40 Ala. 659 | Ala. | 1867
This indictment is founded on section 152 of the Penal Code, so much of which as is necessary for the decision of the questions raised by the charge given and the charges refused by the court, reads as follows: “Any person who willfully sets fire to, or burns, any church,
It appears from the record that E. T. Sears testified that, in March, 1867, he had near his dwelling-house, about twelve or fifteen feet therefrom, a building constructed as follows : Four posts set in the ground, with a roof over the same made of rough-edge and inch planks; one side of which was closed in by plank nailed to the posts, and the other side was closed in by a rail fence ; and one end was inclosed by the paling around the yard, and the other end, which was next to the dwelling-house, was left open. Said Sears further testified, “ that he had four bales of cotton stored therein; that said building, with the cotton therein, toas worth more than five hundred dollars; that said bales were lying on their sides on some timbers; that in March, 1867, between eight and nine o’clock at night, one of the bales was discovered to be on fire; that it was extinguished after burning a small hole in the end of the bale, and before it communicated to any part of the building. The evidence tended to show that the defendant set it on fire, and that it was the property of E. T. Sears.”
The bill of exceptions does not purport to set out all the evidence introduced on the trial; but we will proceed to consider the charges refused by the court with reference to the evidence set out. For, upon that alone, if the jury believed it, they would have been authorized under the charges, if they had been given, to find the defendant not guilty as charged in the indictment.
The legal questions arising on this indictment and the evidence will be fully presented by reading so much of the above recited section of the Penal Code, as follows : “ Any person who willfully sets fire to, or burns, any cotton-house, which, with the property therein contained, is of the value
In our opinion, the statute levels its denunciation at the act of setting fire to or burning the buildings named, and not at the contents thereof. The latter, though mentioned in the statute, only affect the degree of the offense of arson, whenever their value, and the value of the building, amount to five hundred dollars or more. If, therefore, a house described in the statute, which is not worth five hundred dollars, but with the contents is worth that sum, is burnt, and the contents are all saved; yet the defendant would be guilty of arson in the second degree, if all the other constituents of the offense existed. On the other hand, if the goods were all burned, whether of the value of five hundred dollars or not, and the house was not burned within the meaning attached to this word by the common law, the defendant would not be guilty. It is true it may be difficult for such a thing to take place, but it is not beyond the range of probability. It is the house or building, not the goods within it, which is the subject of the vindicatory provision of the statute.
This view is enforced by the consideration, that the statute declares that the offender under it “ is guilty of arson in the second degree.” The word arson has a clear and well-defined meaning at common law, which lies at the basis of our civil and criminal jurisprudence; and it is to be presumed that the legislature employed the word in its legal signification. Mr. Bishop says, “Arson is an offense against the security of the habitation, rather than the property.”- — -Yol. 2, § 39 (24).
The question, and the main one in this cause, is, whether the setting fire to the cotton within the building is a setting fire to the building within the meaning of the statute. There can be no doubt, that, if the building had been set on fire
Under an indictment against a person for arson at common law, it was sufficient to prove that any part of the house was burnt; and if the other constituents of the offense were proved, the offender could be convicted. The burning of any part, however small, completes the offense, the same as of the whole. If the portion of the house which is combustible is blackened by fire, but its fibres or texture is not wasted or destroyed by the fire, the offense is not complete. — 4 Black. Com. 222; Amer. Crim. Law, p. 710, §§ 1659-62; 2 Russell on Crimes, 548; Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence, 270; 1 Bishop’s Criminal Law, § 325 (188),
It has been held, that the words “set fire to” are substantially synonymous with the word “ burn ”, when used with reference to a house. Ordinarily, and in common acceptation, the phrase “ set fire to” would be understood to convey a different meaning from the word “burn”, when applied to a house, or anything else. A person might, in one sense, set fire to a house, or a powder magazine, without burning either; for a blaze would set one on fire and burn it, whilst it might not affect the other, although in contact.
Again, it may be argued with some force, that the legislature intended to convey a different idea by using the terms in the connection in which they are placed in the statute — “sets fire to, or burns” — for, if they are synonymical, why were both used ? that the word “ or ” implies dis
Mr. Bishop says, (1 Crim. Law, § 326, (189,) that the words “set fire to ” have not been minutely difined, but they mean substantially the same as burn. “There need not be a flame visible, yet there must be some consumption of the wood.” He seems to think that the case of The State v. Dennin (32 Vermont, 158) holds a different doctrine. I hardly think so. The statute in that case uses the words “set fire, with intent to burn which seems to me to indicate, that the legislature intended to punish the offender, not for burning the house, but for setting fire with intent to burn. He might set fire, not “to” the house, but to some thing else, with intent to burn a particular house, and could be found guilty under the statute of Yermont. And in that case, the court, admitting the English doctrine on this question, distinguish that case from the English cases, by the difference in the language, and laying stress on the words “with intent to burn.” However this may be, the English doctrine upon statutes similar to section 152 of our Penal Code, sustains the extract taken from 1 Bishop’s Criminal Law, supra.
The statute of 9th Geo. I, c. 22, otherwise known as the “ Waltham Black Act,” uses the words “set fire to any house, barn, or out-house,” &c.; which was extended by statute 9th Geo. III, c. 29, to the “malicious and willful burning or
The case of Sarah Taylor, (1 Leach, 58,) was decided in 1759, by Baron Legge, who, having doubts, submitted two questions to the consideration of the judges. It appears that the defendant was indicted for maliciously setting fire to a certain outhouse, commonly called a paper-mill. The evidence showed that the defendant had set fire to a large quantity of paper, which was drying in a loft annexed and belonging to the mill, and that no part of the mill was consumed. One of the questions submitted was, whether setting fire to paper in a drying-loft belonging to a mill, can be considered as setting fire to the mill ? The indictment was founded on the “Black Act”; and in answer to the question, the judges of the court of king’s bench all agreed, that the prisoner not having set fire to any part of the mill, and no part of the mill having been consumed, the defendant’s case was not within the statute upon which she was indicted. The other question submitted was, whether a mill could be considered an out-house within the meaning of the 9th Geo. I, c. 22; but the court gave no opinion upon this question, which probably -was the cause of the enactment of the 9th Geo. Ill, c. 29.
In Breeme’s case, (1 Leach, C. C. 261,) the words used in the indictment were, “did set on fire, and burn”; and the court held, that the statute of Geo. I, c. 22, “did not vary the nature of the offense as it stood at common law.”
In Stallion’s case, (1 Moody, 398,) the defendant was indicted for “ setting fire to an out-house”; and another count charged him with “setting fire to a coach-house”; and another charged him with setting fire to a building and erection used in carrying on the trade of poulterer. The evidence showed that “the building was formed by six upright posts, nearly seven feet apart, three in the front,
In the case of Regina v. Parker, (9 Car. & Payne, 45,) the defendant “was indicted for setting fire to the house of Edward Stammers. ” The evidence showed, “ that the floor near the hearth had been scorched, and it was charred in a trifling way; it had been at a red heat, but not in a blaze.” The witness, in answer to further questions, said, “that he had not examined the floor to see how deeply the charring went in; neither could he at all form a judgment as to how long it been done.” On this evidence, Bosanquet, J., said to the jury, “ we think this evidence is much too slight, and that you ought to require better proof that the house was on fire at the time in question.”
In the case of Maria Russel, (Car. & Mars. 541,) the prisoner was indicted for “ maliciously setting fire to the house of Ann Wright.” The evidence was, in substance, that a small faggot was found lighted and burning on the boarded floor of the kitchen, about four feet from the hearth-stone. A part of the boards of the floor was scorched black, but not burnt. The faggot was nearly consumed, but no part of the wood of the floor was consumed. On this evidence, Cresswell, J., said, “ I have conferred with my brother Patteson, and he concurs with me in thinking, that as the wood of the floor was scorched, but no part of it consumed, the present indictment cannot be supported.” And he further said, that it was not essential that the wood should be in a blaze.
It is unnecessary for us to notice thus particularly any further English cases bearing on the questions under discussion ; and we will pass to a brief notice of a few American cases, after citing the following authors, who sustain and refer to the decisions above referred to, and others in approval of the same doctrine : 2 East’s Criminal Law, 1020; 1 Hawk. P. C. p. 296, § 16; 1 Hale’s P. C. 568, note 4; 2 Russell’s Crim. Law, 555; Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence, 270-4; 3 Archb. Cr. Pl. 493; Wharton’s Amer. Cr. Law, 1658, et seq.
In The Commonwealth v. Francis, (Thach. Cr. Cases, 240,) a boat was set fire to within a shop or building; but the fire
In the case of Van Schaak, (16 Mass. 105,) the words of the statute upon which the indictment was framed, were “ willfully and maliciously set fire to the dwelling-house of another, or ” &c. The evidence showed, that á board, a part of the exterior covering, was burnt. The court say, “The statute has left the burning to be defined by the common law; and by that, if any part of the dwelling-house, however small, be consumed, the offense is complete; and so it is with the statute.” This case is only cited to show that the court, in effect, held that the proof necessary to sustain a conviction at common law, is necessary to sustain one under the statute. Such, we admit, is not the only construction to be given the decision.
The case of The State v. Tennery, (19 Ill. 436,) is a decision bearing indirectly on the question; and the case of The State v. Dennin, (supra,) bears more directly on it. In Taylor’s case, (45 N. H. 322,) the court say, “The words ‘ set fire to ’, and ‘ burn ’, are generally understood as equivalent; and it is evidently used synonymously in our statutes.”
The only case I have found adverse to the above authorities, is the case of Howell v. Commonwealth, (5 Grat. 664.) The learned judge (Lomax) makes an argument in that case, to show that the words “ set fire to ”, and “ burn ”, are not synonyms; and criticizes Mr. East’s remark, that “ he was not aware of any decision which had put a larger construction on those words (set fire to) than prevails by the rules of the common law; and the contrary opinion may be collected from what is said in Spalding’s case, and Breeme’s case, and in the case of Sarah Taylor ”, (2 East’s C. L. 1020,) by saying, that “upon an attentive inspection of the authorities which he has referred to, it will be dis
Upon the foregoing authorities, we come to the conclusion, that the words “set fire to,” used in our statute, are equivalent to the word “burn” as defined by the common law; and when they refer to a house, that they mean that some portion of the same, however small, must be consumed, or destroyed by fire, in order to complete the offense of arson under section 152 of the Penal Code; and, therefore, the court should have given the first two charges asked by the prisoner.
Although the defendant cannot be found guilty as charged in the indictment, if the facts on another trial should be the same as shown in the record; yet, under section 647 of the Penal Code, he may be found guilty of an attempt to commit arson, if the house is a cotton-house, or an outhouse, within the meaning of that term by the common law; and be punished as provided by section 207 of that Code. — Henry v. The State, 33 Ala. 400, which is re-affirmed in The State v. Lee & Norton, 38 Ala. 217.
We yield any opinion we may have entertained of the interpretation of the words used in the statute, to the weight and wisdom of the enlightened judicial exposition given to them, and acquiesced in for more than a century.
This opinion disposes of all the material questions which are likely to arise on another trial; and it but Remains for the court to say, that the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, and that the prisoner remain in the custody of the sheriff until discharged by due course of law. Let a judgment-entry be made accordingly.