
    The State vs. Susannah Washington.
    
      Larceny — Misnomer—Amendment of Information — Ownership of stolen goods.
    
    Information for larceny in District Court, may, after plea in abatement for misnomer, be amended by substitution or addition of real name.
    Information for stealing a cow the property of A. Proof that the cow was running at large when stolen — that she was the property of A’s mother-in-law, an old woman nearly blind, of whose property and affairs A had the entire management and control., Yerdict guilty. Held, that the allegation of ownership was not sustained by the proof and new trial ordered.
    BEFORE THE DISTRICT JUDGE, GEORGETOWN, 1867.
    Information in tbe District Court for stealing. Defendant was prosecuted by tbe name of Susannah Sparkman and pleaded in abatement that her name was Susannah Washington. On motion of the Deputy Solicitor, the Court allowed the information to be amended by substituting or adding the real name.
    The information alleged the stolen article, a cow, or the beef of a cow, to have been the property of Benoni Palmer. The District Judge reported that “the evidence established that the heifer belonged to Mrs. Johnson, and was when killed with the cattle of Mr. Easterling within three miles of Mrs. Johnson’s house. Palmer lived with Mrs. Johnson, who was his mother-in-law, and had charge of all her affairs. She is an old woman, near seventy and nearly blind, and had requested Palmer to take charge of her affairs and deal with them as if they were his own.”
    The presiding Judge charged that the allegation of ownership was sustained by the proof. Verdict guilty.
    
      The defendant appealed on the grounds:
    1. Because the amendment should not have been allowed.
    2. Because the allegation that Palmer was the owner was not sustained by the proof.
    
      Wilson and Dozier, for the motion.
   The opinion of the Court was delivered by

iNGLis, A. J.

In conformity with the direction in the 12th section of the Act of September, 1866, (13 Stat. 389,) amending the District Court Act, certain rules for the transaction of business and the conduct of causes in the District Courts were made by the Judges of this Court on the 4th October, 1866. One of these rules prescribes that “if a plea of misnomer is put in and sustained, the necessary amendment shall be made immediately and the trial shall proceed.” (Bules D. C. 65.) In its terms this rule may be considered as applicable only in civil actions. (Bules D. C. p. 4.) . It was not necessary that it should expressly embrace criminal proceedings, but it may well be a guide to the exercise of that distinction which is by the Act itself (sec. 7) vested in the District Judge to examine and supervise all prosecutions. The functions which pertain to the Grand Jury in the Court of Sessions are exercised, so far as at all applicable, by the Judge of this inferior Court, and his allowance of an amendment by the substitution or addition of the real name, when ascertained upon proof or admission of the truth of the plea in abatement, accomplishes the same ends which the giving out and finding of a new indictment, conforming to the truth so ascertained, by the Grand Jury in the Superior Court would effect. The exercise of his functions in this regard is not limited to any particular part of the term or stage of the proceedings. The course pursued by the District Judge in the present case is not liable to just exception, and the appeal in so far as it questions the correctness thereof is dismissed.

In larceny and other kindred offences against the right of private property, the ownership of the article, the wrongful interference with which is the subject of the charge, is uniformly one of the elements in the description of the offence which advertises the defendant of the accusation he is to meet. When introduced at all it must be truly laid, and be shown by the proof to be so. The stolen heifer, of which the beef received by the defendant was part, is charged in the indictment.to. have been the property of one Benoni Palmer. Upon the proof made it was beyond question, the property in .fact of Mrs. Johnson. Palmer, the son-in-law of Mrs. Johnson, lived with her and had the oversight and charge of her property, and probably, as much control as.one-ever<-has, under such circumstances, over the acknowledged property of another. He had no separate possession,.for anytime however short, so far as appears, of any part of it, and no such special property as could make a description of it as his property true in law for the purposes of a criminal accusation: The particular heifer stolen was. at the time of the theft running at large with the cattle of the neighbors in the range.

The evidence of ownership does not support the allegation of the indictment, and the verdict affirms in this behalf what the proof clearly denies.

A new trial is granted.

Dunxin, 0. J., and Wardlaw, A.. J., concurred.

Motion granted.  