110 P. 458 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1910
The information under which the defendant was prosecuted and convicted charges him with the crime of maliciously attempting to burn "certain stacks of hay, of the value of $25 and over, the property of one W. A. Rucker," etc.
The crime which the defendant is thus charged with having attempted to commit is defined by section
"Every person who willfully and maliciously burns . . . any stack of hay or grain or straw of any kind, or any pile of baled hay or straw, . . . of the value of $25 or over, not the property of such person, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than one year, nor more than ten years."
The appeal is from the judgment and the order denying defendant's motion for a new trial, and the principal contention made by the appellant here is that the evidence does not sustain or correspond with the allegations of the information.
From the evidence it appears that one W. A. Rucker had under lease in the year 1909 a small tract of land in the city of Merced and on which, in the month of May of that year, he cut and raked into "cocks" about thirty tons of hay. These "cocks" were scattered about over the land and were situated a very few feet from each other.
The evidence shows that, between the hours of 8 and 9 o'clock on the evening of June 5, 1909, Rucker discovered a portion of the hay on fire; that he hastened to the field and extinguished the fire; that later on that same night another cock of hay was set on fire and that he again went to the field and, armed with shotgun, concealed himself behind a pile or cock of hay situated a distance of a few feet from the spot where the second fire occurred, his purpose being to discover, if possible, the person who evidently was trying to destroy all the hay in his field. A short time thereafter the defendant appeared in the field. He walked up to a cock of hay, stooped over it and at about this time Rucker, so he testified, "saw a lighted match or a blaze or something that he had, right between his body and the hay." Rucker then stepped up to the defendant, placed him under arrest and turned him over to the custody of the sheriff. *614
The defendant, it appears, resided with his sister, whose home and premises adjoined the land on which the fire occurred.
The proven circumstances were sufficient to justify the finding of the jury that the defendant set the fire to the hay with the purpose of destroying it. But the important question presented here is, as already stated in a little different language, Does the evidence disclose that the act of the defendant, although malicious, constituted an attempt to violate the provision of section
It is plainly evident that, in order to answer the foregoing question in the affirmative, it must be satisfactorily shown that the legislature intended to include and embrace within the meaning of the phrase, "any stack of hay," as said phrase is employed in the code section, the piles of loose hay ordinarily and commonly designated as "cocks" or "shocks" of hay.
There is, as is generally known, a marked and well-understood distinction between a "stack" and a "cock" or "shock" of hay. Customarily, shortly after hay is mowed or cut, it is raked into small piles or cocks, and is thus allowed to remain until it becomes thoroughly dry or "seasoned," after which it is generally picked up and put into larger piles called "stacks." Webster, in his dictionary, thus defines a "stack": "A large pile of hay, bran, straw and the like, usually of a nearly conical form, but sometimes rectangular or oblong, contracted at the top to a point or ridge and sometimes covered with a thatch." The same author defines a "cock" of hay to be "a small conical pile of hay."
It will thus be observed that there is a wide distinction between a "stack" of hay and a "cock" of hay — a distinction equally as marked and obvious as is the difference between certain buildings, as, for example, a hotel and a private residence, or as is the difference between animals of the same species, as, for illustration, a horse and a mule.
It may be laid down as a general rule that where any particular article of property is mentioned in a penal statute, as the subject of an offense, only such property as is usually designated by such term can be regarded as having been intended by the legislature to be embraced within its provisions. *615
In a very early case in Ohio (Denbow v. State etc., 18 Ohio, 11), the defendant was indicted and convicted under a statute making it penal "to set fire to, or burn, stacks of wheat." Nothing was said in said statute about "shocks" of wheat. Reversing the judgment of conviction, the supreme court of that state had this to say: "When things of the same kind have different names, arising from difference in size, number, age, situation, or any other circumstance, only such as are expressly mentioned by the terms generally appropriated to them can be held to have been contemplated by the legislature. The charge in this case was for burning stacks of wheat. The proof was the burning of shocks of wheat. Now, if the terms, shock of wheat, and stack of wheat, are equivalent, then the proof will sustain the indictment; but the only witness who testifies states that he considers them different. And in common parlance the two terms have a totally distinct and different signification. The shock is the term applied to the small collection and arrangement of a few sheaves together, in the field, in such manner as to protect them against the weather, for a few days, until the farmer has time to gather them into his barn, or place them in the conical pile called a stack."
It is very certain that, to sustain the judgment and order here, it would be necessary to read into the section of the code involved here language which the legislature has not inserted therein. This we cannot do without a manifest abuse of the power of courts in the construction of legislative enactments. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1858.)
Why the legislature did not include the act of maliciously burning "shocks" or "cocks" of hay within the penalty prescribed by section
In any event, under the foregoing views, the evidence does not sustain nor agree with the allegations of the information, and the given instructions upon the vital point, having been framed to coincide with and support an erroneous theory, were themselves necessarily erroneous and prejudicial.
For example, the following instruction which was read to the jury expresses the theory upon which the cause was presented by the people and tried by the court: "If you find from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, as charged in the information, did attempt to burn certain stacks of hay of over the value of $25, then you will find the defendant guilty, regardless of the size of the individualstacks of hay, no matter whether they were large or small." (Italics ours.) The foregoing instruction, while faultless as an abstract statement of the law, was not applicable to the facts developed by the evidence and was plainly calculated to mislead the jury. It is undoubtedly true that it would be immaterial whether a stack of hay is a large or small stack, if it is a stack within the meaning of that term as it is used in the statute and as it is herein shown to mean and such stack was of the value of $25 or more. In other words, a pile of hay may constitute a stack within the commonly understood signification of that word as applied to piles of loose hay, notwithstanding the fact that it may be smaller in size or contain a less quantity of hay than other stacks of hay, for we do not understand that stacks of hay, in order to be such, need be of uniform size or contain a certain precise quantity of hay.
The evidence in the case at bar, however, discloses, as we have shown, that the field in which the alleged attempt to burn was made contained "cocks" or "shocks" of hay — that is, there were small piles of loose hay scattered about over the field, each of which did not contain a quantity of hay of a value exceeding a dollar. In short, it is not disputed that the piles of hay in the field at the time of the attempted burning charged here were nothing more than mere "cocks" of hay and arose, if at all, to the proportions of "stacks" simply because they were erroneously so characterized in the information *617 and the instructions of the court. The truth is, that there was not in the entire field a pile of hay approximately the size of a "stack," as we understand that term. Therefore, the prejudicial effect of the quoted and other instructions becomes clearly apparent when it is considered that the court, in thus addressing the jury upon the law by the light of which they were to examine the evidence and so reach a conclusion upon the question of the guilt or innocence of the defendant, in substantial effect treated the "cocks" of hay proved assmall stacks of hay and as "stacks" coming within the contemplation and intent of the statute. In other words, the court virtually told the jury that any pile of hay, regardless of its size, constituted a "stack" of hay, and, applying this instruction to the evidence, there was, manifestly, no other alternative for the jury but to find the defendant guilty, assuming, of course, that the fact that the defendant attempted to burn a "cock" or perhaps a number of "cocks" of hay was proved to their satisfaction.
Of course, it necessarily follows that the court's refusal to give the instructions requested by the defendant defining "stacks" and "cocks" of hay and the distinction between the two, as explained in Webster's dictionary, and as commonly understood, and declaring that unless the jury found the piles of hay attempted to be burned to be "stacks" as so defined, the defendant would be entitled to an acquittal, constituted prejudicial error. The fact is, under the proofs, the court should have advised the jury to acquit.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing, the judgment and order are reversed.
Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred. *618