28 Cal. 404 | Cal. | 1865
By the Court,
The defendant was indicted with four other persons for the crime of robbery, charged to have been committed on the 25th
It was proved on the trial that a robbery was committed on the day named, near Bidwell, in the County of Butte, by several persons who were disguised. The defendant was encamped at the time with his family near the scene of the robbery, and it was sought to implicate him as an accessory before the fact, with the commission of the crime, by proof of circumstances tending to establish his connection with it. All the evidence in the case, so far as this defendant was concerned, was of a circumstantial nature.
When the case was finally submitted at the trial, the defendant’s counsel requested the Court to instruct the jury that, “ whilst knowledge of the commission of a crime, acquired after the same had been perpetrated, connected with the act of concealing the same or harboring or protecting the person charged, would constitute the offense of accessory after the fact, yet such knowledge and acts do not constitute, nor are they of the offense of which the defendant is indicted.” The Court refused to so instruct the jury, and the defendant excepted.
The evidence in the case was of a character involving the inquiry whether the defendant was guilty, if guilty at all, of the offense charged in the indictment, or as an accessory after the fact. The charge requested appears to have been designed to instruct the jury that in the event the evidence satisfied them the defendant acquired a knowledge of the commission of the crime after its perpetration and concealed it, or harbored and protected the persons charged with its commission then he was only an accessory after the fact, and could not be found guilty as an accessory before the fact, or, in other words, as a principal.
By the eleventh section of the Act concerning crimes and punishments an accessory before the fact is to be deemed and considered as a principal, and punished accordingly. The twelfth section of the same Act defines an accessory after the
If the jury had been instructed as requested, or so substantially, it may be they would have found a different verdict. We think, considering the nature of the evidence, the defendant was entitled to the benefit of the instruction requested,- and that he may have been injured by its refusal.
The judgment is reversed and the,cause remanded for a new trial.