief before us it is said, “ the paper prepared by the Supervisor of Registration is a paper of a public nature directed to be made by the Legislature, to be certified by officers of the State, and to be carefully sealed up with the other papers, and sent to the officers of the State, who have duties to perform. This paper is evidence that the commissioners of election have transmitted to the supervisor returns as required by law. It is evidence that the 'officer (the clerk) within a short period has examined these returns and ascertained the result to which he certifies.”
The clerk had never certified to the one on which this prosecution is based, and no one else is required to do it, and so, further on it is argued, “ that the clerk’s certificate although directed by the law to be appended, is not of the substance of this document, but a mere formal matter — a part of the election machinery of the State, and its omission, while rendering the clerk culpable, does not destroy the validity of the record.” It is not our concern to reconcile the admission that the paper is evidence that the clerk within a short period has examined the returns, with the assertion that his certificate to their correctness, and to his ascertainment of the result, is a mere formal matter, or in other words, that it means nothing.
*571But some of the requirements of election statutes are merely directory, and being so, the question is asked how can it be held, that the absence of this formality (the clerk’s certificate) so far changes the substance of this document as to make it inadmissible in evidence under the information. There is no question here of a change of substance of a document because of the absence of a formality, if indeed such a thing be possible, nor is there any question of the effect produced upon the result of an election by the failure to observe certain directions, as to which the universal rule of construction is, that election statutes are to be construed liberally and to favor the right ascertainment of the vote cast, while criminal statutes are by a rule, equally universal, to be construed strictly in favor of the party accused. The actual and vital question here is, having prosecuted the prisoner for uttering as forged a particular statutory instrument, has the State shewn that he did utter as forged that instrument ? The State has not shewn it. It may have shewn that the prisoner, uttered as forged another and a different instrument, but the decisions of all courts come down to us in an unbroken line of authority, that a conviction can not be sustained under such charge, supported only by such proof.
It is also argued: “It is not sufficient to say that the supervisors’ returns was not the paper that the members of the Returning Board were to principally consider, or that it was not the best evidence. The paper was used, and the paper was fraudulently altered and falsified that it might impose upon the public. The paper was successfully used. If this was used in connection with other papers to produce a fraudulent result in their count, and they returned upon its evidence and forged it for that purpose, it makes a case of forgery.”
The prisoner was not prosecuted for that crime. He was not charged with forging that paper or any paper for any purpose. One man may forge a paper and another may utter it as forged. The crimes are distinct. The acts are distinct. So far from supposing it was sufficient to say that the supervisors’ returns was the paper that the returning officers were, principally to consider, or that it was the best evidence, we said, as the statute says, it was not to be considered at all, and that it was not made by the statute any evidence whatever of the actual vote cast. It was not the paper nor one of the papers which the returning officers were to canvass in making their compilation of the vote. Upon that, the directions of the statute are explicit. Whether in the absence or loss of the commissioners’ returns, it would not be receivable in an election contest as secondary evidence of the vote cast, or even as good as the best evidence, is a matter of inquiry not relevant to this criminal proceeding. And it must be evident that we can not know as a court, and in a case where we have jurisdiction only of the legal questions, *572that the defendant and his co-members of the Returning Board, did in fact make up their compilation from the Supervisors’ returns, and successfully used them to produce a fraudulent result. That is a matter of fact, wholly outside of the record, and if it had been in the record could not be taken into account by us in deciding a naked question of law.
“I can not understand the argument,” continues the Attorney General, “ that pronounces a nullity an official paper which the statute directs shall be made and placed in the hands of public officers, and being oí no value or efficacy, may be altered, forged and falsified with impunity.” Nor can wo. But an acquaintance with the rules governing criminal prosecutions will enable one readily to understand that when a person is charged with uttering as forged a particular instrument, he can not be convicted and punished for forging another and a different instrument.
So, further on, apparently forgetting what the charge is in this case, and misreading the words of the statute, he argues elaborately to prove what no one will ever dispute, viz.: That whoever may be guilty of forging a public record shall be punishable; and professing to cite the law, says: “the statute is that any person who shall utter and publish as true any false, altered, forged or counterfeited record with intent to defraud any person, shall upon conviction, etc.”
Now that is not the statute. The fact is the word utter is not in the statute, but alter is the word used, and one of the numerous grounds of the motion in arrest of judgment is based upon the variance between the crime defined by the statute and the crime charged in the information.
There is a well-recognized distinction at common law between the offence of uttering a forged instrument, and the offence of uttering and publishing such instrument. The first offence is complete when the party has offered the instrument as good, intending it should be received as good. The last is not complete until the paper has come into the hands of some person other than the felon. The common law crime-has been supplemented by statutes in every country, creating statutory offences of this character. In England the words used in the statute to express the passing or putting off a forged instrument to another as a genuine instrument, or an attempt to do so, are, “ offer, utter, dispose of, or put off,” which embrace every mode of disposing or attempting to dispose of a forged instrument. Waterman’s Archbold Criminal Practice and Pleading, 547 — 26. The words of our statute are, “ alter or publish as true,” and are not a misprint, for they occur first in the act of 1818, and are repeated in the Revised Statutes of 1856 and 1870. It was hence contended by the defendant’s counsel that the Legislature had not made the act charged to have been done by him, a crime — the charge being “uttering and publishing as true,” and that *573the crime as laid in the information and for which he was tried is not the crime created by the statute. The statute used the word alter. The information has utter. The statute uses the disjunctive, alter or publish, thus making two crimes. The information has the copulative, utter and publish, thus describing one offence. The prosecution is based on section 833 Revised Statutes, and the word utter is not used in it, while it is employed in the next section, in relation to the intent in passing paper securities, and is used in section 835 for creating another and distinct offence, thus — “ whoever shall utter or tender in payment, etc.” The two words would appear to have been employed intentionally, and it was urged both in the oral and printed argument that the words “ utter and publish,” used in the information as descriptive of the crime, do not charge the crime either of altering or publishing defined by the statute. In other words, the statute made it a crime to alter the record, and the defendant was not charged with that. The statute also made it a crime to publish as true an altered record, and the defendant was not charged with that, but with uttering and publishing, etc. The act of uttering is separable and distinct from either of the others, and unless the phrase “ utter and publish ” means legally the same as the single word “ publish ” and designates the same act, the offence charged in the information has no existence. If the draughtsman of the information had the statute before him, he must have intended the word ‘ utter ’ used by him conjunctively with ‘ publish’ as expressing only what the latter word expresses by itself; but legally that is not true as the law writers all teach. We did not give this objection of the defendant’s counsel a place in our former opinion, because among the twenty-seven bills of exception, and the assignment of errors additional thereto, the two on which we rested our decision were conclusive of the invalidity of the proceedings.
That the crime should have been charged to have been committed by the defendant under color of his office is to our minds a necessity. No one but the returning officers had any power, mission, or authority to compile, canvass or publish the returns of elections. The compilation by any other persons, and its publication, could produce no legal consequence. All persons are presumed to know that the publication of the results of an election by any others than the Returning Board was null and void legally, and hence it was legally impossible that such publications should deceive, injure or defraud any one, and since the criminal act must not only be done with intent to defraud, but must be legally capable of effecting the fraud, it must be charged to have been done by virtue of, and in the capacity of the returning officer. We are asked in the brief if “ four presidents of banks had appropriated large sums of money to induce the returning officers to make necessary *574alterations in the figures, and after the alterations had been made and the result changed, they had caused them to be published,” would not they bo punishable? Unquestionably, if we understand it to be assumed that the publication is made in the name and under the authority of the returning officers, because there is another statute that applies to those who procure to be falsely made, etc. But that is the Attorney General’s imaginary case, and not ours. We supposed a case where it is not alleged or charged, and therefore not to be pretended, that the published document bore the certificate of the returning officers, but only that of four bank presidents. It is undeniable that such publication would not be criminal under our statute for the reasons we then gave. We stated that case to shew that it was of the essence of the offence of uttering and publishing false election returns under the statute, that the publishing should be made by persons having authority and capacity under the law to make it, and therefore it was essential that the information should contain an averment of that authority and capacity, and was fatally defective without it. Its omission could not be supplied by the court.
It is matter of history that the act of the defendant, which actually constituted his crime, was done in his official capacity as a member of the Returning Board. Why was it that the canvassing and publishing of the vote to be made by him and his co-returning officers became the object of public anxiety, and when made, became the subject of public condemnation? If four private persons had done what they did, and then published as election returns whatever might have been in conformity to their wishes, would not the act have been treated with derision, and could it have produced any effect, legally or otherwise ?
Is it not apparent if this defendant had not been a member of the Returning Board and had published the altered returns, being only a private person, that no one would have thought of prosecuting him for that act ? It was because what he did, was done in a recognized official capacity, that the fame and the infamy of it filled men’s mouths, and it was for that cause the criminal prosecution was ultimately instituted. Everywhere, in the market place and at the fireside, in the press and in the forum, at the council board and in the legislative hall, the official act is the thing complained of and denounced. The theory of the prosecution throughout, outside of the information, is that the act was done in an official capacity, and therefore defrauded. The argument of counsel, the charge of the Judge, the bills of exception to that charge and to his rulings in the course of the trial, are all based on that assumption. It is that feature that has imparted to this prosecution the interest, and invested it with the character of a State Trial — which gave to the events that then transpired, and to the criminal acts which are a part of them, *575a national importance — and that feature, conspicuous every-where else, is absent alone from the information.
We have been thus careful to rest our decision upon only those principles of law, of the soundness of which there can be no serious question by candid, disinterested and enlightened jurists every-where. There remain now for notice the concluding sentences of the Attorney General’s appeal to us to reverse our ruling.
Like him, we are conscious of having been just to the accused, and just to the State. With him, we feel the necessity that our decision shall contain no assertion oE principle which can not be successfully defended, and we believe we have now placed that decision upon a basis so unassailable that the rightfulness of our judgment shall commend it to the candid jurist in every land. If this court had yielded to the impassioned and justifiable zeal of the prosecuting officer, or had been swayed by the feeling, natural and spontaneous among all good men, of detestation of a great crime against free government and the rights of the people, and by reason thereof, had permitted its judgment to be clouded by passion, or warped by love of applause, or to be influenced by any consideration, other than its duty with sedulous care to ascertain the law and with firm purpose to apply it, it would be unworthy of the high place it holds in the government of the State. It would argue a deplorable state of public morals, if it could be confidently assumed beforehand in a case such as this, what the decision of a court would be from the known political affiliations or antipathies of its members. It would be a public calamity, the extent of which could not be measured, if a court should prevent the escape of an accused person by torturing the well-settled principles of law, applied through long years to criminal prosecutions with unvarying uniformity, and bend them to the accomplishment of partisan desires.
Bather let it be known of all men that a court can consider neither expediency nor policy — that it can not shape its judgment either to realize the hopes of friends or to quiet the fears of foes — and that judges may abhor a malefactor, and yet refuse to condemn him contrary to the law.
It is therefore ordered that a rehearing is refused, and that our judgment in this cause remain undisturbed.