The basis of one of the defendant’s exceptive assignments of error is the following extract from the court’s charge: “The burden is on the State to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt that this defendant is guilty of agreeing together with Griffin or Murphy, or both of them, or others to do an unlawful thing, to wit, kill W. W. Dick, before this defendant would be guilty of violating the law.”
In view of the fact that the indictment charges nominatim the alleged conspirators and is not cum multis aliis, we are constrained to hold that his Honor erred in charging the jury in effect that if they should find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant conspired with Robert H. Murphy and Howard Griffin, or both of them, or others, to kill W. W. Dick, he would be guilty. The bill of indictment nowhere contains the words “others” or “another,” or any other word or phrase indicating a charge against the defendant of conspiring with any other person or persons than Murphy and Griffin. The charge of his Honor virtually puts the defendant upon trial for an additional offense to that named in the bill, namely, conspiring with others than Murphy and Griffin. Upon the principle that “in all criminal prosecutions every man has the right to be informed of the accusation against him” (N. C. Const., Art. I, sec. 11), it oftentimes becomes necessary to set out the names of third parties, or at least indicate that there are such third parties, when *610sucb parties are necessary for the consummation of the offense, or constitute a necessary part of the description of the offense. 14 R. C. L., 183.
We have examined the charge with the view of ascertaining whether, when considered contextually as a whole and not disconnectedly, the portion assailed by the defendant’s exception is explained and cured, and have reached a contrary conclusion. For instance, in declaring and explaining the law his Honor used the following language: “Now, if you find beyond a reasonable doubt, gentlemen, that there was an agreement by this defendant and Griffin or Murphy, or both of them, that he was to pay him to kill Dick, then that would be unlawful, that would be a violation of the criminal law, because if he and anyone else, or any number of others, entered into an unlawful agreement to kill Dick, or to kill anybody else, that is, they agreed to do it, then they would be violating the law at that time, and it would make no difference whether they carried that plan out or not”; and, in setting forth the contentions of the defendant, told the jury: “The State contends from this testimony that you should be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that this defendant is guilty of conspiring together with Murphy, Griffin, and others to kill W. W. Dick.” It would therefore appear that the portion assailed was in accord with the theory of the charge as a whole, and leads us to believe that his Honor was not advertent to the fact that the bill of indictment was limited to the defendant and Murphy and Griffin.
It is argued in the brief that this error of his Honor is harmless in that there was no evidence of any conspiracy with anyone other than Murphy and Griffin. This argument might aváil if we could agree that there is no evidence upon which the jury might have found that the defendant conspired with others than Murphy and Griffin. An affidavit by the witness Robert II. Murphy contains the following: “Mickey told Howard Griffin if he did not do it he would have to get somebody else.” An affidavit by Howard Griffin contains the following: “Mr. Mickey told me that he had given another man $20.00 to buy a gun to do this job, but that he had backed out,” and again: “Mr. Mickey told me that if I did not hurry up and do the job that he was going to have to get somebody else, as the man who' held the policy was pushing him for action.” These affidavits, admitted in evidence over the objection of the defendant, tend to show a conspiracy, or at least a prospective conspiracy, between the defendant and some other ¡verson than Murphy and Griffin to kill W. ~W. Dick. They also tend to show that a conspiracy to kill W. W. Dick had existed between the defendant and “another man” to whom he had given “$20.00 to buy a pistol to do this job.” They also further tend to show that a conspiracy tO' kill W. W. Dick existed between the defendant and “the man who held the policy.”
*611In tbe light of this evidence, we tbink it was prejudicial to the defendant for the judge to have charged - the jury in effect that they could convict him of conspiring with “others” when the bill of indictment charged the alleged conspirators by name and contained no words indicating others. This holding is in accord with S. v. Diggs, 181 N. C., 550.
There are other interesting questions raised in the record, but since the ease goes back for a new trial we can see no good reason for commenting further upon them.
New trial.