81 N.C. 555 | N.C. | 1879
The bill charged that the defendant did unlawfully, maliciously and feloniously set fire to and burn the gin-house of V. B. Sharpe and W. H. Weathersbee, the gin-house being used for the purpose of ginning cotton, and in the possession of said owners, Sharpe and Weathersbee, and with the intent to injure and defraud them, contrary, etc.
During the trial a juror was called as a talesman and challenged by the defendant for cause under the act of 1879, Chap. 200, and it *387 appeared that within the two years next preceding said term of the Court he had been summoned on a special venire issued in a case of felony then pending, and had attended Court under the summons, but a jury being had before his name was drawn, he did not serve thereon, The cause of challenge was held to be insufficient. Defendant excepted, and then challenged the juror peremptorily, and before a full jury had been drawn the defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges.
The evidence in the case was that the defendant burned the gin-house in the night time; that the gin-house was used for ginning cotton, the property of said Sharpe and Weathersbee; but there was no evidence that they ginned cotton other than their own. The defendant asked the Court to charge the jury: 1. That there was no evidence (557) the defendant had done any act made criminal or penal by the statute under which the indictment is drawn, and that the gin-house used as above set forth was not in the scope or purview of that statute. 2. That the act in Bat. Rev., Chap. 32. Sec. 6, was in force and has not been repealed, and defendant can not be convicted under that act because the indictment does not charge the burning to have been done wilfully, and that the words used in the indictment are not a sufficient substitute for the word "wilfully," and that the jury should acquit the defendant. The Court declined to charge as requested, and defendant excepted. Verdict of guilty, judgment that the defendant be confined at hard labor in the penitentiary for twenty years; appeal by defendant. The indictment charges that the defendant did unlawfully maliciously and feloniously set fire to and burn a gin-house of V. B. Sharpe and W. H. Weathersbee, with intent to injure and defraud them, and the jury find him guilty.
The act of 10 April, 1869, makes "the wilful burning of any gin-house or tobacco barn, or any part thereof, or in the night time any stable containing a horse or horses, or a mule or mules," an offense punishable by confinement in the State's Prison from five to ten years. Bat. Rev., Chap. 32, Sec. 6.
Subsequently, the act of March 22, 1875, was passed, which declares the unlawful and malicious setting fire "to any church, chapel or meeting-house," or "to any house, stable, coach-house, out-house, warehouse, office, shop, mill, barn or granary," or "to any building or erection used in carrying on any trade or manufacture, or any branch thereof, whether the same or any of them respectively shall then be in the possession of the offender or in the possession of any other person, (558) *388 with intent thereby to injure or defraud any person," to be a felony for which, on conviction, the offender shall be subject to confinement in the State's Prison for a term "not less than five nor more than forty years." Laws 1874-'75, Chap. 228.
The indictment is intended to be drawn, and the judgment of the Court pronounced, under the last act.
During the trial an exception was taken by the defendant to the overruling of his challenge to a tales juror tendered, based on the act of 12 March, 1879, for the reason "that such juror has acted in the same Court as grand or petty juror within two years next preceding such term of the Court." Laws 1879, Ch. 200. The facts do not come within the statute, and the objection is not tenable. The juror had been summoned on a special venire and had attended a term of the Court within that time, but his name was not drawn, and a jury being obtained without him, he was discharged. The disqualification attaches to the juror who "has acted" or served as such, and not to one who has been at the Court under a summons, liable only to be called on for such service. The juror was therefore not incompetent.
The defendant further excepts to the sufficiency of the bill of indictment to warrant judgment against him under either of the before-recited acts:
1. Not under the latter, for the reason that a gin-house is not named among the houses and buildings mentioned therein, and is not, therefore, within its scope and operation; nor
2. Under the first, for that the bill fails to allege the burning to have been "wilfully" done.
The acts are not inconsistent, nor does the one interfere with and supersede the other, though both relate to the offense of burning houses. The first is confined to a few designated buildings, the wilful burning of which, and of one containing a horse or mule when done in (559) the night season only, is made an indictable offense. The other extends to houses and other buildings, specifically named, and requires as constituents of the crime that the act be done maliciously and with an intention to injure or defraud the owner, which are not ingredients in the criminal act described and denounced in the former. A gin-house is not mentioned in the latter act, and unless embraced in the word "house," is not within its scope and meaning. The question suggests itself, if the word is used in its most comprehensive sense, and is intended to include every kind and form of building or structure, why are others mentioned at all? The enumeration would be, upon such a construction, wholly superfluous. The term must have a more restricted import, and such seems to be the interpretation put upon similar language contained in the English statute of 7 and 8 George IV., Chap. 30, *389 Sec. 2, which punishes the burning of "any house, stable, coach-house, out-house, warehouse, office, shop, mill, malt-house, hop-oats, barn or granary, or any building or erection used in carrying on any trade or manufacture, or any branch thereof." A house in the Latin, domus, is a dwelling place or mansion, as known at common law, distinguishable as such from all other buildings, used for different purposes, and entitled to peculiar favor and protection. Hence, in the old forms of indictment for arson, the subject of the offense is sufficiently described as the "house" of the prosecutor, which imports it to be a dwelling-house. 2. East P. C., 1020 and 1033; Rex. v. Donevan, 2 Wm. Bl., 682; 1 Leach Cr. Cases, 69. In the same sense must the word be understood in our act, and hence the burning of a gin-house is not under its condemnation.
But in our opinion the conviction may be sustained under the prior act of April 10, 1869. While the indictment makes allegations not required by the act, it embodies every charge essential to the constitution of the crime, and the unnecessary averments may be (560) treated as harmless surplusage. They do not vitiate a verdict which finds them all to be true, nor afford ground for an arrest of judgment.
For the defendant, the substitution of the words "unlawfully,maliciously and feloniously" as descriptive of the defendant's intent in place of the "wilful" burning mentioned in the act is relied on as a fatal defect in the bill. The objection is without force. It is difficult to conceive how an act can be done maliciously and not wilfully, The former is the more comprehensive, and includes the latter. And so it is held that the charge that perjury had been committed "falsely, maliciously, wickedly and corruptly, implied that it was done "wilfully." 2 Whar. Cr. Law, Sec. 1673, and authorities referred to in note.
The punishment imposed in the sentence of the Court is, however, in excess of that authorized by the act of 1869, and the judgment must be reversed. This will be certified to the end that judgment be pronounced according to law, as declared in this opinion.
Error. Reversed and Remanded.
Cited: S. v. Howard,