27 N.C. 350 | N.C. | 1845
The defendant was indicted for burning the public jail of Franklin County. The indictment charged that "he feloniously, willfully, and maliciously did set fire to the public jail belonging to the said county, and the said public jail then and there being by such firing aforesaid feloniously, willfully, and maliciously did burn and consume, contrary to the statute," etc. The prisoner pleaded not guilty. On the trial the State proved that the defendant was confined in the jail of Franklin County, in one of the upper rooms, no other person being in the same room; that the door of the room in which the defendant was confined was partially burned; also a part of the facing of the door and a part of the ceiling of the room were burned. The State further proved that the prisoner had got out of the room in which he was confined, and was in the room below when the jailer reached the jail. The Attorney-General admitted that the prisoner set fire to the jail for the purpose of enabling him to escape from the same. The prisoner's counsel moved the court to charge the jury that if they believed the prisoner set fire to the jail for the purpose of burning off the lock and thereby enabling him to escape from prison, and not to burn down the jail, he (351) was not guilty.
The court refused the instruction prayed for, and charged the jury that if the evidence satisfied them beyond a reasonable doubt that the prisoner did willfully set fire to the jail, no matter with what intent, and any part of the jail was consumed by the fire so set to it by the prisoner, it was their duty to find him guilty of the charge set forth in the bill of indictment.
The jury found the prisoner guilty, and judgment being pronounced against him, he appealed to the Supreme Court. *252 The act of assembly was first passed in 1830, ch. 41, and was as follows: "That if at any time hereafter any person or persons shall willfully and maliciously burn the State-house, or any of the public offices of this State, or any courthouse, jail, etc., he or they shall be deemed guilty of felony." When the acts of the General Assembly came to be revised, by some mistake the word or was inserted in the statute in the place of the conjunction and. And it may be that this is the reason that induced the judge to decline to charge the jury as he had been requested by the prisoner's counsel. The first branch of the clause in the statute as it now stands had been literally violated by the prisoner; he had willfully burnt the jail. But we think that the wordor, to effectuate the intention of the Legislature, and in favor of life, must be construed as if it were and. And before the prisoner should have been convicted the jury should have been satisfied that he not only willfully put fire to the jail, but that he did it likewise maliciously, with an evil and wicked intent to destroy and consume the jail by the means of fire. If it was not the intention of the prisoner to burn down and destroy the jail, but he put fire to the lock to burn it off, merely to effect his escape, and not to destroy the jail, the felony was (352) not completed. The case cited by the prisoner's counsel, People v. Cotteral, 18 Johns., 115, is an authority for this position. We, therefore, think that the judge erred in refusing to charge as he was requested by the prisoner's counsel. But we will say that if the prisoner willfully put fire to the jail with the intent to effect his escape by consuming or destroying it he would be guilty under the statute, if the jury should be of opinion that his secondary intent was to burn down and destroy the jail, although his main intent was thereby to effect his escape. This doctrine is supported by King v. Coke, 6 State Trials, 212. The primary intent of the prisoner in that case was to murder Mr. Crispe; they terribly hacked him and also disfigured him by slitting his nose with a hedge bill, and they left him for dead. Now, the bare intent to murder is no felony; but to disfigure, with an intent to disfigure, is made a felony in England by the Coventry act. The prisoners were indicted under that act, and the court said it shall be left to the jury whether it was not a design to murder by disfiguring, and consequently a malicious intent to disfigure as well as to murder. The jury found the prisoners guilty of such previous intent to disfigure, in order to effect their principal intent to murder, and they were both convicted and executed. The same doctrine is to be found in King v. Gillow, 1 Moody C. Cases, 85. In an indictment against the *253 statute for cutting and maiming with intent to do grievious bodily harm, a prisoner was convicted whose main and principal intent was to prevent his lawful apprehension which is also an offense against the statute if, in order to effect the latter intention, he also intended to murder or do grievious bodily harm, etc., which the jury found he did. We have made the above remarks in order to prevent our being misunderstood in the construction of our statute on the subject of burning public buildings. General malice is sufficient to satisfy the words of the statute. 1 Moody C. Cases, 93.
If the prisoner put fire to the jail, not with an intention of destroying it, he is not guilty under the act of Assembly. But if he put fire to the jail and burnt it with an intent to burn it down and (353) destroy it, he is guilty, notwithstanding the fire went out, or was put out by others before the intention of the prisoner was completed by burning down the jail; and this is the law, although his main intention was to escape.
The two intentions of escaping and of burning down the jail are perfectly consistent with each other as both existing in the mind at the same time, as it may be the purpose of the party to escape by means of burning the jail.
If a person from without set fire to the jail with the view of enabling prisoners confined in it to escape, the case is clearly within the words and mischief of the act; for it must be against such deeds, upon such an intent, that the enactment was chiefly directed. In like manner, if a prisoner himself set the jail on fire from within, to enable him to escape, the same consequence must follow. And in cases under the statute, as well as in arson at common law, the setting fire to the building constitutes the offense, no matter how little may be burned, provided there was an intention to destroy the building; and such an intention is to be inferred, unless the contrary is clearly established, since fire set to combustible materials will naturally consume them. Therefore, prima facie, this prisoner was guilty. But all inference of his guilt is repelled by its being found, or rather assumed by the presiding judge, that he did not intend to burn down the jail, but intended to escape by burning a small hole through the door, and nothing more. It may be extremely difficult for a prisoner, especially a solitary prisoner, to establish, as he must do affirmatively, that he did not intend to consume the jail when he set fire to it, but only to burn a slight opening in it. But that difficulty does not lie on this prisoner, according to the case as now appearing, because it is yielded by the State that he had no such intention. His innocence does not arise from an intention of the prisoner having been to escape, but from the intention to escape by means of burning down the jail being expressly negatived; and, therefore, the presumption before *254 (354) spoken of must yield to the fact found. We speak of the fact as found because the judge told the jury to convict the prisoner, although they might find the fact to be that he did not intend to burn down the house, or no matter what was his intent.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: S. v. Walters,