An alternative charge in an indictment that the accused cut and stabbed a named person with a knife, "or other sharp instrument," renders the indictment bad on special demurrer.
DECIDED NOVEMBER 3, 1944. REHEARING DENIED DECEMBER 11, 1944. Judge Isom was indicted for assault with intent to murder. The indictment alleged the following: "The said Judge Isom in the County of Hart, on the 5th day of September, 1941, unlawfully and with force and arms, and with a pocketknife or other sharp instrument, same being a weapon likely to produce death, did unlawfully, with malice aforethought make an assault upon Waco Sanders, and then and there with said knife or other sharp instrument, not in his own defense or circumstances of justification, did unlawfully and with malice aforethought, did cut, stab, and wound the said Waco Sanders with intent then and there and with malice aforethought to kill and murder the said Waco Sanders, contrary to the laws of said State, the good order, peace, and dignity thereof." Before arraignment the defendant filed a special demurrer to the indictment, claiming that there was an alternative charge in the indictment, by using the words, "or other sharp instrument." The demurrer was overruled, and to this ruling the defendant filed timely bills of exception pendente lite. The defendant then went to trial and was convicted of the offense of stabbing, whereupon he filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled. Error is assigned on the exceptions pendente lite, and also on the judgment overruling the motion for new trial. The Code, § 27-701, "was not intended to dispense with the substance of good pleading, nor to deny to one *Page 804 accused of crime the right to know enough of the particular facts constituting the alleged offense to be able to prepare for trial, nor to deprive him of the right to have an indictment perfect as to the essential elements of the crime charged." O'Brien v.State, 109 Ga. 51, 53 (35 S.E. 112). The rule is well settled in this State that an indictment must not state any essential of the offense in the alternative, for pleadings which are in the alternative are defective in form, and this defect must be taken advantage of by special demurrer. Neither can a defective indictment, which has been attacked by special demurrer, be helped out by the evidence at the trial, nor aided by argument and inference. A defendant is entitled to an indictment good both in form and in substance, and if the defendant is denied this legal right he has been injured, for an indictment not good both in form and in substance is ineffectual, when attacked in the manner prescribed by law. It is not a matter of ultimate innocence or guilt, but it is a matter of giving to one accused of crime that which he is legally entitled to — a valid, legal indictment. In the instant case, the defendant, in filing his special demurrer, was following the only method, under our procedure, by which he could attack an indictment that was bad in form. And if the special demurrer is good, as it is in the instant case, the indictment should be quashed. "An alternative charge in an accusation [indictment], that the accused cut and stabbed a named person with a knife, `or some other like instrument,' renders the accusation [indictment] bad on special demurrer." (Brackets ours.) Henderson v. State, 113 Ga. 1148 (39 S.E. 446). See also Statham v. State, 50 Ga. App. 165,168 (177 S.E. 522). Thus the indictment, by using language that the defendant, "with a pocketknife or other sharp instrument, . . did, unlawfully and with malice aforethought, cut and stab" a named person, was defective, for it charged in the alternative.
The State contends that if there was error, it was harmless, and for that reason the case should be affirmed. This court is bound by an opinion of the Supreme Court even though it is not unanimous, and the ruling in the case of Henderson v. State, supra, with one judge dissenting, is absolutely controlling on the point that the overruling of the special demurrer was error. The principle of law ruled in the Henderson case seems to be supported by rulings in similar cases in the other States and by text writers. As to whether *Page 805 the overruling of the demurrer was reversible error, the Supreme Court, in Haley v. State, 124 Ga. 216, 217 (52 S.E. 159), wherein one Haley was tried "in the city court of Elberton on an accusation which charged him and others with the offense of a misdemeanor, for that on a day named they did `with force and arms unlawfully play and bet for money or other thing of value at a game of skin or other game played with cards,'" said: "The accusation was subject to the special demurrer on the ground that it stated the offense in the alternative. The accusation being demurrable, it could not be cured by the statement of the court that he would confine the State to proof to show that the game was `skin' and the thing bet was money." It will be noted that the Haley case proceeded to a verdict against the accused, and even though the court confined the State to evidence showing that the offense was committed by only one of the alternative methods charged in the accusation, yet the Supreme Court said that it was reversible error. It might be further noted that theHaley case cites the Henderson case.
The rules for determining whether the allegations of the indictment are sufficient to withstand a special demurrer are different from those which govern in determining whether the proof supports the allegations of a good indictment. In the former instance the rule is "that a demurrer raising special objections to an indictment should be strictly construed against the pleader [the State];" whereas, in the latter instance, in dealing with a question of evidence, latitude is allowed for drawing inferences and deductions from the evidence to support the State's case. Green v. State, 109 Ga. 536, 540 (35 S.E. 97); Hadaway v. Southern Ry. Co., 41 Ga. App. 669, 670 (154 S.E. 296); Watson v. State, 21 Ga. App. 637, 640 (94 S.E. 857). In the latter line of cases, where the indictment or accusation properly charges the commission of the crime in the conjunctive, or properly charges a single method of committing a crime, which hold that, where the proof shows that the instrument used to inflict the wound and that proved are substantially of the same character and capable of inflicting practically the same nature of injury, there is no variance. The question in these cases is whether the nature and character of the injury and the manner and means of inflicting it is proved practically and substantially, though not identically, to be the same as those *Page 806 alleged. This line of cases is not applicable to the Henderson and the Haley cases, where the indictment was held to be bad, in that the disjunctive method of expression was employed, and thus the latter line of cases is not authority contrary to theHenderson and the Haley cases. Sanders v. State, 86 Ga. 717,721 (2) (12 S.E. 1058); Grantham v. State, 89 Ga. 121 (14 S.E. 892).
The Henderson case and the Haley case, both decided by the Supreme Court, are controlling in the instant case, and the judge erred in overruling the special demurrer.
Judgment reversed. Gardner, J., concurs.