Commonwealth v. Shaffer

32 Pa. Super. 375, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 17
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 25, 1907
DocketAppeals, Nos. 30, 31, 32, 33 and 34
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 Pa. Super. 375 (Commonwealth v. Shaffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Shaffer, 32 Pa. Super. 375, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 17 (Pa. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

By section 148 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, it [379]*379is provided that if any person shall willfully and maliciously break, injure or destroy any window or door belonging to any dwelling house or outhouse parcel thereof, such person shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, etc.

By section 1 of the Act of March 28,1865, P. L. 42, it is provided that if any person shall maliciously or wantonly break and throw down any post and rail fence erected for the inelosure of land, or shall carry away, break or destroy any post, rail or other material of which such fence was built, such person shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.

Three of the five indictments under which the appellants were tried in the court below charged them with having committed malicious mischief in violation of the provisions above cited. The property mentioned in each bill is precisely the same, to wit: a certain fence inclosing a lot of ground in the city of Johnstown, formerly the property of one John Schonhart, and the doors and windows which were part of the dwelling house erected on said property. All of the defendants named in these three bills of indictment, as well as those named in two other bills to be hereafter mentioned, were tried together before the same jury, and on every bill there was rendered a verdict of guilty with a recommendation 'to the mercy of the court. At the conclusion of the trial the learned trial court was asked to direct a verdict in favor of the defendants, and his refusal to so instruct the jury constitutes one of the assignments of error.

The offenses described and prohibited by the statutes quoted are species of an offense long known as malicious mischief. This offense, whilst varying somewhat in its minor details owing to the different statutory enactments in different jurisdictions, has from the remotest times been individuated by certain peculiar attributes which must be shown to exist in every case in order to support a conviction. The definitions of it-adopted by standard text-writers, and indeed its name itself,clearly indicate that malidious intent towards the owner real or' constructive of the property injured must always be proven.Without such intent this particular offense does not and cannot exist. Hence it has ever been held that where the injurious act is done or committed in the exercise or enforcement of what the defendant honestly believes to be his legal right, even [380]*380though such belief should be a mistaken one, there can be no conviction: Whart. Cr. Law, secs. 1065 and 1067; Bishop’s Cr. Law, secs. 298, 570 and 998; Com. v. Drass, 146 Pa. 55. This is but another application of the controlling principle so often announced in cases of larceny, namely, that the intent to steal is the very essence of the offense. If, therefore, one charged with the commission of malicious mischief may successfully defend by showing that the acts complained of, although they may have injured or destroyed the property of another, were done in the mistaken belief that the property was his own, a fortiori it must follow that his defense is complete if he actually shows by the undisputed testimony that his title to the property injured was unquestioned.

It is conceded in the present case that the defendants whose acts are complained of were the servants and employees of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, acting under its authority. It is also agreed that long before the commission of these acts ' that company had regularly begun and completed condemnation proceedings to appropriate and take for public use the ground formerly belonging to the prosecutor, John Schonhart, upon which the fence and the building, of which the doors and windows mentioned in the indictment were parts, stood. The bond of the company, conditioned according to law, had been filed in the court of common pleas of Cambria county and approved without objection on December 28, 1904. Notwithstanding this fact the prosecutor had refused to surrender the possession of the property and continued to occupy it, in spite of a formal notice to vacate,'until June 7, 1905, when the de-' fendants, acting under the instructions of the company, went upon the property to clear away the obstructions so as to prepare it for use for railroad purposes.

We think there can be no doubt that, under our constitution and laws as frequently construed by our Supreme Court, the title of the former owner to the property, including the buildings and fence, was divested as soon as the bond was approved, and the right of the railroad company, in this respect exercising the powers of the state, to enter upon the property and prepare it for, and subject it to, the public use for which it had been condemned, was complete: Hoffman’s Appeal, 118 Pa. 512; Fries v. Southern Pennsylvania Railroad & Mining Co., 85 Pa. [381]*38173 ; Fischer v. Catawissa Railroad Co., 175 Pa. 554. It seems clear to us, therefore, that the commonwealth entirely failed to establish the all-important averment in the bills, to wit: that the property alleged to have been injured “ was then and there the property of John Schonhart,” and that failure ought to have resulted in the acquittal and discharge of the defendants charged with malicious mischief. We do not understand the court below to have in any way denied the principle that the title to this property for railroad purposes vested in the railroad company upon the approval of thé bond, and, as a necessary consequence, the servants, and employees of that company could not be convicted of malicious mischief by following its directions in removing or destroying it. But the court, through some inadvertence, went outside of the averments in the indictment and permitted the jury to consider the injury to carpets, etc., by the tearing down of plastered partitions and otherwise. Inasmuch as the bills of indictment were evidently drawn with care to meet the requirements of the statutes above quoted, we are satisfied that the offense of malicious mischief as charged in the bills of indictment was not made out against the defendants, and their request for binding instructions should have been granted.

The conviction of the remaining defendants in the two bills charging the offense of forcible entry on the same premises and under the same circumstances already adverted to, invites the consideration of a broad question'that, so far as we can discover, has not heretofore been presented to the appellate courts of this state. The law defining and punishing this offense was not designed primarily to protect an individual in the enjoyment of property in his possession, but rather to secure to the people generally the public peace and repose without which a civilized community cannot accomplish the ends for which government is instituted.

The enforcement of those laws which secure to all the people the rights necessary for their common well-being, which advance the public good, is therefore the paramount duty of a state; whilst the right of an individual to possess and enjoy even the property that is demonstrably his, must be secured and exercised in subordination to the higher public right, and only through those channels which the state provides. Hence a man [382]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Pa. Super. 375, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-shaffer-pasuperct-1907.