61 Fla. 35 | Fla. | 1911
The information charges that William McNair “did feloniously enter a certain building, to-wit: the dwelling house of one W. M. Toomer, there situate, with intent then and there to steal, take and carry away the goods and chattels’ of another of the value of less than twenty dollars.” The defendant was convicted as charged in the information and sentenced to be confined in the State prison for one year. From this judgment he seeks relief by writ of error.
Under the assignments, it is urged that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence and that defendant had no criminal intent in entering the building.
Upon cross-examination Mrs. Budd testified “that nothing was broken to show how defendant entered; that the windows were closed; she saw no clothing there belonging to defendant; that she made a noise raising and lowering the windows; that defendant had plenty of time to get away if he wanted to go; that it was two o’clock when she heard the door being shaken and that it was four thirty when the officer came; that when arrested defendant appeared to have been drinking but was not drunk; that nothing was removed or disturbed in the room; that the only noise she heard was when some one shook the door.”
Officer Tyler testified that “he saw no place broken where the defendant might have entered the house; there was no window broken that I saw; the defendant did not have his hat, shoes or coat; I saw none of his clothing about the premises; there was a lounge in the room, but I don’t know whether he was sleeping on it; he was not armed; he was not drunk, but appeared to have been drinking.”
The defendant testified as follows: “My name is W. B.'
“No cross-examination.”
Section 3287 of the General Statutes is as follows:
“In a trial on the charge of breaking and entering, or entering without breaking, a dwelling house with intent to commit a misdemeanor, or with intent to commit a felony, proof of the entering of such dwelling house in the night time stealthily, without consent of the owner or any occupant thereof, shall be prima facie evidence of entering with intent to commit a misdemeanor in the absence of proof of intent to commit any specific crime.” The
There was a plea of not guilty and the presumption of innocence of the defendant followed him until his guilt was proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Vickery v. State, 50 Fla., 144, 38 South. Rep., 907; Reeves v. State, 29 Fla., 527, 10 South. Rep., 901. In a criminal case the establishment of a prima facie case does not take away from the defendant the presumption of innocence, but leaves that presumption to operate in connection with, or in aid of, any proofs offered by him, or arising out of the evidence to rebut or impair the prima facie case made, out by the State. A circumstance aided by that presumption may so far rebut or impair the prima facie case, as to render a conviction upon it improper. Allen v. United States, 164 U. S., 492, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep., 154; Ogletree v. State, 28 Ala., 693. Although by statute certain facts are made presumptive evidence against the defendant in' a criminal case, if he denies them and adduces evidence in rebuttal, the jury must be satisfied of his guilt’beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Rogers, 119 N. C., 793, 26 S. E. Rep., 142.
Conceding the State made out a prima facie case under the statute, we think the evidence in this case, aided by the presumption of defendant’s innocence, so far rebutted or impaired the prima facie case as to render a conviction upon it improper.
The defendant was not charged merely with the unlawful entry of a dwelling house. To constitute the crime charged, the entry of the dwelling house with the intent to commit petit larceny, the defendant must have had an intent to commit the misdemeanor in the house. This intent is the gist of this offence, and it is not necessarily implied from the simple fact of entering the house.' Jenkins v. State, 58 Fla., 62, 50 South. Rep., 582. The question as to whether the defendant had the criminal intent is a
It was not essential to tbe innocence of the defendant to show that he was drunk when the officer.found him in the house at half past four in the morning. The defendant may have been drunk at two o’clock when he entered and slept the drunk off by four thirty when discovered. All the evidence on the part of the State and the defendant shows that he appeared to have been drinking when he was found in the house. The defendant testified without contradiction that he had been drinking heavily for several weeks, and on the day before he got into Mr. Toomer’s house he had been placed in the city jail by the police for being drunk, and had been released. This could have been contradicted if it were untrue; and the police officer admitted that the defendant had been put in jail. He testified that after he went to the train to return to his home he got another drink and kept on drinking that morning and does not remember where he went, and was drunk at the time he went into Mr. Toomer’s house. This statement finds strong corroboration in the fact testified to by the witnesses for the prosecution that he was found in the house without hat, shoes or coat, and none of his clothing was found on the premises, although he had bought a new suit of clothes, a hat and a pair of shoes the day before he entered Mr. Toomer’s house. It is not likely that he would have removed his coat and hat to aid him in getting into the house without discovery. He did not enter by a window — all the windows were closed. He evidently went into the house through the front door, as he would have done, if, in a drunken stupor, he went into the wrong house to find a place to lie down. The door was not broken. It opened when he shook it. It must have been left unlocked. There was no evidence that it was locked. It may have been left unlocked for Mr. Toomer’s return, as the evi
It may be that the person who took away defendant’s hat, shoes and coat, conducted him to the house and opened the door, assisted him to the sofa and removed these articles. When the writer was prosecuting attorney for the Criminal Court of Escambia County, he prosecuted a man who found a drunken sailor upon the street, accompanied him to the lot back of the house, opened a gate that he told the victim was the door of a house, and laid him down upon the ground that the man said was a bed, and removed his shoes and handkerchief that were later traced to the possession of the defendant. The victim had no coat on. The defendant was convicted.
No attack was made on the information, but it does not charge, in the language of the statute, that the entry was without breaking.
The judgment is reversed.