The accused was arraigned in the city court of Yaldosta, under an indictment charging him with the offense of simple larceny. A trial by jury having been waived, the case was submitted to the judge, who rendered a judgment convicting the
1. Counsel for the defendant in error made a motion to dismiss the writ of error, and the grounds upon which this motion was based will be first dealt with. It is contended that the city court of Yaldosta is not a like court to the city courts of Atlanta and Savannah, for the reason that the act creating the city court of Yaldosta provides for the drawing and summoning of sixteen jurors only, and from this panel a jury of twelve is provided, in civil cases by allowing each party two strikes, and in criminal cases by allowing the accused three strikes and the State one. The act in terms provides for a jury of twelve, and that is the only jury for which provision is made by the act. See Acts 1901, p. 183, sec. 27. The constitution requires that cases in city courts shall be tried by a jury of not less than twelve, when a trial by jury is demanded by either party. Civil Code, §5876. There is nothing in the constitution which prescribes the manner in which this jury shall be obtained, but this matter is left for determination by the General Assembly. While under existing laws for the trial of civil cases in superior courts a jury is procured by each party striking six jurors from a panel of twenty-four, and in misdemeanor cases by the State striking five and the accused seven from a like panel, there is nothing in the constitution or laws of this State which requires that this plan shall be adopted in city courts. All that is required by the constitution is that a jury of twelve shall be provided ; and when the General Assembly makes provision for a jury of twelve impartial persons to try cases pending in a city court, the requirement.of the constitution is met, and the manner in which the jury is to be procured is a matter left entirely to the discretion of the General Assembly. The case of Conyers v. Graham, 81 Ga. 615 (4), is directly in point and controlling on this question. There is nothing on this subject in the act creating the city court of Yaldosta which prevents that court from being a city court within the meaning of that term as used in the constitution.
2. It is further contended that the act creating the city court of Yaldosta is unconstitutional, for the reason that section 14 of the act provides that in cases “ where the principal sum involved iff
The act provides for the establishment of a court which shall have jurisdiction, concurrent with the superior courts, in all civil cases where exclusive jurisdiction is not vested in those courts, and in criminal cases below the grade of felony; and provides that the judge may grant new trials, and that a writ of error shall lie direct from that court to the Supreme Court. The act provides for jury trial in all cases save the class above mentioned. It provides a method for drawing and empanelling juries. The method of trial in civil cases involving fifty dollars or less seems to be a matter of minor importance in the scheme of the act, and there is nothing at all in the act to show that the General Assembly intended the provision that there should be no jury trial in such cases to be an essential part of the scheme. The rule to be followed in determining whether an act which is unconstitutional in part can be sustained as to the remainder is thus stated by the present Chief Justice in Elliott v. State, 91 Ga. 696: “When a statute can not be sustained as a whole, the courts will uphold it in part when it is reasonably certain that to do so will correspond with the main purpose which the legislature sought to accomplish by its enactment, if, after the ob
3. It is also contended that the city court of Yaldosta was not established in a city, for the reason that Yaldosta is not a city within the meaning of that term as used in the constitution, it having a population of only 5,600 inhabitants when it was created a city by legislative enactment. What territory and what population shall be sufficient to constitute a city are questions referred, under the constitution, to the determination of the General Assembly, and the courts have no power to review the judgments of the General Assembly on such questions. See Heard v. State, 113 Ga. 444. If the General Assembly had by legislative enactment declared Yaldosta to be a city, it had the power after the passage of such an act to establish a city court in Yaldosta.
4. By an act approved November 21,1901, the City of Yaldosta was incorporated and Yaldosta was declared to be a city under the corporate name of the City of Yaldosta. By this act the powers, rights, and liabilities of the City of Yaldosta are fully set forth, and in the act is a clause repealing all conflicting laws. Acts 1901, p. 670. On November 27, 1901, the act incorporating the town of Yaldosta and the several acts amendatory thereof were repealed. Acts 1901, p. 689. It is said that, because the act creatingthe City of Yaldosta was passed before the act repealing the charter of the town of Yaldosta was passed, the act incorporating the city never took effect. We do not think this is the correct view of the matter. When the act of November 21 was passed, the effect of that act was to create the City of Yaldosta and to repeal all laws conflicting with that act, and all acts relating to the town of Yaldosta were thus repealed by necessary implication. The act of November 27, repealing all laws in relation to the town of Yaldosta, was not absolutely indispensable to the creation of the City of Yaldosta, and therefore it is immaterial that the repealing act was passed after the approval of the act incorporating the city.
5. It is further argued that the act establishing the city court
6. An additional reason urged for dismissing the writ of error is that a writ of error does not lie to this court from the city court of Valdosta “ in cases not tried in term time”; it being contended that this case was “ tried in vacation ” and without a jury. ■ It does not appear from the bill of exceptions or the record that the accused was tried “ in vacation.” On the other hand, the bill of exceptions recites that the case came on to be tried in the city court of Valdosta, which would indicate that the court was then in session. It also appears that the accused waived trial by jury. It does not appear from the record or the bill of exceptions whether the term at which the case was tried was a regular or adjourned or a special term of the court. The accused having waived trial by jury, a lawful trial by the court could be had at any term of the court which was lawfully convened, notwithstanding that under the act creating the court a trial by jury could be had only at a regular term. The judge of the city court of Valdosta has, under the act creating that court, the same powers that a judge of the superior court has in reference to convening the court, and under the law of this State the judge of a superior court may call a special term at any time for the trial of criminal cases; and if the city court of Valdosta was in session in pursuance of an order calling a special term for the trial of this case alone or with other cases, the trial was regular at that time, the accused having waived a trial by jury.
7. The accused was indicted for the offense of simple larceny; it being charged that he “did take and carry away, with intent to steal the same, one bottle of beer, the personal goods of the Acme Brewing Company,” of the value of fifteen cents. A demurrer was filed which set up that the indictment was defective, for the reason that it £id not set forth the ownership of the property alleged to have been stolen; that the term Acme Brewing Company was not the name of an individual, and that it did not import either a partnership or a corporation. The demurrer was overruled, and this is one of the errors assigned. It is essential to the validity of an indictment for larceny that the goods alleged to have been stolen should be averred to be the property of some person or number of persons. If it is the property of an individual, the name of the individual should be stated. If it is the property of a partnership, the names of the persons composing the partnership should be set forth. If it is the property of a corporation, the name of the corporation should appear in the indictment. If in the indictment the name of the owner appears to be a partnership, the indictment would be defective unless the names of the individuals composing the partnership were set forth therein. See 12 Enc. P. & P. 967. If an indictment alleges the owner to be a corporation, it is not necessary to set forth the names of the members of the corporation. 3 Enc. P. & P. 759; Rapalje, Lar. § 103; 2 Russ. Cr. (6th ed.) 271. In the present case the indictment alleges that the owner of the property alleged to have been stolen was the Acme Brewing Company. This is not the name of an individual. The indictment does not show by allegation whether it is a corporation or partnership. The name is of a character which is more appropriate to a corporation than a partnership, though partnerships are sometimes formed under names which would be appropriate to corporations. The name being one more peculiarly suited to a corporation than a partnership, the presumption would be that it was the name of a corporation. The name itself imports a business corporation. When the name of a party to a suit is such as to import that the party is a corporation, there is a presumption to this effect, and this presumption prevails until the contrary is made to appear. See Wilson v. Sprague Mow
In each of the other two cases cited above the name ended with the word “ company,” and it was held that the name imported a corporation. The Acme Brewing Company can not be an individual. It must be therefore either a corporation or a partnership. If it is a partnership, the indictment would be defective for the reason that the names of the partners were not set forth. If it is a corporation, the indictment would be good notwithstanding the names of the members were not stated in the indictment. The term does not import a partnership, for it would be an unusual name for a partnership. It does import a corporation, for the reason that it is a name that ordinarily would be adopted by a corporation engaged in the character of business that the name indicates. As the name imports a corporation, the question is, is it necessary to allege in the indictment that it is a corporation, to make the indictment valid ? Whether it is so necessary is a question about which the authorities are not agreed. See 12 Enc. P. & P. 973 ; Hughes, Cr. Law & Pr. § 2737; Whart. Cr. Pl. & Pr. (9th ed.) § 110, note 5; 10 Enc. P. & P. 509—10; Rapalje, Lar. §103. The following cases maintain the negative of the proposition just above stated: Fisher v. State, 40 N. J. L. 169; State v. Grant, 104 N. C. 908; State v. Fitzpatrick, 9 Houst. 388; Stanley v. Railroad Co., 89 N. C. 331; McLaughlin v. Com., 4 Rawle, *464; State v. Shields, 89 Mo. 259. In the following cases it was held that the fact of incorporation must be alleged: Wallace v. People, 63 Ill. 451; Cohen v. People, 5 Parker’s Crim. Rep. 330; Pells v. State, 20 Fla. 774. In many of the cases cited above, other cases will be found cited which bear on the question under discussion. In this State it has
8. During the progress of the trial the prosecuting officer asked a witness this question: “How many barrels .of beer have you missed ? ” Counsel for the accused objected to this question, upon
9. The accused was tried by the judge without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment of conviction was entered against him. It is contended that this judgment is erroneous, because the evidence shows that if the accused was guilty of any offense at all it was the offense of larceny from the house, and the court had no power to convict him of the offense of simple larceny upon evidence showing Mm guilty of larceny from the house. In Gardner v. State, 105 Ga. 662, it was ruled: “Evidence showmg that the accused took and carried away from a house, with intent to steal the same, the personal goods of another, will warrant a general verdict of guilty upon an Mdictment which merely charges simple larceny.” That case is directly in point and is controlling. See also Roberts v. State, 83 Ga. 369. The evidence authorized the verdict, and there was no error which reqmres a reversal of the judgment.
Judgment afirmed.