21 Fla. 242 | Fla. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court:
In the month of March, A. D. 1884, Charles Tilly, the plaintiff in error, was indicted by the grand jury of. Marion county under Chapter 3468, Laws 1883, which reads as follows: “ Whoever breaks and enters, or enters without breaking, in the day time or night time, or enters in
This indictment was endorsed in printed words: “ A true bill,” and beneath these words was signed in writing
Erancis E. .Harris, Eoreman.”
Counsel for Tilly moved to quash this indictment for these reasons.
, 1st. Because the entry is not alleged to have been done burglariously.
2d. The entry is alleged to have been done feloniously.
3d, The ownership of the property in the said house is not alleged.
4th. The indictment does not upon its face show that the entry was into such a building as is contemplated by the statute.
5th. It is not alleged that the said entry was committed in the day time or in the night time.
• 6th. Because the indictment is not endorsed “a true bill,” in writing and signed by the foreman of the grand jury; but is endorsed with the words “ a true bill,” in printing, and signed simply “ Erancis E. Harris, Eoreman,”
This motion was overruled by the court and the defendant excepted.
A jury was empanelled, the defendant tried and a verdict of guilty rendered. Counsel for defendant then moved
The errors, assigned' in this court are as follows:
1st. The court erred in overruling the motion to quash the indictment.
2d. The court erred in permitting the question, “ why did you go to Charles Tilly’s house to look for your meat ?”■ to be asked of the witness Raney Osteen, the defendant objecting to the question on the ground that it tended to ■elicit hearsay and conjectural testimony.
3d. The court erred in refusing to give the first, third and fourth instructions requested by defendant’s counsel.
4th. The court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment.
5th. The court erred in permitting the answer of Raney Osteen to the question propounded by the State’s Attorney, to wit: “ Why did you go to Charles Tilley’s house to-look for your meat?” to go to the jury, and to be considered by them as evidence, the said question being objected to as tending to elicit hearsay and conjectural testimony, and the said witness answering that she (the witness) went to prisoner’s house because other persons had told her the meat was there, i. e., in the prisoner’s house.
Offences prescribed and defined by the statute must be charged in the language of the statute or language equivalent. This rule has long been established and frequently announced by this and other courts. McGahagin vs. The State, 17 Fla., 665 ; People vs. Lewis, 61 Cal., 366 ; Stevens vs. State, 18 Fla., 904; Schmidt vs. State, 78 Ind., 41 ; Jones vs. State, 12 Texas Ct. Ap., 424.
The statute under which this indictment was found describes the whole offence, and the indictment charges the crime in its very words. It is not necessary for the indict-
. The statute does not make the offence burglary, and it is not treated as such; it is made a felony, punishable as a felony, for breaking and entering, or entering without breaking, in the day time or night time, with intent to commit a misdemeanor. It is not necessary to allege the •ownership of the property in any particular individual. The charge is of willfully entering a building, to wit: a meat house of one Nancy Osteen. In cases for burglary it has been held that it would be sufficient to lay the ownership of the house' in a married woman, who lives apart from her husband and has the occupancy and control of it Ducher vs. The State, 18 Ohio, 308. In this ease Nancy Osteen testified that she was a married woman ; that the meat house belonged to her husband, Allen Osteen. “ He left me more than a year ago, and has not lived with me since. I have several children and we get our support from this property. I have had control and use of the property and the house the meat was taken from since he left me.”
The indictment is properly endorsed. It makes no difference that the words, “ a true bill,” are printed, if appended thereto is the signature of the foreman of the grand jury. In this case .the signature was so appended. Gallaher vs. The State, 17 Fla., 370.
The indictment charges that the offence was committed ■on “ the twenty-eighth day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-four.” This is a sufficient designation of the time under the statute. 12 Metcalf, 240. This statute was evidently enacted by the Legislature to fill a want of proper laws to punish such
The next error assigned is that the court erred in permitting the State’s Attorney to ask the witness, Haney Os-teen, “why did you go to Charles Tilly’s house to look for your meat ?” Defendant’s counsel objected to this question upon the ground that it tended to elicit hearsay and conjectural testimony. Another error is assigned in connection with this, viz-: in permitting the answer to this question to go to the jury. The answer to the question was, “ because other persons had told me that the meat was there.” Mrs. Osteen testified in relation to the meat which was alleged to have been taken, as follows: “ There was thirty-six pouudsof meat gone; the meat was worth fifteen cents a pound. I went to Charles Tilly’s house the next day with the officer who executed the search warrant and found the meat in his' house.” The question _was then asked by the State’s Attorney: “ Why did you go to Charles Tilly’s house to look for the meat?” This question was objected to as is stated in the assigned error above, the objection was overruled, and an exception was taken. The witness answered as is above stated. To this answer the record does not show that any objection was made or exception taken. She further testifies: “The officer who searched the house found meat locked up in the house. I was present. I know it was my meat.” ‘The question asked was not objectionable, and it was not error in the court below to admit it. It does not follow from it that it would “ elicit hearsay or conjectural testimony.” The witness may have seen the defendant in s'ome suspicious position with reference to her meat house, or seen his tracks leading towards his house, or found other evidence to satisfy herself
The other alleged errors relate to the refusal of the court to charge the jury as asked by the counsel of the defendant, as follows:
“ 1st. The jury must be satisfied that the meat house from which the meat is said to have been stolen was the meat house of Nancy Osteen ; if on the contrary you find that the meat house was the property of Allen Osteen, the husband of Nancy Osteen, you will find the defendant not guilty.”
2d. The court did not err in refusing this charge. Nancy Osteen was in possession and actual occupation of the meat house. It is not necessary to allege the.ownership of the property under this statute in any particular individual. If it were necessary, we are inclined to think that the person in the occupancy and control of the premises at
“ 3d. The indictment is for entering without breaking with intent to commit a misdemeanor. If the proof is that the house was both broken and entered, then the defendant ought not to be convicted under this indictment. A breaking under the law is committed if a latch were lifted or pulled aside and a door opened.”
■ There was no error in the court thus declining to charge. The offence consists in breaking and entering, or eutering without breaking in the day time or night time, or entering in the night time, “ with intent to commit a misdemeanor.” The punishment affixed to either or all of these offences is the same. The statute practically abolishes the distinctions between the breaking and entering, and entering without breaking, the intent being to commit a misdemeanor.
“4th. Where burglary is connected with larceny, mere possession of the stolen goods, without any other evidence of guilt, is not to be regarded as evidence of the burglary unless there is other evidence of guilty conduct.”
Uo burglary was charged against the defendant in the indictment. He was alleged to have committed an offence not known as burglary, but made by statute, to punish a misdemeanor, committed in a particular manner. The strict forms and rules which apply to the commission of the crime of burglary at common law, are not necessarily
Had he introduced such evidence as would have given a reasonable account of such possession, the burden of proof would have been upon the State to show that such evidence was false. “ It is well settled law that the exclusive possession of the whole or some part of stolen property by the prisoner recently after the theft’is sufficient, when standing alone, to east upon him the burden of explaining how he came by it, or of giving some explanation, and if he fail to do so, to warrant the jury in convicting him of the larceny.”
And it is further settled that if the “ property was shown to have been taken by burglary or robbery, such possession unexplained is sufficient also to warrant a conviction of those crimes.” Commonwealth vs. McGorty, 114 Mass., 299; State vs. Hogard, 12 Minn., 293; Knickerbocker vs. The People, 43 N. Y., 177; See State vs. Hodge, 50 N. H., 510.
The evidence authorizes the finding of the jury and the judgment must be affirmed.