Shepherd v. People

5 N.Y. 537
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 5 N.Y. 537 (Shepherd v. 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
Shepherd v. People, 5 N.Y. 537 (N.Y. 1859).

Opinion

Denio, J.

Although we have come to the conclusion that the conviction in this case ought to be reversed on account of the insufficiency of the evidence to establish the guilt of the plaintiff in error, yet, as a new trial will be ordered, it is necessary that we should determine the questions of law which arose upon the trial, one of which, at least, is of considerable importance. It has been strenuously argued that the offence of arson in the first degree cannot be committed if the dwelling-house burned belonged to, and was in the actual possession of, the offender: in other words, that one cannot be guilty of arson in burning his own house. This was undoubtedly the rule of the common law, for the ancient definition of the felony denominated arson was the malicious and voluntary burning of the house of another. (East P. C., 1015.) By the statute 9 George I, ch. 22, it was enacted that if any person should set fire to any house, barn or out-house, &c., every person so offending, being thereof lawfully convicted, should be adjudged guilty of felony without benefit of clergy. This act, not containing the qualification that the building should belong to a person other than the offender, gave rise to a plausible argument that the Parliament intended to leave out that part of the [540]*540common law definition, and thus create a new offence; but the courts held otherwise. In Spalding's case (1 Leach, 258), the prisoner was indicted for voluntarily and maliciously setting fire to his own house; and there being evidence that it was situated so near other buildings as to endanger them, and that the prisoner had insured it and his goods in it, which sufficiently showed the mischievous intention with which he did the act, he was convicted. All the judges, however, were of opinion that the indictment was bad, for that arson at common law was the burning of the house of another, and that the statute (9 George I., ch. 22) did not create a new offence, but only excluded the offender from clergy more clearly. The same doctrine was reiterated in Breeme's case and in Pedley's case. (1 Leach, 261, 277; East P. C., 1022 et seq., where all the cases are collected.).

The statutory enactment respecting arson, in this State, prior to the revision of 1830, followed the language of the English statute of George I, and did not in terms require that the building should be the house of another; and yet it is probable that they would have received the same construction as the act from which they were apparently transcribed, and that the willful burning of one’s own house would not be a felony.

It is apparent that the provisions of the Revised Statutes on this subject were framed with a perfect acquaintance with the English decisions; and that it was intended to define the offence anew and with precision, especially upon the points which had been the subjects of controversy in the courts. Thus: ‘ Arson in the first degree, the punishment of which is prescribed in this title, consists 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 every 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.” (2 R. S., 657, § 9.) That this was intended to be a full description of the crime is apparent, not only from the formal statement that it shall consist [541]*541in the circumstances stated, but from the consideration that it embraces certain particulars which were not before connected with the definition of arson, namely, that it must be a nocturnal burning, and that there must be some living person in the building at the time. There is no ground for the argument applied to the act of George I, that it was only a provision respecting the punishment of an offence created by the common law, and remaining unaltered in its essential features. It is quite clear, on the contrary, that it was the creation of a new offence not known to the common law or to any former statute.

The definition of arson in the second degree, and the first specification of that crime in the third, are equally silent as to the ownership of the subject of the burning. The expression is: any dwelling-house, or any shop, warehouse, &o. (Id., 666, 667, §§ 1, 2, 3.) These provisions relate to the burning of inhabited dwelling-houses in the day-time, and of buildings adjoining to or within the curtilage of a dwelling-house, the burning of which would endanger the dwelling, in the night, and also (§ 3) in the day-time. They are aimed against acts more or less dangerous to life; and it was not regarded as material to the public whether the building burned was that of the offender or of some other person. The remaining definitions of arson relate to buildings other than dwellings, and to those unconnected with dwellings; to properly insured against fire and burned to defraud the insurer, and to ships, vessels, and certain personal property; and in these cases a qualification is introduced to shield a party from punishment who burns property which is his own, and the burning of which is not calculated to injure any one else. In the fourth section it is: the house of another; in the seventh: not being the property of such person; and in the eighth: not belonging to himself. It will thus be seen, that the Legislature took up the subject of arson de novo, and, disregarding the description of the offence at common law, arranged it anew into classes or degrees, specifying by a discriminating description what should be essential to each degree. Where it was intended to make an invasion of the property of another essential to the crime, the descrip[542]*542tion embraced that feature; and where it was not so intended, it was left out. If other evidence were wanting, it would be found in the manner in which the provisions were reported to the Legislature, and the observations of the revisors by which they were accompanied, together with a significant change made by the Legislature when they were enacted. In the section defining arson in the first degree, the words, “burning in the night-time the dwelling-house of another,” contained in the section as reported, were changed into “ burning in the night-time a dwelling-house,” as they now stand in the Revised Statutes. The first specification of arson in the second degree, which was enacted as reported, so far as the present question is concerned, was as follows: “Every person who shall willfully set fire to or burn any inhabited dwelling-house in the day-time which, if committed in the night-time, would be arson in the first degree, shall, upon conviction, be adjudged guilty of arson in the second degree.” In the note attached to this section, the revisors remark that, as drawn, it would include the case of a man setting fire to his own house. The Legislature not only enacted it in this particular as drawn, but they changed the prior sections defining arson in the first degree to correspond with it in the respect in which we are considering it. It is, therefore, quite impossible to deny that it was the intention of the Legislature to make one guilty of arson in the first degree in burning his own dwelling-house, if done under the circumstances mentioned in the definition of that offence. The British Parliament has lately modified the law respecting arson, so as to render it immaterial whether the house burned be that of the offender himself or of a third person. (Stat. 1 Vic., ch.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.Y. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-people-ny-1859.