12 S.C. 567 | S.C. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an indictment for burglary in-breaking and entering, in the night-time, into a mill-house and stealing therefrom flour and corn. The mill-house was situated about seventy-five yards from the dwelling-house of the prosecutor, on the opposite side of a public road, and was not inclosed. No one slept in it. The Circuit judge charged the jury “ that the mill was the subject of burglary, and instructed them that if they believed that the defendants broke into it in the night-time and carried away the flour and corn, as alleged in the indictment,, they must find them guilty.” To this charge and instruction exception was duly taken, upon the ground that the mill-house was not the subject of burglary. The defendants having been found guilty, were sentenced “to be imprisoned at hard labor in the state penitentiary for three years, and to pay a fine of one dollar.” Exception was also taken to so much of the sentence-as imposed a fine.
At common law, the offence of burglary consisted in breaking and entering the dwelling-house of another with intent to commit a felony therein; and the term “ dwelling-house ” was held to include all outhouses contiguous to the dwelling and parcel thereof, if within the curtilage. 4 Bl. Com. 224; 2 Russ, on. Crimes 14; 2 Bish. on Crim. L., § 104. These authorities show that to bring an outhouse within the curtilage of a dwelling-house,, it must be parcel of or appurtenant thereto, and be connected therewith by being under the same roof or within the same inclosure. For, as is said by Blackstone, “ if the barn, stable or warehouse be parcel of the mansion-house and within the same common fence, though not under the same roof or contiguous, a burglary may be committed therein, for the capital house protects and privileges all its branches or appurtenants, if within the curtilage or homestall.” So, in Russell, it is said “any out
The next question is, whether the mill-house in question can be brought within the class of houses which, by the act of 1866, (Gen. Stat., ch. CXXIX., § 32,) have been declared to be subjects of burglary. The language of that statute is as follows: “ With respect to the crimes of burglary and arson, and to all criminal offences which are constituted or aggravated by being committed in a dwelling-house, any house, outhouse, apartment, building, erection, shed or box in which there sleeps a proprietor, tenant, watchman, clerk, laborer, or person who lodges there, with a view to the protection of property, shall be deemed a dwelling-house; and of such a dwelling-house, or of any other dwelling-house, all houses, outhouses, buildings, sheds and erections, which are within two hundred yards of it, and are appurtenant to it, or to the same establishment of which ■ it is an appurtenance, shall be deemed parcels.”
Now, in order to bring this mill-house within the terms of this statute, it is not sufficient to show that it is situated within
The question raised by the second exception cannot arise under this view of the case, inasmuch as the judgment below must be set aside, and, of course, the sentence based upon such judgment must go with it.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is set aside and a new trial ordered.
New trial granted.