20 Ind. 242 | Ind. | 1863
Indictment for arson. Acquittal of the defendant, not because he did not fire the buildings burned, but because they were not such that the burning of them constituted arson.
The buildings burned were in process - of erection, to be vised, one as a dwelling, the other as a barn, but were, at the time of burning, incomplete, and had never been used for the purposes for which they were being erected.
The statute upon the subject of arson is as follows :
Every person who shall wilfully and maliciously set fire to the dwelling house, barn, stable, boat, water-craft, mill, mill house, distillery, manufactory, mechanic’s or artificer’s ■shop, store house building or room, occupied as a shop or office for professional business, or printing office of another, ■or any public bridge, court house, jail, market house, church ■or meeting house, school house, seminary or college edifice, ■orbuilding thereto belonging, or other public building, or to any cord wood in piles or ricks, or stacks or shocks of grain or hay, or any fence or growing grain, of the value of twenty ■dollars; or to any house, shop, wood house, water station or ■other building connected with any railroad; or shall in like manner set fire to any bridge, or any part of the structure of any railroad, shall be deemed guilty of arson, and, upon conviction, he fined not exceeding double the value of' the property destroyed, and be imprisoned in the State’s prison not less than .two ‘nor more than ten years; and should the life
We have no common law crimes. Ours are all statutory, both in name and definition. Marvin v. The State, 19 Ind. R. p. 181.
The above statute does not, as do those of some of tlie States, in terms, include an unfinished structure.' Can the Court, influenced by the rule that the penal laws must be strictly construed, extend the operation of the statute so as to embrace such ? As applied to this case the statute reads: “Every person who shall, &c., set fire to the dwelling house or barn of another,” &c.
We think this language means the dwelling house and barn that are, or have been, actually occupied by another,for the uses specified. See 3 Greenleaf’s Ev., p. 52, sec. 51. ■
The judgment is affirmed.