Dedieu v. . the People

22 N.Y. 178
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 22 N.Y. 178 (Dedieu v. . the People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dedieu v. . the People, 22 N.Y. 178 (N.Y. 1860).

Opinions

I am of opinion that this judgment cannot be sustained. The prisoner has been convicted and sentenced for an offence of which the grand jury never indicted him. *Page 180

In this State, all offences punishable by imprisonment in the State prison are defined by statute. Each separate crime consists in the commission or omission of certain acts under certain circumstances, and, in some cases, with a particular intent. An indictment for any of these offences must charge the defendant, with certainty and precision, with having committed or omitted the acts, under the circumstances and with the intent mentioned in the statute. If any of the ingredients contained in the statute definition are omitted, the indictment is fatally defective, and the defect is not cured by verdict. (2 Hale's P.C., 168, 192, 193; Archbold's Crim. Pleadings, 46; The People v. Allen, 5 Denio, 76.) To bring a party within the statutes under which this conviction took place, there must have been property, real or personal, which was, at the time, insured against loss or damage by fire; the property so insured must have been willfully burned by the accused, and such burning must have been done with the intent to prejudice the insurer. (2 R.S., 667, § 5.) No facts of this kind are mentioned in the present indictment. There is no allusion to any insurance, or to any intention to injure or prejudice any person holding such a relation to the property. Though the indictment may have been a good one for another offence, it certainly was not an indictment under the 5th section of the statute under which the conviction was had. It lacked every averment required in such an indictment.

There is another rule of criminal law which was overlooked on the trial under review. The act which is charged as an offence must be described with such a degree of certainty as to identify and distinguish it from other transactions, so that the party may not be indicted for one thing and tried for another. The rule has been well stated by Judge BRONSON, in The People v. Taylor (3 Denio, 91). "Certainty," he said, "is also required to the end that the defendant may know what crime he is called upon to answer: that the jury may be able to deliver an intelligible verdict; and finally, that the defendant may be able to plead his conviction or acquittal in bar of another prosecution for the same offence." Then, descriptive averments *Page 181 must be proved as averred, for it would be idle to require a certain description of the act complained of to be repeated in the indictment, if the prosecutor were at liberty to prove that particular act or any other criminal act at his pleasure. The rule, therefore, is that the evidence must correspond with the indictment as to all matters of description; and this is so though the pleader has been more particular in his description than he need have been. (Rosc. Crim. Ev., 102; 1 Stark. on Ev., 373.) Now the act imputed to the defendant was setting fire to the dwelling house of Amelia Asselin, situated in the ninth ward of the city of New York. The house was properly enough laid as the dwelling of that person; the statute allowing the name of a lodger in the same building to be stated as the owner. (2 R.S., 657, § 9.) But it turned out in the evidence that he had not set fire to the house at all. What he did, no doubt, endangered the building and was most reprehensible in itself, but it was not the setting fire to the house. He set fire to and attempted to burn up some personal property belonging to himself, an act which was not of itself criminal. But that property was insured and his design in burning it was, probably, to defraud the insurers. No one can fail to see that the subject of the offence and the illegal act itself was wholly misdescribed, and that there was a very wide variance between the allegation and the proof. The prisoner's counsel claimed an acquittal on that ground, but the jury were instructed that they might convict upon the case made by the evidence, variant as it was from the charge in the indictment.

It would no doubt be admitted by the counsel for the prosecution that these objections would be fatal to this conviction by the rules of the common law; but it is claimed that the ruling upon the trial was warranted by the following provisions of the Revised Statutes: "Upon an indictment for any offence consisting of different degrees, as prescribed in this chapter, the jury may find the accused not guilty of the offence in the degree charged in the indictment, and may find such accused person guilty of any degree of such offence inferior to that charged in the indictment, or of an attempt to *Page 182 commit such offence." (2 R.S., 702, § 27.) As understood by the counsel for the prosecution, this enactment would greatly modify and in many cases would supersede the rules which have been mentioned. According to the argument it would not be material how widely the circumstances of the offence proved, might differ from those charged in the indictment, if the latter disclosed a higher degree of an offence arranged in the statutes under the same general name. For instance, many criminal acts, very different in their character and circumstances, are arranged under the name of arson. Thus, burning growing grain, marsh grass, fruit trees, woods and fences, are specifications of arson in the fourth degree. Upon the construction contended for, any of these acts might be proved, and a conviction therefor might take place under the present indictment, in which the defendant is charged with a very different thing, namely, setting fire to an inhabited dwelling house. And cases still more preposterous might occur in respect to other crimes. In manslaughter, the most usual example is the killing of another in the heat of passion, but in a cruel and unusual manner. This is the offence in the second degree. But it is manslaughter in the fourth degree if one keep a mischievous animal, with a knowledge of its propensities, and it kill some person. So in forgery. Forging a will, or a public security for money, are instances of the offence in the first degree; and engraving a plate for bank notes without the authority of the bank, is an example of the offence in the second degree. It certainly is not possible that under an indictment for the higher degree in these cases, the circumstances being stated with the particularity required by the rules of criminal pleading, facts so strikingly different as those required to constitute the offence in the lower degree could be proved, and be the foundation of a conviction; and yet, if the section is to be understood in the sense contended for, such would be the consequence. But the provision is not that in all cases the jury may find the prisoner guilty of the inferior degree, under an indictment for the higher degree of the same offence; but the meaning is, that there is no legal objection to such a *Page 183 result arising out of the circumstance that the crime is divided into several degrees. This division into degrees was a change of the common law, or in some cases an innovation upon former statutes. Neither manslaughter, forgery nor burglary formerly admitted of degrees; but in framing the Revised Statutes, it was seen that many criminal acts, very different in their moral aspects and in their effects upon society, fell under the same name, and were punishable in the same manner. Hence an effort was made towards a more discriminating arrangement; and the definition of different degrees of several of the leading offences was the result. These different degrees became in legal effect so many different offences.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Gouyagadosh
295 A.D.2d 246 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2002)
People v. Helliger
180 Misc. 2d 318 (New York Supreme Court, 1998)
People v. Udzinski
146 A.D.2d 245 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1989)
People v. McGee
131 Misc. 2d 770 (New York Supreme Court, 1986)
People v. Ramirez
79 A.D.2d 978 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1981)
People v. Lucas
95 Misc. 2d 334 (New York County Courts, 1978)
People v. Smith
91 Misc. 2d 300 (New York Supreme Court, 1977)
Mildwoff v. Cunningham
432 F. Supp. 814 (S.D. New York, 1977)
People v. Johnson
348 N.E.2d 564 (New York Court of Appeals, 1976)
Worrell v. State
307 So. 2d 74 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1974)
People v. Flores
42 A.D.2d 431 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1973)
People v. Usher
39 A.D.2d 459 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1972)
United States ex rel. Russell v. Vallee
322 F. Supp. 579 (S.D. New York, 1971)
People v. Wall
34 A.D.2d 215 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1970)
People v. Martini
62 Misc. 2d 544 (Criminal Court of the City of New York, 1970)
People v. Hetenyi
50 Misc. 2d 311 (New York Supreme Court, 1966)
People v. Roderman
34 Misc. 2d 497 (New York County Courts, 1962)
People v. Legacy
4 A.D.2d 453 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1957)
People v. Mussenden
127 N.E.2d 551 (New York Court of Appeals, 1955)
People v. Mussenden
284 A.D. 479 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.Y. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dedieu-v-the-people-ny-1860.