27 N.J.L. 323 | N.J. | 1859
The first count of the indictment charges the defendant: with burning :the “house” of John Dunn. The second count charges him with burning the bam of John Dunn, not parcel of a dwelling-house. The crime was charged to have been committed ou the 6th of April, 1858. On the trial, it appeared that the fee of the pre
The defendant was convicted upon the second count of the indictment, which charges him with burning the barn of John Dunn, not parcel of the dwelling-house. The title to the barn was in Dunn. The exclusive possession was in the defendant, under a contract for purchase. Was the barn the building “of another,” within the meaning of the statute?
Arson at common law consists in willfully and maliciously burning the house “of another.”, 1 Hawk. 165, cap. 39; Hale 566; 4 Bla. Com. 220; 2 Russell on Cr. 486
If a landlord or reversioner sets fire to his own house, of which another is in possession- under lease, &c., it is arson, for during the lease the house is the property of the tenant. Harris’ case, Foster 113; 4 Bla. Com. 222; Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 199.
So if it be,in the possession of a copyholder. Spalding’s case, 1 East’s P. C. 1025; 1 Leach’s Crown Law 218.
The principle of the rule is, that it was for the protection of the person in the actual and immediate possession of the house. The offence is against the possession of another. Breeme’s case, 1 Leach 220; 2 East’s P. C. 1026; Pedley’s case, 1 Leach 235; 1 Hale’s P. C. 567, note; 3 Chitty’s Cr. L. 1106. And the court will not inquire into the tenure or interest which such person has in the house burnt. It is enough (hat it was his actual dwelling at the time. 2 J. R. 104; 12 Verm. 93.
The 30th section of the act for the punishment of crimes, (Nix. Dig. 164,) is simply declaratory of the common law crime of arson. It enacts that if any person shall willfully
The 31st section of the act under which the defendant is convicted enacts that if any person shall willfully and maliciously burn the barn or other building “of another,” not parcel of the dwelling-house, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. It is suggested that the offence designated in this section is not against the possession, as in the preceding section, but against the property of another, and lienee title, and not possession, is drawn in question. The 30ih and 31st, sections of the act are not only in pari materia, but they are substantially parts of one and the same enactment. They both prohibit the willful and malicious burning of the buildings “of another.” The one relates to the dwelling-house, and other buildings parcel thereof, the other relates to buildings other than the dwelling-house, and not parcel thereof. This is the substantial difference in the two enactments, and they have been separated for the purpose of distinguishing the degree of punishment. It.would be a violation of the clearest rules of construction, under such circumstances, to make the phrase “ of another,” in one section, to refer to property, and in the other, to possession. The 32d section, which prohibits setting fire to buildings with intent to burn them, includes all the buildings mentioned in both of the preceding- sections. In this section, the phrase “of an
If the phrase could, by any rule of construction, be supposed to refer not to possession, but to title, what estate must the party have? Must it be an estate in fee for life or years? Must it be vested or contingent? Must it be a legal or an equitable estate? If the tenant in possession, having paid tiie entire purchase money upon a contract for purchase, should burn the building before the delivery of the deed, and while the legal title is in the vendor, is he within the penalty of the statute? • It would seem that he must be so if the phrase “ of another ” refers not to possession, but to title. And is the court of criminal jurisdiction upon the trial of an indictment to try and deáide the question of title ?
It is further urged that the offence charged, viz., burning a dwelling-house by the occupant, the title to which is in a third party, is an offence at common law, and that the conviction may be sustained on that ground.
There are certainly authorities which sustain the position, that the burning of a building by the party in possession, in which another had a legal and beneficial interest as landlord or mortgagee, or which necessarily greatly endangered the property of others, is a misdemeanor at common law. Holmes’ case, Cro. Car. 376; 2 East’s P. C. 1023-1027; Scofield’s case, 2 East’s P. C. 1028; Wharton’s Cr. Law, § 1665.
But admitting this to be an indictable offence, the indictment is not adapted to that aspect of the case, arid is not sustained by the evidence. '
The first count of the indictment charges the defendant with willfuly and maliciously setting fire, in
The second count charges him with willfully and maliciously setting fire to, in the night time, and burning a barn of John Dunn, not parcel of the dwelling-house mentioned in the first count. And a third count charges him with willfully and maliciously aiding, counseling, and procuring the burning of said house.
After an elaborate trial, which occupied a week, the jury found the defrudant guilty on the second count, and not guilty on the first and third counts. It appeared in evidence that Fish was in possession of the house and the barn, at the time they were consumed, under an agreement with Dunn to purchase them, and the farm on which they stood, although the title was in Dunn ; and one Mr. Young held a mortgage upon the farm, executed by Dunn, of which Fish was informed. It also appeared that Fish, without notice either to the mortgagor or to the mortgagee, had effected insurances upon the buildings in his own name; and that, shortly after the fire, he had received his insurance money from one insurance company in New York, without notifying them of the true state of the property.
The question presented to this court is whether, as Fish was in the occupancy of the buildings when they were burned, lie can lawfully be sentenced upon the conviction of burning the barn of another.
Inasmuch as none of the essential elements of arson at common law enter into the burning of a barn, not parcel of a dwelling-house, I ruled, at the court below, that a tenant might be convicted of willfully and maliciously setting fire to and burning a barn in his possession, upon an indictment alleging it to be the property of his landlord. It was argued there, and the argument has been repeated in this court, that the conviction cannot be supported, unless a construction is given to the words “ of aTUOtkerf as used in the 31st section, different from that
The argument is held -by my brethren to have been well made, and upon a more full consideration of the ease I cheerfully concur in their views, that the verdict should be set aside on that ground, and a new trial be granted.
In thus disposing of the verdict, I am not to be understood as admitting that the facts found by the jury against the defendant are unpunishable under the existing laws of (bis state. Through his deliberate and wicked acts, as established by the verdict, an insurance company was defrauded out of over $ 1000 in cash, and it cannot be that the common law is impotent for the punishment of such a fraud, if charged upon the offender in an indictment properly framed. Should a doubt exist upon this point, the action of the legislature should at once be invoked for supplying the defect in our criminal law.
Justices Vredenburgh and Whelpley concurred.
See Pamph L. 1859, p. 367.