60 N.C. 471 | N.C. | 1864
Burglary, at common law, is defined to be the breaking and entering the dwelling-house of another, in the night-time, with intent to commit a felony therein. Roscoe Cr. Ev., 298; S. v. Langford,
The principles which we have thus stated as establishing the kind of house in which a burglary may be committed, we do not understand the counsel on either side to dispute. In their application to the facts of the case now before us, the counsel for the prisoner contends: (1) That the house in which the superintendent Pulliam slept was not such an one as the law recognizes as a dwelling-house; and (2) if it were, the smoke or meat house which was broken open was so situated in reference to it that it could not be considered as a part or parcel of it. *303
Upon the first point, our opinion is against the position taken by the prisoner's counsel. The building is described to be a small log house, and is called a log cabin; but it appears to have been a substantial, permanent one, and therein differs from a tent or a booth erected in a market or fair, in which no burglary could be committed, although the owner lodges in it. See 1 Hawk. Pl. Cr., ch. 38, sec. 35; 1 Hale, Pl. Cr., 559; Roscoe Cr. Ev., 300. This house was in truth the dwelling-house of the owners of the tobacco factory, and not of the superintendent, Pulliam, he being only their servant or employee. See S. v. Curtis,
As to the second position taken for the prisoner, there is (474) perhaps more doubt, but upon mature consideration we think it is in his favor. The dwelling-house in which Pulliam usually slept was uninclosed, and of course had no curtilage or inclosed yard; and the smokehouse stood upwards of a hundred feet from it. The factory and the smokehouse had a common inclosure, from which the log dwelling was excluded. Under these circumstances, it seems too much to say that the smokehouse was appurtenant to the log dwelling-house. Indeed, it did not appear to have been used as such; for Pulliam, who slept in it, did not carry the key to it, except occasionally; that being usually carried by the acting manager of the partnership, who lived and slept in a dwelling-house about a quarter of a mile off. The smokehouse was doubtless used for the purpose of storing meat and other things for the use of all the persons, white and black, who were engaged in the tobacco factory established at that place. It was the "carelessness or indifference" of the proprietors which placed it in such a situation that it would not enjoy that protection which the law affords against a burglarious entry.
PER CURIAM. Error.
NOTE. — As to what is a dwelling-house, etc., in which burglary can or cannot be committed, vide S. v. Mordecai,
Cited: S. v. Pressley,