The defendant was convicted of common-law burglary under General Statutes § 53-68.
1
That statute does not create or define a crime but merely provides a penalty for the crime of common-law burglary.
Rex
v.
Hanson,
Common-law burglary is an offense against the habitation carried out when the occupants are expected to be asleep and, therefore, not alert to prevent the invasion of their dwelling. 4 Blackstone, Commentaries, p. 224. Therefore, “night season” was defined as that time when there is not enough daylight for one to discern the features of another.
State
v.
Morris,
The second definition given by the court was apparently taken from our opinion in
Gibson
v.
Hoppman,
That this error in the charge was harmful is clear. First, it is common knowledge that, immediately after sunset, there is a period of twilight in which visibility, although diminishing, is not overcome by darkness to the extent that the features of another cannot be discerned. A similar period precedes sunrise. Thus, the court’s charge led the jury to understand that there were two periods, of different lengths, either of which could be considered to be night, although one of them was inclusive of
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the other. The jury conld not have been other than confused by these inconsistent and conflicting definitions of this essential element in the crime charged. “A charge should not contain contradictory statements of the law”.
Bailey
v.
Bruneau’s Truck Service, Inc.,
Second, the materiality of the error is further apparent from the claims of proof, from which it appears that on April 2,1964, the day of the alleged burglary, the Kellner house, which was in a rural area in Woodbridge, was locked and left temporarily unoccupied at 4:30 p.m. The sun set at 6:17 p.m. At approximately 7:30 p.m., Salvatore DeGennaro, a Woodbridge police sergeant, apprehended the defendant walking along the road with his companion, Louis Vena, about 100 feet from the Kellner house. Vena was afterwards found to have been carrying goods stolen from the Kellner dwelling and a briefcase containing burglars’ tools. Later the Kellner residence was found to have been broken into. There is no dispute as to the times set forth above. The state has not claimed to have proven by direct evidence the time at which either the defendant or Vena entered or left the Kellner house but has relied, as is often necessary in burglary cases, upon the inferences which the jury might reasonably have drawn from the foregoing claims of proof as to the time at which entry was made. The time of the entry may be established by circumstantial evidence, the persuasive force of which depends upon all the facts and circumstances.
State
v.
Leaden,
In this case, about three hours elapsed between the time the house was left secure and the time the
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defendant was apprehended. More than half of that time was before sunset, and there was an additional period of twilight during which a breaking and entering would not have constituted common-law burglary. On the other hand, the jury might fairly consider it unlikely that the defendant and Vena spent more time in the house than was reasonably required to locate and gather the goods later found on Vena and that the two did not loiter in the neighborhood after leaving the house. There had been darkness for nearly an hour prior to the apprehension of the defendant and Vena on the highway. We cannot say as a matter of law that the jury could not have found that the entry occurred at night under either definition thereof given by the trial court. But the charge must be considered from the standpoint of its effect on the jury in guiding them to a proper verdict.
Fasanelli
v.
Terso,
The other claims of error pursued in the defendant’s brief either were not properly raised or, because of the necessity for a new trial, do not require discussion.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendant was not charged with any of the statutory modifications of common-law burglary embraced in General Statutes §§ 53-73, 53-75, or 53-76.
