Felsman v. State

187 N.E. 201 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1933

Max Felsman and Henry Burke were indicted on a charge of having on November 30, 1931, committed arson by maliciously burning the shop of the Beth Realty Company. On the separate trial of Felsman, a conviction was had. This proceeding seeks to set aside the verdict and judgment.

The case was not a strong one, but we would not disturb it as being opposed to the weight of the evidence.

The court erred in charging that the defendant was on trial under the provisions of Section 12433, General Code, and in sentencing the defendant under that section. This error was most natural, as it was clearly induced by the form of the indictment, which used the term "arson," although it charged the defendant with burning a shop. Arson at common law was the unlawful burning of a habitation. Jones v. State, 70 Ohio St. 36, 70 N.E. 952, 1 Ann. Cas., 618. For a hundred years the arson statute of this state included all sorts of buildings; the penalty varying only with the value of the structure. In 1929 (113 Ohio Laws, 541), however, the Legislature overhauled all the statutes relating to incendiarism, leaving in Section 12433, as the subject-matter of arson, only the dwelling house and other buildings making up the curtilage, and increasing the penalty to a minimum of two years and *430 a maximum of twenty. It then provided against the burning of other buildings by a separate section, Section 12433-1, with a minimum penalty of one and a maximum of ten years. As the building involved in the instant case was not part of a curtilage, there was no possibility of arson in this case. It does not appear, however, that the defendant was in any way prejudiced by the court reading the wrong section of the statutes to the jury, as it was unnecessary to read either section. The sentence, however, as of arson was clearly erroneous. This would require us to set aside the sentence, but, if it were the only error, would not require setting aside the verdict.

The defendant stoutly insisted that no motive had been shown for the crime charged to him. It cannot be said that an absence of motive was shown, as might be the case if the defendant had never seen and never come in contact with those who may have hoped to benefit by the destruction of the building, and could not, therefore, have been hired to burn it. The most that can be said is that no motive was shown by direct evidence. Whatever motive, if any there was, had to be inferred from the relation of the defendant to the possible beneficiaries, and from other attendant circumstances. The presence or absence of a motive was for the jury.

With this situation the defendant sought an instruction upon motive. Of course he did not contend that the state had to prove motive in order to convict. He did insist, however, that he was entitled to have the jury instructed to the effect that, if there was no motive for the defendant to commit the crime, that circumstance should be considered in determining whether he did commit the crime. The instructions offered in this behalf were not happily drafted, and the defendant was entitled to neither of them in hæc verba. The defendant did, however, make clear the idea which he wanted charged, and this was sufficient *431 to impose upon the court the duty of charging upon that feature of the case. Boyle v. State, 6 C.C., 163, 3 C.D., 397.

That the presence or absence of motive is a circumstance that ought to weigh with the jury is sound sense. It is also sound law. A like question was before the Court of Appeals of Wood county in Neiswender v. State, 28 O.C.A., 545. In that case the opinion, written by one who now adorns the supreme bench, holds that, while the request to charge was not preferred at the proper time, it ought still to have been given, and that failure to give it constituted prejudicial error. If we were unwilling to follow this authority, we would be required to certify this case to the Supreme Court. We follow it, however, and find additional indirect but clear support therefor in Fabian v. State, 97 Ohio St. 184, 119 N.E. 410.

The instruction upon alibi has nothing to commend it. A like instruction, with its conceded error, has, however, been tolerated by the Supreme Court in Sabo v. State, 119 Ohio St. 231, 163 N.E. 28, and is therefore tolerated here.

The other assignments of error are not sustained.

For the reason that the sentence imposed is illegal, the sentence is set aside. For the further error, that the court refused to charge on motive, both the sentence and the verdict are set aside. The case is remanded for further proceedings according to law.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded.

BLOSSER and MIDDLETON, JJ., concur.

MAUCK, BLOSSER and MIDDLETON, JJ., of the Fourth Appellate District, sitting by designation in the Eighth Appellate District. *432

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