State v. Myer

259 Mo. 306 | Mo. | 1914

WALKER, P. J.

In April, 1913, appellant was convicted in the circuit court of Jackson county, of arson in the second degree, in having set fire to a storehouse adjoining a certain inhabited dwelling house, and his punishment assessed at three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. Pending this appeal appellant is under recognizance.

Omitting the formal parts and signature of the prosecuting attorney, the information is as follows: “that Harry Myer, whose Christian name in full is unknown to said assistant prosecuting attorney, late of the county'aforesaid, on the 6th day of July, 1912, at the county of Jackson, State of Missouri, did then and there unlawfully, wilfully, maliciously and feloniously set fire to and attempt to burn a certain building, to-wit, a storeroom at No. 1003 East Twelfth street, there situate and adjoining to a certain dwelling house of one E. M. Deming, there situate; and that said inhabited dwelling house of one E. M; Deming, by the firing of the said storeroom as aforesaid, was then and there endangered, against the peace and dignity of the State.”

The verdict of the jury, omitting signature of foreman, is as follows: “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of arson in the second degree as charged in the information and assess his punishment at three years in the State Penitentiary.”

Near midnight, July 6, 1912, a police officer, walking his beat on East Twelfth street, Kansas City, saw smoke issuing from the transom or ventilator over the door and from crevices in the windows of a storeroom at No. 1003 on'said street; upon closer investigation he found the room filled with smoke and called the fire department. The store was broken open by firemen, when a strong odor of kerosene and turpentine was perceptible. The counters, shoe boxes, racks, shelves and goods were found covered with excelsior, which had been saturated with a mixture of kerosene and *311turpentine. Two or three spots on the floor indicated that this mixture had been poured thereon. Along the floor a train of excelsior, also moist with the same mixture, led to the basement stairway and down the steps into same, where a barrel was found one-third full of oil, around which was piled like-saturated excelsior. Excelsior had also been scattered over the cement floor of the basement, hut it had burned off until the fire reached the foot of the stairway leading to the storeroom, when it had become extinguished. Several upright timbers in the basement, which had been placed there as the framework of a partition, but from which the laths and plastering were off, were charred from the floor upward two or three feet. The doors of the storeroom and basement had been locked and barred on the inside, and the windows covered with cloth. The building in which the store was located was two stories in height, and. in the second- story a family consisting of several persons resided and were in the building on the night in question.

Appellant was arrested at his residence in a different part of the city about an hour or more after the discovery of the fire. He denied any knowledge of the transaction. A police captain who made a careful examination of the premises the morning succeeding the attempted burning of the building, testifies to substantially the same facts as above in regard to the condition of the store when he made the examination. Eefurning to the police station he had a talk with appellant. The latter said that he had the only key to the store. While talking, appellant pulled out his handkerchief which emitted a strong odor; when it was taken from him, he fainted; it smelled strongly of turpentine and kerosene. Upon being revived, appellant was asked as to the odor of the handkerchief, and said he could not account for it as he had used it only to wipe his face and hands. He made a signed statement. Among others things he said; “I own the *312stock in the store at 1003 East Twelfth street; I gave $4800 for it, paying $3000 cash, and still owe $1000 on the purchase price. I have $4000 insurance on the stock. I am the only one who has a key to the store. I left it about 9:30 o’clock p. m., the night of the fire. I put aprons over the inside of the windows to keep out the dust.” The day succeeding the discovery of the fire, a fire warden made an invoice of the stock of goods in the storeroom, and exclusive of fixtures, a sewing machine and refrigerator, its estimated value was fixed at $165.50.

The foregoing is in substance the abstract of the facts as made by counsel for appellant, to which he adds: “The defendant did not testify and no testimony was offered in his behalf.”

The statute which appellant was charged with having violated is as follows: “Every person who shall wilfully set fire to or burn any shop, warehouse, office, storehouse or other building not being the subject of arson in the first degree, but adjoining to or within the curtilage of any inhabited dwelling house, so that such dwelling house shall be endangered by such firing, shall, upon conviction, be adjudged guilty of .arson in the second degree.” [Sec. 4507, R. S. 1909.]

The information. I. (a) The gist of the offense, under section 4507, Revised Statutes 1909, consists, not in the injury to the building set fire to, but the danger to the persons occupying the adjoining building. This being true, the ownership of the building is immaterial and need not be alleged. Under an indictment for an attempt to commit arson in State v. Hayes, 78 Mo. 307, 313, it was. contended by the defendant that the indictment was bad for not charging the ownership of the house in the defendant. It was charged that the house was occupied by certain families named, human beings other than the defend*313ant. “The statute,” said the court, “denounces the act of burning ‘any dwelling house, in which there shall be at the time some human being.’ It was not even necessary to name the person occupying the house.” In an early case (State v. Aguila, 14 Mo. 130) cited with approval in the Hayes case, supra, the court said in effect: “Where the facts which constitute the arson are set down and specified, an indictment in the words in which the offense is created is sufficient.”

The reason for the necessity of an allegation of ownership in an indictment for arson at common law was that the crime did not consist in setting fire to one’s own dwelling house or one he occupied as tenant, because there could be no arson without a trespass to the possession and one in possession could not be guilty of a trespass against his. own possession, therefore, it became material to allege ownership other than in the occupant. But the common-law rule has been changed by statute so that if a person burn his own dwelling or one he occupies, in which there is at the time a human being, he is guilty of arson. Under such a state of facts, the ownership is immaterial, because the statute is intended to protect human life rather than property. [State v. Young, 153 Mo. 445,] In the case at bar a like purpose is evident in'the statute upon which the information is drawn and, therefore the same rule is applicable. Keeping the distinction in view as- to whether the offense charged in a particular case endangered property or life, we are enabled to readily distinguish the Missouri cases in which it has been held that an allegation of ownership is essential in indictments for arson. [See State v. Whitmore, 147 Mo. 78; State v. Wacker, 16 Mo. App. 417.] In the Whitmore case, supra, the offense consisted in the burning of a county jail, primarily an offense against property. The court held in this case that where the indictment was drawn upon what is *314now section 4505, Revised Statutes 1909, the ownership should be alleged in the jailer who occupied the building, the reason for this ruling being stated thus: “At common law the ownership of the house must be alleged and proved as laid. Our statute had not done away with this requisite of the common law.” This ruling clearly ignored the reason for the allegation of ownership required by the common law, and as a consequence the change in the statute which rendered such allegation in certain cases unnecessary. In so far, therefore, as the Whitmore case holds that an allegation of ownership is necessary in an indictment for arson, where the offense charged endangers life, it should be overruled. The reasoning in the Wacker case turns upon the indefiniteness of the indictment in simply alleging that the accused “set fire to and burned a certain dwelling house in the city of St. Louis;” this indictment, it must be admitted, was insufficient in not clearly informing the defendant of the particular act charged against him. No such grounds of complaint can be urged against the information in the case at bar, which alleges the location of the building set fire to, by street and number. It is also evident from the facts in the Wacker case, that the offense charged was one endangering property and not life, and hence an allegation of ownership was material.

(b) The sufficiency of the information is further challenged on the ground that it only- charges an attempt instead of the commission of the offense. The language of the statute upon which the information is based is, in the charging part, that “every person who shall wilfully set fire to or burn,” etc.; it will be seen that the offenses are disjunctively denounced in the statute, and the first is completed if fire is set to any building therein named in an attempt to burn same, and an allegation to that effect is, therefore, sufficient. It is a mere trifling with words to say that where it is *315alleged in the language of the statute, as it is here, that the defendant “unlawfully and feloniously set fire to” the building named, that only an attempt to commit the crime is charged, because the explanatory words “and attempt to burn” follow the principal allegation in the information. If such explanatory words have any effect, they serve to inform the defendant more definitely of the nature of the crime with which he is charged, and so far as the sufficiency of the indictment is concerned it is immaterial whether they be regarded as explanatory words or be rejected as surplusage. In State v. Jones, 106 Mo. 302, 311, this court held that the use of the words “did set fire to and burn” did not charge two offenses; it has also been held in another jurisdiction that the words “set fire to” are equivalent to the word “burn” (State v. Taylor, 45 Me. 322); and in another, that an allegation “of burning” in a charge for “setting fire to” may be rejected as surplusage (State v. Hull, 83 Iowa, 112). Viewed from every angle of interpretation, there is, therefore, no merit in this contention.

(c) The information is further challenged because it is contended that the dwelling house adjoining the building set fire to was not alleged to be inhabited. The language of the information in this regard is as follows: “a storeroom at No. 1003 East Twelfth street there situate and adjoining to a certain dwelling house of one E. M. Deming there situate; that said inhabited dwelling house of the. said E. M. Deming, by the firing of the said storeroom as aforesaid, was then and there endangered.” While this is an inartificial statement of the language of the statute, it is sufficiently definite to inform the defendant that the building set fire to was adjacent to an inhabited dwelling house, and there is, therefore, no uncertainty as to the allegation in reference to the subject-matter of the offense which the appellant was called on to meet. [State v. Moore, 61 Mo. l. c. 278.]

*316Instructions. II. Appellant contends that instruction numbered 2 given by the court was erroneous. It is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if they find and believe from the evidence that at the county of Jackson and State of Missouri, at any time within three years next before the 15th day of November, 1912, the date of the filing of the information in this case, the defendant, Harry Myer, did then and there unlawfully, wilfully, maliciously and feloniously set fire to and' attempt to bum a certain building, to-wit, a storeroom at number 1003 East Twelfth street, there situate and adjoining to a certain inhabited dwelling house of one E. M. Deming, there situate, and that said inhabited dwelling house of the said E. M. Deming, by the firing, if any, of the said storeroom as aforesaid, was then and there endangered, then you will find the defendant guilty as charged in the information and assess his punishment at imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for any term not less than three years.
“Wilfully means intentionally not accidentally.
“Feloniously means wickedly and against the admonitions of the law, unlawfully.
“Maliciously means a wrongful act intentionally done without just cause or excuse.”

The appellant’s contention is that this instruction told the jury that the “attempt to burn” constituted arson in the second degree. As we have shown in discussing the information, the language of which is followed in the instruction, the gravamen of the offense is the “setting fire to;” and whether the words “and attempt to bum” be regarded as purely expletory in either the information or the instruction, or as explanatory in evidencing the intent to bum previously charged, they may be treated as surplusage.

In State v. Hull, 83 Iowa, 112, an indictment charged that the defendant caused to be set fire to and burned a large amount of combustible material with *317the intention to cause a certain described store building to be burned, and did then and.there in the manner and at the time and place aforesaid, set fire and cause to be burned the said store building, it was held that the charge as to the actual burning must be regarded as an allegation of evidence, and, therefore, to be treated as surplusage. While this was a ruling in regard to the indictment, it is equally applicable in construing an instruction.

In State v. Hayden, 45 Iowa, 11, the charge was of breaking and' entering a store building wherein valuable merchandise was kept for sale, with intent to steal said goods and that he did steal certain articles named. It was held that the allegation that “he did.’ steal” was a statement of evidence and, therefore, surplusage.

In the case at bar, as in the Hull case, supra, not only the charge, but the instructions, verdict and judgment show that the appellant was tried for setting fire to the store and attempting to burn same, and not for burning it, and such a consistency appears in the entire proceeding that the appellant has no just cause of complaint on account of the instructions.

Remarks of counsel. III. There is no merit in appellant’s contention that the remarks of the prosecuting attorney were prejudicial. In each instance when the remarks were made, although it is exceedingly doubtfnl whether they were objectionable, the court directed that they be withdrawn from the consideration of the jury. No request was made by counsel for the appellant that the court rebuke the prosecuting attorney, but it was asked to discharge the jury, whereupon the court, as we have stated, withdrew the remarks of the prosecutor, and the latter did likewise. The remarks of the prosecutor consisted of a comment upon the evidence. A stronger case is presented in support of objectionable remarks *318by counsel in State v. Ruck, 194 Mo. l. c. 440, in which it is held that uncontradicted evidence on the part of the State may be referred to as such by the prosecutor without error. Here, as in the Ruck case, the remarks complained of amounted to no more than an expression of counsel’s views as to the strength of the testimony on the part of the State, and that it had not been rebutted and there was nothing to the contrary. We have never gone so far as to hold this to be error.

Secondary Evidence. IV. The policy evidencing the insurance on appellant’s stock was shown to be in another State. Secondary evidence was, therefore, from necessity admitted to prove such insurance. [State v. Martin, 229 Mo. 620, 635; State v. Flanders, 118 Mo. 227, 237.]

Sufficiency of the Evidence. V. Without repeating the testimony set forth at some length in the statement, the salient outlines of same may be noted as follows: The small value of the stock and the large amount of insurance; indubitable evidence of arson in the distribution over the interior of the stock, store and basement of quantities of excelsior saturated with oils, of the highly inflammable nature of which we take judicial notice; the barring of the doors and windows from the inside; the admitted fact that no one except the defendant had a key to the premises; his presence at the store at 9:30 o ’clock the night of the fire; and last, but not least, the possession by the appellant, when he was arrested and taken to the police station, of a handkerchief strongly impregnated with the odors of kerosene and turpentine. So much for the evidence of arson, circumstantial it is true, but so closely connected are the facts, all of which point to- appellant’s connection with the transaction, that ample grounds were afforded for the finding of the verdict.

*319Tlie testimony as to the fact that the dwelling adjoining the store was inhabited, shows that there were several persons who not only resided there bnt were in said dwelling during the night when the store was set fire to and that they rushed out of same in their night clothes when the alarm of fire was given. The actual evidence of the setting on fire of the building is shown by the fact that the excelsior which had covered the floor of the basement, had been burned off and the wooden uprights which had formed a framework for a partition in the basement had been charred for two or three feet upward from the floor. [State v. Bobbit, 228 Mo. l. c. 263; State v. McCaffery, 225 Mo. 617.] It would be difficult to find a stronger case of circumstantial evidence of arson than is, here presented. There is, therefore, no merit in the contention that there is an insufficiency of evidence to support the verdict.

In view of the foregoing it follows that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.

Brown, J., concurs; Paris, J., not sitting.
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