State v. Pentacost

Decision Date07 January 1911
Citation69 S.E. 880,87 S.C. 405
PartiesSTATE v. PENTACOST.
CourtSouth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from General Sessions Circuit Court of Richland County; S.W G. Shipp, Judge.

Henry A. Pentacost was prosecuted for breach of trust. From an order quashing the indictment, the State appeals. Reversed and remanded.

Wade Hampton Cobb, Sol., for the State. R. H. Welch, for respondent.

WOODS J.

The circuit court made an order quashing the indictment against the defendant for breach of trust, on the ground that the allegation as to the ownership of the money alleged to have been held in trust and fraudulently converted by the defendant was fatally defective, in that the money was described as "the proper goods and chattels" of the owner. The solicitor then made a motion to amend by striking out the words "proper goods and chattels" and inserting instead the word "property." This motion was refused. The state appeals, alleging error in the quashing of the indictment and the refusal to allow the amendment.

Speaking with verbal accuracy, money is not goods and chattels; but verbal accuracy is not necessary in an indictment. There could not be any doubt that the indictment clearly informed the defendant of the charge he was to meet and that was sufficient under section 56 of the Criminal Code of 1902, which provides that an indictment shall be sufficient which charges the crime so plainly that the nature of the offense charged may be easily understood. Indeed, if the words "of the proper goods and chattels" of the said James A. Cathcart" were stricken out, the indictment would charge that the defendant had committed a fraudulent breach of trust by converting "$63.35 of James A. Cathcart." Such an allegation of ownership would be quite sufficient, for the meaning would be perfectly plain to the defendant. The objection to the indictment would no doubt have been held too technical, even before the criminal practice was modified by the statute above cited.

Counsel for defendant relied on the case of the State v Shirer, 20 S.C. 392, decided before the enactment of the section above referred to. But that case holds that it is only necessary to state substantially the facts constituting the offense. The money was not described as goods and chattels in the indictment there under consideration, and the remarks of the court on the point here under consideration were nothing more than obiter dicta.

The...

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