STATE v. W. T. MASSEY
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
FEBRUARY TERM, 1889
103 N.C. 356
- Chapter 66, Laws 1885, amending The Code, § 985 (6), being without any saving clause, has the effect of discharging all who had been previously guilty of violations of said section, except those against whom аn indictment could be sustained and judgment pronounced under said section without the aid of the words stricken out of it by the act of 1885.
- The Code, § 3766, does not serve the purpose of a saving clause to ch. 66, Laws 1885. That section only applies where an amendatory law repeals a proviso to a section of a former act, or a whole section to a former act, and the section without the proviso, or the section not affected, will support an indictment.
- It is more dangerous for this Court to usurp the powers of the legislative department by supplying omissions in, or putting strained constructions upon, criminal statutes, than that some criminals should go unpunished.
- A later statute repeals, by implication, an older statute, with which it is irreconcilably inconsistent, to the extent of such repugnancy. But the two statutes must be reconciled if that can be done by any fair construction.
- When a criminal statute, or any part of it, which is essential to sustain an indictment, is repealed or stricken out by a later act, offences committed under the older statute cannot be punished, unless a contrary intent appear from an express saving clause in the repealing statute, or by necessary implication from its wording.
(MERRIMON, J., and SMITH, C. J., dissented).
This was a CRIMINAL ACTION, tried at the Spring Term, 1889, of the Superior Court of LINCOLN County, before Clark, J.
The indictment was found at the Spring Term, 1888. The material portion of the first count of the indictment is as follows:
“The jurors for the State, upon oath, present: That W. T. Massey, late of Lincoln County, before the sixteenth day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-five, to-wit, on the first day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-four, with force and arms, at and in said county, a mill in the possession of the said W. T. Massey, unlawfully, maliciously and feloniously did set fire to, with intent thereby to injure and defraud the Georgia Home Insurance Company, being then and there a body corporate, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State.”
There were several additional counts, all charging the burning to have been done at the same time and “unlawfully, maliciously,” &c., but “with intent to defraud” some other corporate body. The last count contained a charge of burning a church unlawfully, maliciously, &c., found at the Fall Term, 1888. The defendant is charged in a single count with unlawfully, maliciously, &c., burning a mill, &c., “with intent to defraud the Georgia Home Insurance Company,” &c.
The Solicitor admitted the fact, alleged in a plea in abatement, filed by the defendant, that the offence of burning the mill was committed, if at all, on the first day of April, 1884. Thereupon, “the Court, being of opinion that the statute in existence at the time of the offence charged, has been since repealed, and there is now no statute upon which the Court could proceed to judgment on conviction,” ordered that the indictment be quashed and the defendant discharged. The Solicitor appealed.
The other material facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
The Attorney General, for the State.
Messrs. W. A. Hoke and W. J. Montgomery, for the defendant.
There are several established rules of construction that will aid us in determining whether the last statute cited leaves the section of
- If a later statute is irreconcilably inconsistent in its terms with one previously enacted, it operates to repeal the older statute, so far as such repugnancy extends, by implication, but when any fair construction will reconcile a seeming repugnancy, it must be adopted. State v. Custer, 65 N. C., 339.
- When a statute creating a criminal offence is exprеssly repealed, or any portion of it, that is essential to sustain an indictment drawn under its provisions, is stricken out by a law subsequently enacted, the former will be held inoperative even as to offences committed before the passage of the later act, unless a contrary intent on the part of the lаwmakers appear from an express saving clause or by neces-
sary implication from the language in the repealing statute. Lindsey v. State, Southern Reporter, vol. 5, No. 7, p. 99; State v. Long, 78 N. C., 571; State v. Wise, 66 N. C., 120. “The act punished must be criminal when judgment is demanded, and authority to render it must still reside in the Court.” State v. Williams, 97 N. C., 455. When the Legislature re-enacts, in terms or in substance, an act then in force, but declаres the law previously passed repealed, it is considered a reaffirmance of the old law. State v. Sutton, 100 N. C., 474; Bishop on Statutory Crimes, sec. 181. In such cases the legislative intent is implied from the very words of the repealing act. Our case cannot be brought within this principle, for there is nothing in the repealing act to indicate an intent to leave the old law unrepealed or to reaffirm it.
We cannot concur with counsel, that
It is contended, however, that the original section of
Where an amendatory law repeals a proviso to a section of a former act, or a whole section of a former act, but the sectiоn without the proviso or the section not affected will support an indictment, the law referred to (
There is a marked distinction between the case at bar and State v. Putney, Phil. Law, 543, cited by the Attorney General. The defendant Putney was convicted at Fall Term, 1867, of the Superior Court of Wake County, under an indictment found in December, 1866, of the larceny of a mule. On the 25th of February, 1867, the General Assembly, after reciting “that the crime of stealing horses and mules hath of late, notwithstanding the punishment provided by law, become much more common than formerly,” &c., enacted “thаt every person who shall steal any horse, mare, gelding or mule, and shall be thereof convicted, accord-
When, by the Constitution of 1868, corporal punishment was forbidden, the question was raised (in State v. Kent, 65 N. C., 311), whether one who was convicted of larceny, committed before the law was changed, could be punished by imprisonment in the State prison. The Court held that the law altering the punishment was not an ex post facto law, becаuse it did not make punishable an act already committed and not previously criminal, and it did not aggravate the punishment of the crime of larceny, previously punishable with whipping. We think, therefore, the case is easily distinguishable from the cases of State v. Sutton, State v. Kent, and State v. Putney, supra, cited by the Attorney General.
In State v. Rogers, 94 N. C., 860, Mr. Justice MERRIMON, for this Court, says, in effect, that the act of 1885 (ch. 66) repеals the words of
We think that the law under which the indictment was drawn did not continue in force in its original form up to the passage of the amendatory act, and we, therefore, concur with the Judge below in his ruling
It is not the province of this Court to pass upon the innocence or guilt of the accused. If he was not guilty, still he had the right, and it was the duty of his counsel, to have the case disposed of in this summary way. If he was guilty, under
The judgment of the Court below is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.
MERRIMON, J. (dissenting). I dissent from the opinion and judgment of the Court. It seems to me very clear that the statute (acts 1885, ch. 66) is intended to and does operate only prospectively in all respects. It in no way affects, nor was it intended to affect, offences already perpetrated at the time of its enactment; it does not in terms purport to do so, nor is there anything in it, or in it taken in connection with the general statutory provision (
The statute (
The interpretation I have thus given is strengthened as the correct one, in that it is not to be presumed that the Legislature intended to let crimes, cоmmitted in violation of the statute before the amendment, go unpunished, in the absence of any declaration to that effect, nor is such purpose to be allowed to appear by mere inference, especially in the face of the general statutory provision cited. The settled purрose to punish severely the perpetrators of such offences is manifest, and I cannot consent to allow guilty men (not meaning to say that the defendant is, or is not, guilty) to escape by the observance of a mere technicality, which, it seems to me, is clearly excluded, and intentionally, in the way I havе indicated.
SMITH, C. J. (dissenting). I concur in the construction put upon
