
    The King v. John Lukens.
    
      Criminal practise.
    
    The act of 1705, requiring the prosecutor’s name to be indorsed on an indictment, applies only where there is an actual prosecutor; and proof of the person prosecuting cannot be made by the defendant.
    Indictment for a nuisance. Mr. Dickenson, for the defendant, moved that a prosecutor should be indorsed on the indictment, agreeable to the act of assembly,  before the defendant should be put to plead.
    Mr. Chew, attorney-general, urged that such a construction ought to be put on the act, as that public justice may not be eluded; and that there should be no necessity to indorse a prosecutor, unless it be proved that there is some person active in carrying on a prosecution; because, if it took its rise from the grand jury, or a justice of the peace, no person could be indorsed ; and offenders of the highest nature would escape being brought to justice.
    
      
       4 Ann. c. 37; 1 Sm. Laws, 56
    
   By the Court.

It often happens that all the witnesses necessary to support a public prosecution, are brought unwillingly to give evidence ; and the act could never intend there should be a prosecutor ^indorsed, J unless there was really a prosecutor existing, for the words in the act are, the prosecutor. And as no person in the present ease is. proved to ’be active in carrying on the prosecution, the defendant must plead to the indictment, without any indorsement.

It was then moved, that the defendant himself might be sworn to prove the person prosecuting; but denied by the Court, who said, it must be proved by indifferent witnesses, 
      
      
         There are many cases, however, in which a party to a suit has been admitted to prove facts not immediately connected with the issue. Thus, the service of notice to produce papers, may be proved by a party. (Jordan v. Cooper, 3 S. & R. 675.) So, the loss of a bill of exchange may be proved by the plaintiff, in an action against the acceptor, its previous existence having been proved. (Meeker v. Jackson, 3 Yeates 442.) So of a lottery ticket. (Snyder v. Wolfley, 8 S. & R. 328.) So, in Dehaven v. Henderson, post, p. 424, a plaintiff was admitted to prove the loss of an order given to him by the adjutant-general, for the restoration of property seized by the defendant, to let in evidence of its contents. So, a plaintiff has been admitted to prove the death of a subscribing witness to a deed, in order to let in evidence of his handwriting. (Douglass v. Sanderson, 2 Dall. 116, s. c. 1 Yeates 15.) But he is not competent to prove the handwriting of a witness to a deed (Peters v. Condron, 2 S. & R. 80); nor to prove the handwriting of a person (since dead) by whom the entries in his book were made. (Karsper v. Smith, 1 Bro. app. liii.)
      And see Sneider v. Geiss, 1 Yeates 34; Miller v. McClenachan, Id. 144; Davis v. Houston, 2 Id. 289; Coxe v. Ewing, 4 Id. 429; Lodge v. Phipher, 11 S. & R. 333.
     