48 S.E. 670 | N.C. | 1904
The defendants were indicted for burning a barn or granary, the property of Henry Dry. There were two counts in the bill. In the first it was alleged that Samuel N. Ford willfully, wantonly and feloniously set fire to the barn, and in the second that Elizabeth Morgan and her husband, John E. Morgan, unlawfully, willfully, wantonly and feloniously incited and procured him to do it. The indictment was (629) drawn under section 985 (6) of The Code, which, requires the act to be done "willfully and wantonly, makes it a felony. *457
The State introduced evidence which tended to show that Ford had set fire to the barn and that the other persons named. in the bill procured him to do so, and there was evidence for the defendant tending to show the contrary. John E. Morgan died before the trial.
Numerous exceptions to the admission and rejection of testimony. were noted by the defendants, but as there is an exception taken to the charge of the Court to the jury which we must sustain, it is deemed unnecessary to consider the other questions raised, as they may not be again presented.
The State alleged, and it was one of its principal contentions, that John E. Morgan and his wife and the other defendant, Samuel N. Ford, had formed a conspiracy to burn the barn because John E. Morgan was mad with one Henry Dry, and as one of Morgan's tenants had left him and gone to live with Dry he wanted to have his revenge. This was assigned by the State as the motive for the burning, and in referring to the question of motive the Court charged the jury as follows: "While it is permissible to show motive as a circumstance to be considered by the jury upon the question of guilt, it is not necessary, as contended by counsel for the defendants, that the State should show a motive. All the State has to do is to satisfy the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants did the acts charged in the bill of indictment." To the last part of this instruction the defendants in apt time excepted.
It must be conceded that it is not always necessary to show either a motive or an intent, for in some offenses the intent to do the forbidden act is the criminal intent, and the act committed with that intent constitutes the crime. If the person has done the act which in itself is a violation of the law, he will not be heard to say that he did not have the intent. S.v. King,
The principle just stated, which is fully sustained by the authorities, *458
has been applied by this Court to cases where the act is forbidden and denounced as criminal if "willfully" or "wantonly" done. In S. v. Whitener,
It will be seen that in S. v. Whitener the Court takes a case like ours, or one where by the very terms of the statute an act must be done willfully and wantonly, out of the principle that when an act is forbidden the intentional doing of the act constitutes the criminal intent and places it in that class of cases in which the intent is a necessary ingredient of the crime and must be found by the jury. It makes no difference how clearly the intent may appear from the circumstances, the ultimate fact of the intent must be found, and in order to do so the jury are required to pass upon those circumstances.
In this case the Court simply told the jury that if they found the defendants committed the acts alleged in the indictment — that is, if the defendant Ford set fire to the barn and the other defendants procured him to do it — they were guilty, as that was all the State was required to prove. This certainly did not inform the jury that it was necessary that the act should have been willful and wanton, and was not any more explicit than was the charge in Whitener's case, which was adjudged to be erroneous. When the Court undertook to tell the jury what was necessary to warrant a conviction, it should have given all of the ingredients of the alleged offense and instructed them as to all the facts necessary to be found by them before they could *459
convict. S. v. Austin,
Our conclusion is that there was error in the charge, and it must be so certified, to the end that a new trial may be awarded to the defendants.
New trial. *460