40 S.E. 795 | N.C. | 1901
This is an indictment under The Code, sec. 1062, for pulling down a house. The defendant, it seems, was the owner of the house and mortgaged it to Mrs. Exum, with power of sale. The debt not being paid, Mrs. *509 Exum sold, and the prosecutor Best bought and took a deed therefor from the mortgagee. This sale took place a few days before the alleged offense was committed. The defendant was living in the house at the time he pulled it down, and had been for several years, as the mortgagor of Mrs. Exum. Best, the purchaser, was present when the defendant pulled down the house, offered to show the defendant his deed from the mortgagee, and forbade the defendant pulling down the house. The defendant, who was present at the mortgage sale, said he did not want to see the deed, and proceeded to pull down the house. Neither had the prosecutor Best nor Mrs. Exum ever been in the actual possession of the house.
Upon this evidence, which was uncontradicted, the defendant requested the Court to charge the jury that the defendant was not guilty. The Court refused to charge as requested, and defendant excepted, and, upon a verdict of guilty and judgment, appealed.
If this statute had not been already construed by the Court in so many cases, we would be very much disposed to affirm the judgment below, as it seems to us that it was the intention of the statute to prevent the wilful pulling down a house not belonging to the party doing so, to the damage of the owner; and the wilful act of pulling down such a house constituted the criminal offense. But this Court has put a different construction upon the statute; and being instructed by these decisions, it would seem that we should say the defendant was entitled to the charge asked for, "that upon the evidence he was not guilty."
It is held, to constitute a criminal offense under section 1062 of The Code, there must be a trespass. State v. Williams,
We have said, the defendant being in the lawful possession, that is, his possession commenced rightfully and not tortiously. And while the prosecutor may have been entitled to the possession, the defendant having gone into possession rightfully, his possession was not unlawful within the criminal meaning of the term.
Error. *511