15 Wend. 327 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
By the Court,
By the revised statutes it is enacted that Every person who shall wilfully burn any building, ship or vessel, or any goods, wares, merchandize, or other chattel, which shall be at at the time insured against
It was said, on the argument, that it should have- been set forth in the declaration, as inducement to the alleged charge, that the plaintiff’s barn had been insured, in order to support the innuendoes. If such averment should be held material, it must have been proved on the trial; and the consequence would be, that no person charged with the crime, even in the very language of the statute, could vindicate his character or obtain redress for the injury, unless the building which he was charged to have burnt was in fact insured. The law cannot be so defective. The question is not whether the plaintiff was in a situation, in respect to his own property, in which he could have committed the crime imputed ; that is no part of his case. If it was possible for him to have been guilty, as charged, it is sufficient. The crime is then as fully conveyed to the mind of the hearer, as if he had been charged directly and in terms with the offence of arson. Here the words, of themselves, so clearly express the crime, that it was not necessary to put upon the record any other fact to help out the innuendoes. They are well warranted without any such means of explanation. In the case of Pelton v. Ward, 3 Canies, 73, the words were, c‘ You swore to a lie, and you
The third count, however, is clearly defective, and for that reason the judgment must be arrested. No certificate was produced showing that the testimony applied to the first and second as well as to the third count. 12 Wendell, 135.
Judgment arrested.