People v. Durkin

5 Park. Cr. 243
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Park. Cr. 243 (People v. Durkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Durkin, 5 Park. Cr. 243 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court, Morgan, J.

The defendant was convicted of arson in the second degree, for firing a building adjoining a certain inhabited dwelling house, situate in' the city of Syracuse, belonging to one Austin Wagner. The same indictment charged the defendant with firing his own house in the night [247]*247time, it being a dwelling house, and “ there, then and there being within the said dwelling house some human being, to wit, one Ann Welch.”

The evidence tended'to show that Ann Welch was an accomplice. The court charged the jury that if Ann Welch was an accomplice, then the prisoner could not be convicted under that count.

Ann Welch swore that one John Smith was in the defendant’s house the night of the fire, and slept with the defendant.

The defendant’s counsel thereupon raised the point that if Ann Welch was an accomplice, and Smith was not, there could be no conviction under the indictment. The court overruled the point, and the prisoner’s counsel excepted.

And this is the only point of any serious difficulty in the case.

The indictment did not charge that John Smith was in the house at the time of the fire. If there had been such a charge, perhaps the jury would have found the defendant guilty of ' arson in the first degree, for the jury might have believed Ann Welch as to Smith’s lodging there at the time of the fire. Evidently the jury must have believed that Ann Welch was an accomplice, or they would have found the defendant guilty of arson in the first degree.

Does it lie in the mouth of the defendant to say that he was guilty of a higher crime than the one for which he was convicted, when the difference is only in degree? The language of this objection is, that the defendant was guilty of arson in the first degree, and therefore was not guilty in the second degree.

The statute (2 R. S., 657, §9), defines arson in the first degree to consist “in willfully setting fire to or burning in the night time a dwelling house, in which there shall be at the time some human being; and any house, prison, jail or other edifice, which shall have been usually occupied by persons lodging therein at night, shall be deemed a dwelling house of any person so lodging therein.”

[248]*248The offense of arson in the second degree, for which the defendant was convicted, is defined as follows: ‘‘ Every person who shall willfully set fire to or burn in the night time any shop, warehouse or other building, not being the subject of arson in the first degree, but adjoining to or within the curtilage of any inhabited dwelling house, so that such house shall be endangered by such firing, shall, upon conviction, be adjudged , guilty of arson in the second degree.”' (2 R. &, 666, § 2.)

It is argued that if the defendant’s house was occupied by John Smith as a lodger at the time the defendant fired it, it was the subject of arson in the first degree, and therefore the firing of it, although it endangered Wagner’s house, which adjoined it, could not be arson in the second degree. This argument, if sound, would require the district attorney to specify in his indictment that the building set fire to was not the subject of arson in the first degree. The construction contended for makes it a part of the ingredient of the offense of arson in the-second degree, that the house should not be so circumstanced as to be the subject of arson in the first degree. It is admitted that the language of the statute seems to favor such a construction, although in practice it has never been thought necessary to incorporate the negative into the indictment by way of exception.

The usual rule is well settled that where the accusation includes an offense of an inferior degree, the jury may convict of the less offense. Thus upon an indictment for burglariously stealing, the prisoner may be convicted of a simple larceny; upon an indictment for stealing privately from a person, the prisoner may be convicted of simple larceny (1 Chitty Cr. 638); and by our Revised Statutes the jury may find the prisoner guilty of an offense in an. inferior degree when the offense consists of different degrees. (2 R. S., 702, §2.) In The People v. Jackson (3 Hill R., 99), the indictment charged the defendant with producing an abortion of a quick child, which is punishable as a felony. The jury were allowed to convict the defendant of a misdemeanor only, the proof being that the child was not quick.

[249]*249And where there are several species of the same general crime, with more or fewer circumstances of aggravation, subject to a gradation of punishment, the defendant may be convicted of either species, under an indictment which charges the higher offense.

It may be said, however, that the offense of arson in the first degree does not include arson in the second degree, but that it is a different offense. True, it does not necessarily include the inferior offense; but when it does so in fact, where is the difficulty, of bringing it within the géneral rule? If there is no inhabited dwelling house adjoining the one set fire to, there could be no arson in the second degree. But it happens here there was such a building; so the defendant was not only guilty of firing his own house, but of endangering that of his neighbor adjoining it. This last was a lesser1 offense, but it was included in the greater offense in this particular case; and the indictment was drawn with a separate count, charging it as a distinct offense, so as to meet the facts of the case.

It was not supposed, on the argument, that the objection would be available, if it had been left to the jury to decide, as a matter of fact, whether Smith was a lodger or not in the defendant’s house. If no one lodged there, the building would not be the subject of arson in the first degree, and the firing of it would be arson in the second degree—made so by the fact that it adjoined the inhabited dwelling house of Austin Wagner.

The main difficulty, therefore, arises out of the statutory definition of arson in the first and second degrees; for it is apparent that the prisoner was guilty of arson in the first degree, upon the hypothesis that his own building contained Smith as a lodger. The jury were, however, told by the judge that, notwithstanding this, they could legally convict him of arson in the second degree. The exception is to the legal proposition, and not to the propriety of advising the jury that they ought not to convict the defendant of the second offense if they believed him guilty of the principal offense.

[250]*250The question, then, comes back to the point whether the defendant may be indicted and convicted of arson in the second degree, when the facts proved on the trial would justify a conviction for the principal offense, provided the indictment had properly charged it. lío doubt a person may be indicted and convicted of larceny, although the facts prove a burglary. Evidence of an assault with a weapon dangerous to life, will support a complaint for a simple assault, even if the complaint alleges that it was not committed with a weapon dangerous to life. (14 Gray R., 100.) And in Commonwealth v. Pike (3 Cush. R., 181), the defendant was held to have no just ground of objection to a conviction upon- an indictment for manslaughter, because the facts proved that he had been guilty of' murder. The propriety of taking such a conviction is another matter.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Park. Cr. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-durkin-nysupct-1862.