43 Fla. 151 | Fla. | 1901
The plaintiff in Error, Wesley Hearn, was tried and convicted in September, 1900, in. the Criminal Court of Record for Duval county of the crime of being accessory after the fact of the felony of wilfully and maliciously burning a building of his own property, and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary and to- the payment of a money fine, and from such judgment takes writ of error.
The third count, upon which he was convicted, is as follows: “And your informant aforesaid, upon his oath aforesaid, further information makes that the said Wes' ley Hearn of the county and State aforesaid in the county and State aforesaid, on the 17th day of May in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred, did then and there, the said Wesley Hearn not standing in the relation of husband or wife, parent or grand-parent, child or grand-child, brother or sister, by consanguinity or affinity to the said Henry Hicks, and with the intent that the said Henry Hicks should escape trial.and punishment, did then and there maintain and assist the said Henry Hicks by then and there sending him, the said Henry Hicks, money and whiskey and advising him, the said Henry Hicks, to keep his mouth shut, he the said Wesley Hearn then and there knowing that the said Henry Hicks had theretofore, on, to-wit: the -9th day of May in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred, committed a felony, to-wit: had wilfully and maliciously set fire to and burned a certain building, to' wit: a house the property of the said Wesley Hearn,
The first error assigned is that the court erred in denying the defendant’s motion to quash the third count in the information: This motion is evidenced to us only in and by the bill of exceptions, and does not appear in the record proper of the transcript certified here. As motions to quash indictments are based wholly upon matters of record, and are addressed directly to the • court, demanding- a decision directly upon the matter of record presénted, so that the motion itself, the matter it presents and the ruling of the court thereon all appear of record, such motions and the rulings thereon form part of the record proper, in the cause, and have no> place in a bill'of exceptions, and when evidenced to- an appellate court only-by a bill of exceptions such court can not consider them. Brown v. State, 42 Fla. 184, 27 South. Rep. 869; Raines v. State, 42 Fla. 141, 28 South. Rep. 57. The first assignment can not, therefore, be considered.
From the conclusion we have reached on the evidence in the cause it becomes unnecessary to discuss any other of the assignments of error than the one predicated upon the denial of the, defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground thereof that the testimony does not support the verdict, and that under the evidence no crime, was committed under the- third count of the information. The third count of the information, upon which the conviction was had, is predicated upon section 2356 of the Revised Statutes that reads as follows: “Whoever, not standing in the relation of husband or wife, parent or grand-parent, child or grand-child, brother or sister, by
“May 17th, 1900.
Mr. Henry Hicks, City.
Dear Sir:
Your note received. Reply will say I am sorry to know that things happen as it did. I am sure you had nothing to do with it, but whatever you do dont gave me and brass away, as it would cause me to* luse my in' suranc. If you will keep your mouth shut you will come out all O. K. I will send you the, whiskey to make the medicine with, no mattter what they promises dont you*155 gave them brass’s name or say anything you heard us talking about.
Your friend
Wes. Hearns.
Be sure and burn this up and dont right no more;.”
And besides this note the defendant sent word to Hicks to “keep his mouth shut.”
Under the above quoted'Statute, where aid or assistance is given to- a felon the gist of the offence inhibited thereby lies in the intent with which, such aid or assistance is given; such intent must be that the felon shall avoid or escape either (1) detection, (2) arrest, (3) trial, or (4) punishment. The particular intent charged in the information is “that the said Henry Hicks should escape trial and punishment.” The only proof of such intent as charged is the bare fact that the defendant sent to the man Hicks, while securely confined in jail charged with a felony, a bottle of whiskey, for the expressed purpose of concocting some medicine with, several small amounts of money at different times aggregating not exceeding $7.00, and writes to him and sends him word to “beep his mouth shut.” How, from this proof, it can be gathered that this assistance was rendered to Hicks by Hearn with the intent by the latter that the, former should escape trial or punishment for the crime with which he was charged, it is impossible to discover. There is nothing in the mere fact of sending insignificant amounts of money and a bottle of whiskey to a prisoner in jail charged with crimé with the advice or injunction that he shall keep his mouth shut, that tends to establish the fact that it was done, with the intent that such prisoner should escape trial and punishment. Had the articles sent to the prisoner been a file, a saw, a bottle of iron destroying
The judgment of the court below is reversed and a new trial awarded.