State ex rel. Wooten v. Bomar

352 S.W.2d 5, 209 Tenn. 166, 13 McCanless 166, 1961 Tenn. LEXIS 361
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 352 S.W.2d 5 (State ex rel. Wooten v. Bomar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Wooten v. Bomar, 352 S.W.2d 5, 209 Tenn. 166, 13 McCanless 166, 1961 Tenn. LEXIS 361 (Tenn. 1961).

Opinions

MR. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit is based on a petition for habeas corpus by plaintiff in error. The plaintiff in error was convicted of burglary with explosives under Section 39-906, T.C.A., and sentenced the minimum sentence under that Section to twenty-five (25) years in the State penitentiary. On appeal this conviction was affirmed, as is shown in the reported case in 203 Tenn. 473, 314 S.W.2d 1.

The petition herein is bottomed on the proposition that the Code Section on which the indictment in the first instance is based (sec. 39-906, T.C.A.) was impliedly repealed some two years before the indictment herein was found by Chapter 321 of the Public Acts of 1955, which Act was an amendment to now Code Section 39-904.

Section 39-904, the Section which was amended by the Acts of 1955, is a section defining burglary in the third degree and fixing a penalty therefor. The amendment [168]*168broadens this Section defining burglary in the third degree to the extent that if a bnrglar “opens or attempts to open any vault, safe, or other secure place by any means,” then he shall be punished by imprisonment of not less than three (3) years nor more than twenty-one (21) years. The language of this Section “by any means ’ ’ is what the plaintiff in error contends to be a repeal of Section 39-906, the one on which this conviction and indictment was based. The argument is that this Section repeals it because by use of the language “by any means” that this includes burglarizing with explosives therefore since the penalty for this crime, burglarizing a safe “by any means” is fixed from three (3) to twenty-one (21) years thus the Section of the Code wherein one is convicted for burglarizing with explosives the penalty is fixed at a minimum of twenty-five (25) and a maximum of forty (40) years, and that by the use of this language that the Legislature impliedly repealed the Code Section under which this indictment was based.

In order to properly answer the question embraced it is necessary for us to consider the entire Chapter in the Code (Chapter 9, entitled “Burglary”). When we do so it very clearly appears as to what the purpose and object of the legislation is and what it intends to do so that we can give this legislation and the existing statutes a fair consideration and determine what was meant by the legislation.

Section 39-901, T.C.A. (the first of the Sections under the Chapter entitled “Burglary”), is a statutory definition defining burglary and fixing the penalty for those guilty of violating this general statute. This Section of [169]*169the Code is nothing more than a common-law definition of burglary. Davis v. State, 43 Tenn. 77.

The next and following Section of the Code in this Chapter is entitled “Breaking after entry” and fixes the punishment of one who does the same as if he had broken into the premises in the first instance, as defined in the preceding Section 39-901.

The next Section 39-903, T.C.A., defines burglary in the second degree and fixes the penalty for one violating this Section. It is noticed that second-degree burglary is confined to a dwelling-house by day in an attempt to commit a felony.

The following Section 39-904, T.C.A., the one that is here amended by Chapter 321, Public Acts of 1955, is burglary in the third degree, which is the breaking and entering of any house except a dwelling house. It is noted that the preceding Section is for entering a dwelling house. This Statute fixes the penalty from three (3) to ten (10) years, while the second degree, the preceding section, fixed the punishment from three (3) to fifteen (15) years. Then in the following Section of the Code the Legislature saw fit to define the breaking and entering into of vehicles and things of that kind and to make one doing so guilty of burglary and fixing the penalty for this offense the same as for burglary in the third degree. Then follows the Section of the Code, sec. 39-906, T.C.A., under which plaintiff in error herein was convicted in the first instance, and this Section, which says that “Any person duly convicted of burglary with explosives” shall be punished for a minimum of twenty-five (25) years, is an entirely different classification from those heretofore mentioned. This [170]*170Section of the Code, burglary with the nse of explosives, is the most aggravating circumstance under which burglary could be committed and under all the statutes in the various states that have it, as far as we can find (statutes for the use of explosives), impose the most severe penalties of any form of burglary.

Common law did not recognize such a classification and made no distinction for the use of explosives in burglary, therefore the commission of a burglary by use of explosives is not a common-law action, but purely statutory. United States v. Brandenburg, 144 F.2d 656, 154 A.L.R. 1160.

The following Section in the Code, sec. 39-907, T.C.A., “shows that an intent on the part of the Legislature that the numerous offenses referred to in the Code Sections in question should be regarded as degrees of the offense of burglary.” Ledger v. State, 199 Tenn. 155, 285 S.W.2d 130, 132.

The last two Sections of this Chapter of the Code fix penalties for carrying burglarious instruments and for the manufacture or possession of explosives for. bur-glarious purposes.

Thus it is when we come to consider these various statutes clearly to our mind they have all been framed by the Legislature as the Legislature had the right to do, to make degrees of burglary. Thus it is the higher offense is limited to cases where human life might be endangered. At common law, burglary was regarded as an offense against the habitation. A dwelling house, of course, included a common-law house regularly occupied as a dwelling and it did not lose its character by the temporary absence of the occupant.

[171]*171The 1955 Act which, is claimed to have, by its language, impliedly repealed the Section of the Code under which this indictment was based is nothing more by its very terms than an amendment to the definition and penalty of burglary in the third degree. It in nowise attempts to say anything about, or have anything to do with, the more serious or aggravating offense of burglary with explosives. An examination of the House Journals, etc., shows that clearly this Act was merely an amendment to this definition and penalty for burglary in the third degree. It did not in any way have reference to burglary as such, burglary in the second degree, or burglary of vehicles, or any of these other things, but was clearly limited to the part of the Code wherein it was fixed as an amendment to burglary in the third degree.

It-seems to us that the language is too plain to admit of any serious difficulty as to its meaning, especially when we view it as hereinabove.

The crime of burglary being a felony, it was entirely proper for the Legislature to impose any penalty they saw fit for burglarizing a place with explosives. The Legislature had it within its power to impose and fix a larger penalty for burglary with explosives than burglary in other degrees hereinbefore set forth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
352 S.W.2d 5, 209 Tenn. 166, 13 McCanless 166, 1961 Tenn. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wooten-v-bomar-tenn-1961.