89 Mo. 423 | Mo. | 1886
At the November term, 1885, of the circuit court of Cooper county, the defendant, John Clark, and one Straub Young, were jointly indicted for larceny committed in a dwelling house in said county. The indictment was framed upon section 1309, Revised Statutes 1879, which provides that: “ If any larceny be committed in a dwelling house, or in any boat or vessel, or in any railroad car, or by stealing from the person in the night time, the offender may be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not exceeding seven years.”
The indictment (omitting its formal parts), charges that, at, etc., on, etc., one Straub Young, and one John Clark, then and there, in a dwelling house (to-wit, the dwelling house of a person to the grand jurors ■unknown), feloniously did steal, take, and carry away, a certain keg of beer, the property of one August Dengolensky, then and there, in said dwelling house being, against the peace and dignity of the state.
Upon a trial of the cause before a jury at the same term, the following, in substance, was the evidence in the case: That on the twenty-eighth day of August, 1885, one Straub Young and John Clark did take from an ice house one keg of beer. That said beer belonged to one August Dengolensky, and the house was the property of William Dengolensky, and was situated in
At the close of the testimony the court, over the ob
"v5 ci3. If the jury shall find from the evidence that the witness, Dengolensky, kept his beer in the basement of a house, and that said basement was also used as an ice house, and that the superstructure' over said basement was composed of four rooms, and that two families were living in those rooms, and that each family occupied different rooms, and that the only means of entering the basement, where said beer was kept, was by a cellar door, on the outside, then the jury are instructed that said basement was portion of a dwelling house, and if the defendants took the beer mentioned in evidence from said basement, then they took it from a dwelling bouse, within the meaning of the law.”
The court then refused the following instruction asked by defendants, to which defendants excepted:
“1. The jury are instructed that the defendants are indicted for larceny committed in a dwelling house,, and they are further instructed, that if they find from the evidence that Straub Young, one of the defendants,, was dwelling in and residing with his family in a portion of the house referred to in' the indictment, and that the keg of beer mentioned in said indictment was in an ice house, which formed a part of, or was connected with the dwelling house in which Young was living with his-family, and that said ice house, at the time it is charged said beer was taken, was under the control of ¥m. Dengolensky, and that there was no door or internal communication between the part in which Young was living and the ice house, then the jury cannot find the defendants guilty of the offence charged in the indictment. ’ ’
Upon the trial, as shown by the record, the defendant, Straub Young, was acquitted by the jury ; but the defendant, John Clark, was found guilty as charged in the indictment, and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for three years and four
But the controlling, if not the only question in this
Another distinguished writer (Bishop on Statutory Crimes [2 Ed.], sec. 242), says that: “The word ‘dwelling house,’ the meaning of which is fully explained further on, includes, in the law of burglary and generally in the law, a structure for business uses, whereof
In this same connection also we may quote a paragraph from the opinion of Judge Scott, in the case of State v. Ramelsburg, 30 Mo. 28, which like this was an indictment for stealing from a dwelling house, to this ■effect: “The same offense may be committed under ■circumstances which will greatly enhance its guilt. Property, which is necessarily exposed to the depredations of offenders, must be protected by severer punishment than that which may be guarded and protected. So those who would make a visit to a dwelling house a ■screen to hide a theft, should be punished more severely than one who would steal the same thing found in a place calculated to create a temptation to do the act. The one act is indicative of a much more depraved disposition in the offender than the other.”
Tested by the rules enunciated in these authorities, it is manifest, we think, that the conviction and judgment in the case at bar cannot be upheld, under the undisputed evidence in the cause. It clearly appears that the keg of beer in question, worth $3.65, was stolen by said Young and the defendant, Clark, in the day time from the ice house or beer cellar in question, which formed the basement of the building above, which had four rooms, but without any internal communication between said rooms above and said ice house below; that there was but one way of ingress and egress from said ice house, beer cellar or basement, and that was by a ■door upon the outside ; that the occupants and dwellers in the rooms or building above, neither owned, possessed, nor had any interest in, or control over said ice house,' •cellar or basement, or the business or uses to which it was applied ; that the same and the dwelling over it were the property of, and owned by Win. Dengolensky, and that part of the ice house, cellar or basement without any internal communication with the building or
It is quite clear, therefore, that the ice house, beer cellar or' basement was not, in the language of the text writers, under the immediate personal control of any of the dwellers above, and that being so, there was nothing to make passing and repassing from said ice house to the building above, in the language of the text writers, an ordinary household occurrence on the part of the dwellers above, and if that be so, the peril to life consequent upon a nocturnal attack upon it,"much less an attack in broad day light, apprehended by the text writers and adjudged cases, does not exist in the case at bar; and if so, there is nothing in the facts of the case or the policy of the law to make the offence in question, in the language of the books, one against family peace and safety as well as against property ; or in other words to convert a case of simple “petit larceny” into one of “grand larceny” within the purview of section 1309, supra; nor is there in the case at bar, in the language of Judge Scott in delivering the opinion in the case of the State v. Ramelsburg, 30 Mo. page 28, any thing like “a visit to a dwelling house in order to screen or hide a theft” so as to render
It follows, therefore, that the trial court erred in giving the instructions asked for on the part of the state, and in refusing that requested by defendant. And for these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the defendant ordered to be discharged from further imprisonment by reason thereof.