Pitcher v. People

16 Mich. 142, 1867 Mich. LEXIS 76
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 16 Mich. 142 (Pitcher v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitcher v. People, 16 Mich. 142, 1867 Mich. LEXIS 76 (Mich. 1867).

Opinion

Cooley J.

The information charges that one Samuel Reed, on the 5th day of July, 1865, in the night time, feloniously and burglariously broke and entered the dwelling house of William Moore, in the township of Adrian, with intent the goods and chattels of said William Moore in said dwelling house to steal, take and carry away, and then and there thirty - nine fleeces of wool, of the goods and chattels of said William Moore did steal, take and carry away, and that sgid John Pitcher the said thirty-nine fleeces of wool did receive and have, and aid in concealing, well knowing the same to have been so feloniously and burglariously stolen, &c. The proof tended to show that Reed broke into a barn on the premises of Moore, the situation of which, relative to the house, is described by the latter as follows: “The road runs east and west, and my house is on the north side of the road and some sixty - five feet back from it. My barn is north of the house, in rear of the L part of the house about eight rods. There is a fence from the road to the house, and a little past the west corner, and then it is all open from the house to the barn, and both are in the same yard. The fence around the door yard is built up to each end of the barn, so that the front doors of the barn open into the door yard. At the back side of the barn is a pair of bars, and a door at the end of the barn into the barn yard.” Pitcher being convicted on this information, made full satisfaction to Moore for the value of the wool stolen, [146]*146and then claimed that, under § 5765 of the Comp. L. it was not competent for the court to sentence him to confinement in the state prison, inasmuch as the larceny by Reed was only a simple larceny; the term “burglarious larceny” being, as is claimed, inapplicable to any offense described in the statutes, and the various compound larcenies for which the statutes provide penalties, being all with different accessories than those accompanying this case.

It is argued, first, that the act of Reed was not burglary, because the offense as described in the statute in the sections which the prosecution suppose applicable to such a case, is confined to the breaking and entering a “dwelling house” in the night time, with intent, etc. ( Comp. L. 5754 and 5755), and the words “dwelling house” are so used throughout the chapter where those sections ■ occur, as to show the legislative intent that they should include only the dwelling house proper, and not the adjoining outbuildings used therewith for domestic purposes (and which would be included by the designation at the common law), inasmuch as all such buildings are distinctively enumerated in other sections by which punishment of unlawful acts therein is provided for.

The statutory definition of burglary in a dwelling house, is the same as that of the common law; and we must infer that the statute designs simply to provide for the punishment of the common law offense, unless we discover some reason for believing that the legislature employed the definition in some new and restricted sense. No-other reason is suggested, except that the words “dwelling house” are used with restricted meaning in prescribing penalties for other offenses — a reason the force of which must depend upon other considerations.

If the statute had provided distinct punishments for burglary in the dwelling house proper, and in the outhouses, etc. used in connection therewith, a legislative intent to employ the words “dwelling house” in a sense not embracing [147]*147such outhouses, would be very apparent; but it will be perceived, by an examination of the statute, that no such division of the common law offense has been made, and that unless the words “dwelling house” are used in the sections referred to in their common law sense, many burglaries will not be covered by the statute, and their punishment will consequently not be provided for at all. Thus, entering in the night time without breaking, or breaking and entering in the daytime, any out-house adjoining a dwelling-house and occupied therewith, with felonious intent, is made a felony by the statute— Comp. L. §5757, while breaking and entering in the night time with like intent, is not provided for at all, unless the designation of dwelling house, in §§ 5754, 5755, will embrace such outhouses also. This consideration will go far to disprove the position of the plaintiff in error, since we are not lightly to infer that it was designed to leave crimes of this grave character without provision for their proper punishment. But I am of opinion that, in all cases where a common law definition is employed, we must act upon the presumption that it is so employed in the common law sense, unless we have distinct and satisfactory evidence to the contrary. It is a cardinal rule in the interpretation of statutes that words which have acquired a well-defined technical meaning, are to be understood in their technical sense, especially when employed by way of definition. There may be reasons of more or less force for a more specific enumeration of buildings in defining statutory offenses, which would not apply when the common law offense of burglary was in question; in regard to which the meaning of the terms of art immemorially employed, has been so well settled by judicial decisions that any change in definition would only tend to suggest questions, and to unsettle the law.

There can be no doubt that the barn in question would have been regarded as within the curtilage, and embraced by the term “ dwelling house ” as a part of the congregated [148]*148buildings occupied and used by the family for domestic purposes, and that consequently tbe act of Reed would have been a burglary at the common law — 4 Bl. Com. 225; People v. Taylor, 2 Mich. 250; and see 1 Bish. Cr. L. § 171. It was therefore, I think, a burglary under the statute, and correctly described in the information.

But it is further argued that, even assuming Reed’s act to be burglary, the larceny by him in the building must still be regarded as simple larceny only, and that by no provision in the statute could it have been punished as compound larceny. If Reed, it is said, had been informed against for the larceny and burglary both, by the same information, and had been acquitted of the burglary, but convicted of the larceny, the conviction and punishment must have been for simple larceny only, since none of the compound larcenies which the statute punishes are described as committed in the night time in such a building. This may be true, but it does not appear to me entirely conclusive. For it is now well settled that, upon such an information, the defendant might be convicted generally ; the larceny being proved to characterize the intent with which the breaking and entering was accomplished — Commonwealth v. Hope, 22 Pick. 1; Jones v. State, 11 N. H. 269; State v. Brady, 14 Vt. 353 ; so that it is not the simple larceny which is punished in such a case, but the graver crime which the larceny characterizes.

I apprehend that when the words “simple larceny,” are employed by the statute in reference to the punishment of receivers, they have reference only to such larcenies as are not accompanied by any such circumstances as aggravate the offense and increase the punishment, whether they be technically enumerated as larcenies or not.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Mich. 142, 1867 Mich. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitcher-v-people-mich-1867.