Commonwealth v. Williams

56 Mass. 582
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 56 Mass. 582 (Commonwealth v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Williams, 56 Mass. 582 (Mass. 1849).

Opinion

Dewey, J.

We perceive no sufficient grounds for setting aside this verdict. It is undoubtedly the policy of our system of criminal jurisprudence, that the district attorney, oi [585]*585other public officer having official charge of the criminal department, should have the active superintendence and management of all criminal cases, on the trial of the same before the jury. There are obvious considerations for such a course of proceeding. As a general rule, this is required, and the conducting of the case before the court and jury is to be confined to the public prosecutor. But exceptions may occur to this rule, arising from peculiar circumstances applicable to particular cases, which would justify the court in associating with the public prosecutor, at his request, additional counsel to aid him in the conducting of a cause. When this takes place, it must be at the request of the district attorney, and under some stringent reason, arising in the particular case ; and the control and direction of the case must be with the public prosecutor. There is nothing in the present case to show, that the counsel thus associated with the district attorney received any pecuniary compensation, from any private individual, for the services he rendered; and we are to presume, this being a motion addressed in some degree to the sound discretion of the presiding judge, that proper reasons existed for granting the request of the district attorney, that Mr. Farrar should be associated with him in the trial of this case. While we deem it our duty to say, that such additional counsel is not, under ordinary circumstances, to be permitted, yet, when sanctioned by the court, under the limitations suggested, it will not furnish any sufficient ground for setting aside a verdict.

The second question arises upon the exceptions taken to the admission of the evidence, as to the finding of certain tools and implements in the possession of the defendant, and the exhibition of those articles to the jury upon the trial. The objection urged against the admission of this evidence arises from the circumstance that only a part of these tools and implements are such as might apparently have been used in the alleged burglary. As we understand the facts stated in the bill of exceptions, they import nothing further than this, that certain tools and implements were found in [586]*586the possession of the defendant, and were brought into the court room in mass and exhibited to the jury, as well those that might probably have Ven used in the alleged burglary, as other instruments not adapted to the commission of this particular offence. The latter being however parcel of the larger quantity, found in the possession of the defendant, at the time of his arrest, and a part of the articles thus found being of a character that might properly have been submitted to the jury, and relied upon as evidence applicable to the case, the admission of evidence as to the finding of the whole parcel, and the exhibition of the same to the jury, were not objectionable. Without sanctioning the admission of evidence merely tending to show that the defendant had in his possession instruments adapted to the commission of other crimes, we think we may sustain the present ruling, as justified by the character of a portion of the tools and implements, thus found and exhibited as a mass or entire parcel. The exceptions are therefore overruled.

A motion was afterwards filed in arrest of judgment, in this court, on the ground of the insufficiency of the indictment: 1. Because the building alleged to be broken is not therein stated to be the property of any person; 2. Because it is not stated, that the time, in which the offence is alleged to have been committed, was the night-time, in which, by law, such offence may be committed, nor is the hour of the day or night alleged, at which the offence was committed ; and, 3. Because there is no proper and sufficient description of the property alleged to be stolen.

This motion was argued by the same counsel, and the opinion of the court was given at the April term, in Middle-sex, 1849.

Dewet, J.

The first ground relied upon for arresting the

judgment raises the question of the sufficiency of the indictment, in reference to the allegation of property or ownership of the building alleged to have been entered. The indictment charges, that the defendants broke and entered “ the city [587]*587hall of the city of Charlestown.” The objection is, that there is no averment of property in the city of Charlestown. To sustain the objection, reference was made by the counsel for the defendants to the forms of indictments for larcenies, and for other criminal offences affecting personal property. If these were proper tests, the averment in this indictment would be found to be defective. The ownership of personal chattels is stated more fully; the usual form being, that they are the goods and chattels of A. B. ; ” or sometimes, “ the property of A. B.” But a reference to the best books of precedents in criminal pleading will fully sustain the distinction between the modes of describing real and personal property, in reference to the ownership of such property. While the latter is described as has been stated, a very general, if not universal, mode of describing the ownership of real estate, is similar to that adopted in the present case. This is peculiarly so in indictments for arson, burglary, and malicious mischief. 2 Chitty, C. L. 1101; Archbold, C. P. 385, 390, (5th ed.) ; Wharton’s Precedents, 88.

This was the form of indictment in the case of the Comm’th v. Taylor, 5 Bin. 277, for breaking and entering a house, and in the cases of the Comm'th v. Squire, 1 Met. 258, and Comm'th v. Harney, 10 Met. 422, for malicious burning of buildings. The present indictment does sufficiently allege the ownership of the property, and that it was a public building.

It is then further contended, that no larceny was sufficiently charged, and that inasmuch as the statute offence is that of breaking into a public building and committing a larceny therein, both these offences must be technically charged. The alleged defect in the indictment, in this respect, is in the allegation of the felonious taking of sundry bank bills amounting together to the sum of five hundred dollars ” of the goods and chattels of the city of Charlestown. But the indictment also alleges a larceny by the defendants “ of ten pieces of gold coin, current in this commonwealth, called eagles, of the value of ten dollars each, and ten other pieces [588]*588of gold coin, called sovereigns, of the value of five dollars each;” and these larcenies, it is conceded, are alleged with technical accuracy. If the defendant had successfully maintained his position, that no breaking and entering of a building was well charged, by reason of a defect as to the allegation of ownership of such building, this question as to the sufficiency of alleging a larceny as “ of sundry bank bills amounting together to the sum of five hundred dollars ” would have been of importance, in reference to the value of the property stolen, as it would affect materially the punishment to be awarded, if the conviction and sentence were for simple larceny only. But, in reference to the offence, upon which this indictment is found, and for which the defendant is to be punished, the amount of property stolen does not enter into the offence, or affect the statute punishment.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Mass. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-williams-mass-1849.