Thе defendant, George F. Neary, is presently serving a 5-year sentence imposed in 1976 after he was found *27 to be a violator of a deferred sentence. He had received that sentence on July 3, 1972, after plеading nolo contendere in the Superior Court to an indictment charging that he had entered an apartment intending to commit larceny. Neary now contends that his indictment should be quashed because it fails to chаrge an offense. 1
Four years after the deferred sentence was imposed, Neary appeared in the Superior Court, admitted violating the terms of that sentence and, following receipt of a prеsentence report, was brought before Judge Bourcier for sentencing. At that hearing, the prosecuting attorney advised the judge that Neary had received the deferred sentence on a charge of burglary, an offense carrying a minimum sentence of 5 years and a maximum of life imprisonment. A 5-year sentence was imposed. Two months later, however, Neary’s motion to vacate that sentence was granted by Judge Bourcier. The judge confessed error in his earlier belief that the original indictment charged Neary with burglary. Indeed, he said that as he read the indictment, he was uncertain where “it fits,” and that he was satisfied that he had improperly imposed a 5-year sentence for the violation. Accordingly, he vacated that sentence and referred the case to Judge Mackenzie, who had originally deferred imposition of sentence.
When that referral was considered on November 17, 1976, the prosecutor advised the court that in the state’s view the indictment charged an offense specifically provided for by G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §ll-8-3:
2
entry of a dwelling
*28
house with intent to commit larceny. In response to Judge Mackenzie’s announcement that he was continuing the case so that he might have an opportunity to read a supplemental presentence report, dеfense counsel, relying on
State
v.
Fortes,
While that appeal was pending, Neary applied for post-сonviction relief, claiming (1) that the underlying indictment did not charge an offense and should therefore be quashed; and (2) that his conviction should be vacated and he should be allowed to replead because, contrary to the rule enunciated in
Bishop
v.
Langlois,
We need consider only Neary’s contention that the indictment alleging that he “did enter the apartment of one Charles Sullivan with intent to commit larceny” fails to charge him with a crime. In countering that argument, the state admits that the indictment does not refer to the specific statute upon which the offense is predicated. It argues, how
*29
ever, that such a designation is unnecessary under the rule adopted in §12-12-6
3
and
State
v.
Domanski,
The state’s argument would be more convincing if §11-8-3 were the only statutory provision requiring consideration. Then, it could well be argued that common sense dictates that an apartment is a dwelling house. Section 11-8-3, however, is not the only statute that we need cоnsider.
An examination of its legislative history discloses that §11-8-3, together with what is now §11-8-2, was originally adopted as a single, one-paragraph enactment.
4
The statute
*30
retained its combined form in G.L. 1938, ch. 608. It was first sectionalized in the 1956 General Laws. That bifurcation, however, was not accomplished by the Legislature, but by' the compilers who prepared the 1956 General Laws. In these circumstances, in order to ascertain what conduct the Legislaturе intended to criminalize, we must look to the original 1928 enactment and not to the separate parts into which that enactment was fragmented in 1956.
See State
v.
Brown,
Viewed in this light, we find that in the first clause of the 1928 enactment, the Legislature usеd both the term “dwelling house,” and the word “apartment” in a context that strongly suggests that the legislators intended neither that the two be synonymous nor that the term “dwelling house” include the narrower word “apartment.” Had the Legislature intended either of those results, it could have accomplished that purpose by using only the term “dwelling house” and omitting the word “apartment.” But just as it also used the words “outbuilding” and “garage” as meaning something different from a “dwelling house,” so, too, did it use the word “apartment.” We must assume that it did so intending to accomplish some useful purpose and contemplating that each of those words would have some force and effect.
See Providence Journal Co.
v.
Mason,
This conclusion is supported by the fact that in the second clause of the 1928 enactment, now §11-8-3, the word “dwelling house” stands alone. The Legislature must have intended *31 to distinguish between the term “apartment” and the term “dwelling house” if it used them in contrasting ways in the same statute. We must conclude therefore that, as used in chapter 1209, the word “apartment,” like the words “garage” and “outbuilding,” has a meaning different from the term “dwelling house.” The charge thаt Neary “enter[ed] the apartment of one Charles Sullivan with intent to commit larceny” is therefore not encompassed by the terms of §11-8-3.
In sum, then, Neary has “the constitutional right to be clearly informed of the acсusation against him so that he may defend the same and later plead a conviction or acquittal in bar of a subsequent charge for the same offense, and, further so that the court, upon conviction, may pronounce sentence according to the right of the case.”
State
v.
Domanski,
“I am satisfied that when I considered this matter as a burglary, violation burglary offense, that I was in error. No ifs, ands оr buts about it.
“As I read the indictment, I am not certain where it fits. I don’t know where it sets, under 11-8-2 or 11-8-3. 11-8-2 requires breaking and entering, and 11-8-3 provides for entering a dwelling with intent to commit larceny. But this indictment charges entering an apartment, so I think the more we look at the indictment, the more we see problems here.”
In the words of Judge Bourcier, the more we look at the indictment, the more we are satisfied that it does not charge an offense.
For thе reasons stated, the defendant’s appeal from the judgment in the postconviction proceedings is sustained, the judgment appealed from is reversed, and the case is *32 remanded to the Superior Court for quashal of the indictment and for such other proceedings in both appeals as may be appropriate.
Notes
Neary also argues (1) that his plea of nolo contendere should be vacated and thаt he should be allowed to replead to the 1972 indictment, and (2) that the 5-year sentence was illegal. However, his initial contention that the indictment does not charge an offense is dispositive and makes unnecеssary our consideration of those additional assertions.
General Laws 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §11-8-3 reads as follows:
“Every person who, with intent to commit murder, rape, robbery, arson or larceny, shall enter any dwelling house at any time of the day or night, or who with such intent shall, during the daytime, enter any other building, or ship or vessel, shall be imprisoned not more than ten (10) years or be fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500) or suffer both such fine and imprisonment.”
General Laws 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §12-12-6 provides:
“The indictment or complaint may charge, and is valid and sufficient if it charges, the offense for which the defendant is being prosecuted in one or more of the following ways:
(a) By using the name given to the offense by the cоmmon law or by a statute.
(b) By stating so much of the definition of the offense, either in terms of the common law or of the statute defining the offense or in terms of substantially the same meaning, as is sufficient to give the court and the defendant notice of what offense is intended to be charged.
The indictment or complaint may refer to a section or subsection of any statute creating the offense charged therein, and in determining the vаlidity or sufficiency of such indictment or complaint regard shall be had for such reference.”
This statute has since been repealed by P.L. 1972, ch. 169, §20 and Super. R. Crim. P. 7(c) replaces it.
Public Laws 1928, ch. 1209, §1, reads as follows:
“Every person who shall break and entеr at any time of the day or night any dwelling house or apartment whether the same is occupied or not, or any outbuilding or garage attached to or adjoining any dwelling house, *30 without the consent of the owner or tenant of such dwelling house, apartment, building, or garage shall be imprisoned not more than three years or be fined not more than three hundred dollars or shall suffer both such fine and imprisonment; and every person who with intent to commit murder, rape, robbery, arson or larceny shall enter any dwelling house at any time of the day or night, or who with such intent shall during the daytime enter any other building, or ship or vessel shall be imprisoned not more than ten years or be fined not more than five hundred dollars or suffer both such fine and imprisonment.”
