162 P. 395 | Cal. | 1917
This defendant and his wife were jointly charged by information with the crime of arson, in the willful, malicious, and felonious setting fire to and burning with intent to destroy a certain building, the property of another, occupied by them as tenants as a dwelling-house. In a second count of the same information they were charged with burning and destroying the same property with intent to defraud an insurer thereof. Separate trials were demanded and the trial of this defendant was had before his codefendant was put on trial. It does not appear that she has ever been tried. A verdict of not guilty was rendered as to the matters charged in the second count. As to the charge *173 of arson, the jury found the defendant guilty of arson in the first degree. Judgment of imprisonment in the state prison was thereupon pronounced. We have here an appeal from this judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.
The appeal in this case was taken, as the constitution requires, to the district court of appeal of the second appellate district, and that court affirmed the judgment and order appealed from. A hearing in this court was ordered principally because we were not satisfied as to the correctness of the disposition by the learned district court of appeal of the claim that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict finding this defendant guilty of arson in the first degree. Further consideration of that question has satisfied us that the evidence furnishes no support for any such verdict.
By our statute arson, which is the willful and malicious burning of a building, with intent to destroy it (Pen. Code, sec. 447), is divided into two degrees. Arson of the first degree, the more heinous offense, is defined as being the malicious burning "in the night-time an inhabited buildingin which there is at the time some human being." (Pen. Code, sec.
For the purposes of further proceedings in the event that they are concluded to be advisable, we deem it proper to notice one or two other matters.
The contention as to two different offenses being improperly charged in the information is no longer of any practical importance in view of the fact that defendant has been acquitted as to the matters embraced in the second count, and that subject matter is no longer in the case.
We find no substantial merit in the other objections raised by motion to set aside the information and by the demurrer *175 to the information. As to the particular objection founded on a claim that a tenant cannot be guilty of arson, under our statutes, as to a building owned by another, and occupied solely by himself, we concur in the views expressed by the learned district court of appeal, and adopt the same as a part of this opinion. They are as follows:
"Although the information stated that the defendants occupied the building and were tenants therein, the further fact was alleged that the building was the property of Smith. 'To constitute arson it is not necessary that a person other than the accused should have had ownership in the building set on fire. It is sufficient that at the time of the burning another person was rightfully in possession of, or was actually occupying such building, or any part thereof.' (Pen. Code, sec. 452.) The foregoing section clearly implies that ownership of the building by a person other than the defendant is sufficient, although it is declared to be not necessary. InPeople v. Handley,
Certain questions raised as to instructions to the jury are of such a nature that they will probably not arise on another trial, and need not here be discussed.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
Shaw, J., Sloss, J., Melvin, J., Lorigan, J., Henshaw, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred. *176