after stating the case: In the present state of the case we are not permitted to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the crime of perjury. Our inquiry must necessarily be confined to the allegations of the bill. It cannot be that an indictment is defective and should be quashed merely because the State has failed, if it has done so, to make out its case. The evidence is not of that character which can be considered upon a motion to quash or a plea in. abatement. Sometimes, and not infrequently, extrinsic evi-*642denee is beard for tbe purpose of passing upon the validity of an indictment upon a motion to quash, as, for example, where there has been some irregularity in drawing the grand jury, or where the indictment was returned as “a true bill,” when, in fact, the grand jury had ordered it to be endorsed “not a true bill.” State v. Horton, 63 N. C., 595. If the court had “tried out” the case, we might consider the question raised by the defendant as to the materiality of the evidence given by Cline before the magistrate, but, having ordered a mistrial, the question is not now before us. We must look to the bill, and, if that is sufficient in form to charge the crime of perjury, there was error in quashing it. The Legislature has not only declared what shall constitute a sufficient averment of perjury in an indictment, but has actually prescribed the form of the bill. Revisal, secs. 3246 and 3247. We have held, in State v. Harris, 145 N. C., 456, that it had the constitutional power to enact the law. The indictment in this case is drawn in accordance with the terms of the statute and the prescribed form, and also is, a,t least in substance, like the one approved by us in State v. Harris, supra. We do not mean to say that it is not necessary that the alleged false testimony be material, for the materiality of the false oath is considered to be one of the essential elements of the crime of perjury. 4 Blk., 137; State v. Gates, infra. But this bill avers that the defendant committed perjury, and this involves, necessarily, the charge that the false testimony was material to the issue in the suit before the justice, even though it is alleged in this very general way, as the statute permits that to be done. The following cases would seem to be directly in point: State v. Gates, 107 N. C., 832; State v. Peters, 107 N. C., 876 ; State v. Flowers, 109 N. C., 841; State v. Thompson, 113 N. C., 638. The statute has merely simplified the form of the indictment for perjury, and the constituent elements of the offense remain unchanged and require the same proof to establish the commission of the crime. State v. *643 Peters, supra. It may appear, when the evidence is before us, that tbe alleged false statement was not material to tlie inquiry, but we axe not at liberty to decide that question now. The quashing of indictments is not favored." It releases recognizances and may set the defendant at large, when, it may be, he ought to be held to answer upon a better indictment; hence it is a general rule that no indictment which charges one of the higher offenses, as treason or felony, or’one of those crimes which immediately affect the public at large, as perjury, forgery, and the like, should be thus summarily dealt with, except in a clear case and with proper caution. State v. Colbert, 75 N. C., 368.
T^.e court erred in quashing the bill. .
Error.