58 So. 925 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
Lead Opinion
At common law neither the husband nor the wife could be convicted of arson for willfully setting fire to or burning the property of the other. One of the essential elements of arson is that the offense shall be committed for the purpose of injuring or defrauding the party in possession of the property at the time of the commission of the offense. As the husband and wife, in contemplation of law, are one — the Avife being under the protection of the husband, feme covert — the common law declared that, “to constitute the offense, there should be an intent to injure or defraud some third person,” and the husband and wife, being identified with each other as one person, were therefore, by virtue of their peculiar status to each other?1 held by the common-law judges as unable to commit the offense, the one against the other.—Rex v. Elizabeth March, 1 Moody, C. C. 182.
As arson is an offense against the possession rather than property, it Avas also held that a tenant in possession and occupancy of a house under a lease could not be guilty of arson in willfully setting fire to or burning such house while in such possession and occupancy under the lease.—State v. Young, 139 Ala. 136, 36 South. 19, 101 Am. St. Rep. 21.
To correct the mischiefs- arising from the doctrines above stated, the Legislature,’ in adopting our present Code, provided that “any person who willfully sets fire
By adopting tbe above section, tbe Legislature simply destroyed a defense which certain persons, prior to its adoption, were, under tbe law, authorized to make to indictments charging them with tbe crime of arson. Tbe section creates no new offense. It simply declares that tbe party charged with such crime shall not be acquitted because such party was, at tbe time of tbe alleged pífense, the husband-, tbe wife, or tenant of tbe party whose property was willfully set fire to or burned, unless tbe act was done with tbe express consent of tbe owner of tbe property.
In other words, tbe above section has, in a prosecution for arson, rendered tbe fact that tbe defendant was, at tbe time of tbe alleged offense, tbe husband, tbe wife, or tbe tenant of the party named in tbe indictment as tbe owner of tbe property, irrelevant and incompetent as evidence unless it is accompanied by evidence tending to show that tbe wrong alleged to have been committed was done with tbe express consent of tbe owner of tbe property. By adopting said section tbe Legislature brought tbe husband, tbe wife, and tbe tenant of tbe owner of tbe property willfully set fire to or burned within the direct operation of sections 6295, 6296, and 6299 of tbe Code.—State v. Law Lamar, Jr., 58 South., present term.
As tbe Code prescribes forms of indictments for arson in its three degrees, and as tbe indictment in this case charges, in tbe exact language of tbe form prescribed by
2. It has been many times decided that the declarations of a party in possession of property, explanatory of his possession, are competent evidence, and the rule is general that declarations made against the interest of the party making them are also competent evidence.—Holman v. Clark, 148 Ala. 291, 41 South. 765.
In this case there was evidence, introduced by the state when offering its testimony in chief, that, while the defendant was in possession of the residence when it was burned, his possession was the possession of his wife. One of the witnesses for the state testified that he had insured the property for $1,000 “for Mrs. J. E. Williams,” and that three or four days before the residence was destroyed the defendant came to him and obtained a vacancy permit on said premises for the purpose of keeping the insurance policy alive while the residence was unoccupied. In addition to the above, the witness, Gus Hubbard, testified that the defendant, a few days before it was burned, in speaking of the residence, “said it was his, in his wife’s, made out in his wife’s name, but it was insured.” The jury were therefore authorized to infer that the residence belonged to the defendant’s wife, and that her name was “Mrs. J. E. Williams,” as alleged in the indictment.
It is a familiar rule that, whenever there is any legal evidence in a case tending to establish the existence of a controverted fact, the question becomes one for the determination of the jury.—Stephens v. State, 1 Ala. App. 159, 55 South. 940.
3. The existence of the policy and the fact that it was issued to Mrs. J. E. Williams were mere collateral mat
4. The fact that the defendant, who, at the time of the commission of the alleged offense, lived at Ensley, some distance from Jacksonville, where the residence which was burned was situated, was, only two or three days before it was destroyed by fire, driving about near Jacksonville with his alleged accomplice; that on that particular occasion he called upon and obtained from the agent of the insurance company a permit to allow the residence to remain-vacant; the fact that the residence was vacant, and was therefore producing no income; and the fact that, shortly after defendant’s arrest, he asked the officer making the arrest if the alleged accomplice had made an affidavit against him connecting him with the alleged offense — were all matters corroborative of the testimony of the alleged accomplice, and they possessed some tendency to connect the defendant with the commission of the corpus delicti.
It is true that the defendant offered explanations as to all these matters, but it was for the jury to say what, if any, weight or credit they would give to such explanations.—Ross v. State, 74 Ala. 532.
The court did not err in refusing to give to the jury the general affirmative charge asked in writing by the defendant in his behalf.—Stephens v. State, supra.
The court, as above stated, properly held that there was some evidence corroborative of the testimony of the alleged accomplice and tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the corpus delicti. The jury had a right to disbelieve all such corroborative evidence, and,- on that account, acquit the defendant. They had
6. In the case of Washington v. State, 106 Ala. 58, 17 South. 546, the Supreme Court says: “Confessions to be admissible must be voluntary, and that they were voluntary must appear. This is usually shown by an examination voir dire as to promises and threats, etc. Where, however, the facts and circumstances under which they were made affirmatively show that there were no improper influences proceeding from the person to whom they were made, or from any other person, or from the surrounding circumstances, the confessions are prima facie free and voluntary and are admissible.”—Hornsby v. State, 94 Ala. 55, 64, 10 South. 522; Stone v. State, 105 Ala. 60, 17 South. 114.
Tested by the above rule, the conversation had between the defendant and the officer who arrested him, in which the defendant asked the officer if the alleged accomplice made the affidavit against him, was admissible. The circumstances surrounding the parties and the conversation itself show that all of the statements made by the defendant in that conversation were freely and voluntarily made.
Neither were the objection's interposed by the defendant, when on the stand as a witness, to being examined
7. The charges requested by the defendant and which the court refused to give to the jury are, with the exception of those above discussed, patently had, and we will not discuss them.
A careful consideration of this record convinces us that the court below, on the trial of this defendant, committed no error. The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
Rehearing
ON APPLICATION FOR REHEARING.
1. In the case of Peinhardt v. State, 161 Ala. 70, 49 South. 831, to which our attention had not been called when the above opinion was written, the Supreme Court used certain language which was at least in apparent conflict with the views above expressed as to the sufficiency of the indictment in this case. As it is our duty —and our constant effort — to conform our opinions to those of the Supreme Court, we certified this question, on this application for a rehearing, to the Supreme Court for its opinion on the subject. In a careful and exhaustive opinion, the Supreme Court, through. Mr. Justice Mayfield, has declared that “there is no variance in the case submitted to us by the Court of Appeals; and that an indictment charging the husband or the wife with arson of the property of the other need not allege the relationship of the parties, nor negative the fact that the property was burned without the express consent of the owner to so burn.”—Williams v. State, 58 South. 921, present term.
We have given this application for a rehearing careful consideration, but we can see no reason why it should be granted. The application for a rehearing is therefore overruled. ' .
Application for rehearing overruled.