State v. Choate

238 P. 538, 41 Idaho 251, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 100
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 P. 538 (State v. Choate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Choate, 238 P. 538, 41 Idaho 251, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 100 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

— Appellant was, under C. S., sec. 8556, charged with and convicted of burning a stack of bean hay. The evidence shows without dispute that the substance destroyed was that left after the bean seeds had been removed by threshing from bean vines.

Many errors are assigned but one will dispose of the case, namely, whether the substance thus burned comes within the terms of the statute.

This section, apparently based upon sec. 57 of the chapter on the “Offenses Against the Person of Individuals,” Idaho Sess. Laws 1863-64, page 446, is first found in its present form in section 7156 in the Revised Statutes of 1887, being copied thence into the Revised Codes and into the Compiled Statutes. The original section as found in sec. 57 in the Idaho Sess. Law's of 1863-64 was evidently adopted from sec. 5 of an act of April 19, 1856, of California Sess. Laws, p. 132. The California statute in its original form is again found in the Statutes of California, 1871-72, page 896. In this California statute in these two Session Laws the words “hay” and “straw” did not appear and there were other differences between the California statute and the Idaho statute. In 1901 the California statute was amended to read as follows:

*253 “Every person who wilfully and maliciously burns any bridge exceeding the value of fifty dollars, or any structure, snowshed, or vessel, not the subject of arson, or any stack of hay or grain of any kind, or any growing or standing grain, grass, or tree, or any fence, or any railroad ear, lumber, cordwood, railroad ties, telegraph poles, or' shakes, of the value of twenty-five dollars or over, not the property of such person, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than one nor more than ten years.” (Cal. Sess. Laws 1901, p. 268.)

And later amended in 1905 to read as follows:

“Every person who wilfully and maliciously burns any bridge exceeding in value fifty dollars, or any structure, snowshed, vessel or boat, not the subject of arson, or any tent, or any stack of hay or grain or straw of any kind, or any pile of baled hay or straw, or any pile of potatoes, or beans, or vegetables, or produce, or fruit of any kind, whether sacked, boxed, crated, or not, or any growing or standing grain, grass or tree, or any fence, or any' railroad-car, lumber, cord-wood, railroad ties, telegraph or telephone poles, or shakes, or any tule land or peat ground of the value of twenty-five dollars or over, not the property of such person, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than one year, nor more than ten years.”

It will thus be noticed that the legislature of California evidently considered that there was such a difference between hay and straw as to require the word “straw” to be inserted and it will be noticed that the Idaho statute does not contain the word “straw.”

Hay is defined to be:

1 ‘ Grass mowed or ready for mowing, especially grass cut and cured for fodder.” (Webster’s New International Dictionary.)
“Grass, clover, or the like, cut and dried or cured for preservation and use as fodder; grass that has been exit.’’ (New Standard Dictionary.)
“Grass that has been cut; especially, grass cut and dried for use as fodder.” (Century Dictionary.)
*254 “Grass cut or mown and dried for use as fodder; formerly (as still sometimes) including grass fit for mowing, or preserved for mowing.” (New English Dictionary by Murray.)
“ (A word common in various forms to Teutonic languages; of Ger. lieu, Dutch hooi; the root from which it is derived, meaning ‘to cut,’ is also seen in ‘to hew’; cf. ‘hoe.’) Grass mown and dried in the sun used as fodder for cattle. .It is properly applied only to the grass when cut, but is often also used of the standing crop.....The term ‘haymaking’ signifies the process of drying and curing grass or other herbage so as to fit it for storage in stacks or sheds for future use.....The principal stages in the process everywhere are: (1) mowing, (2) drying or ‘making,’ (3) ‘carrying’ and storage in stacks or sheds.....In the dry districts of south-eastern England it is often possible to cut and carry the hay without any special ‘making,’ as the sun and wind will dry it quickly enough to fit it for stacking up without the expenditure of much labor. This rule also applies to dry countries like the United States and several of the British colonies.....Forage of all kinds intended for hay should be cut at or before the flowering stage if possible. The full growth and food value of the plant are reached then, and further change consists in the formation and ripening of the seed at the expense of the leaves and stems, leaving these hard and woody and of less feeding value.” (Encyclopedia Britanniea.)

Straw is defined to be:

“A stalk or stem of grain, as of wheat, rye, oats, barley, or Indian corn; also, a stalk of buckwheat, beans, or peas. Collectively, stalks of grain after threshing, used as bedding for cattle, for packing or for fodder.” (Webster’s New International Dictionary.)
“Straw: apparently ‘that which is scattered about’ (if so, it must have been originally applied to the broken stalks of grain after threshing, the simple sense, ‘straw’ but then later, from the root of strew. The stalk or stem of certain *255 species of grain, pulse, etc., generally of wheat, rye, oats, barley, buckwheat and peas, cut or broken off. (and usually dry) ; such stalks collectively, especially after drying and threshing; as a load of ‘straw.’ ” (The Century Dictionary.)
“Straw: (from strew as being used for strewing) is the general term applied to the stalky residue of grain-plants, (especially wheat, rye, oats, barley).” Encyclopedia Britannica.

As to beans we find the following in the Encyclopedia Britannica:

“Several varieties of the bean are cultivated in the field for the sake both of grain, which is used as food for livestock, of the haulm, which serves for either fodder or litter. Beans are cut when the leaf is fallen and the haulm is almost black either with the fagging hook or the reaping machine, though the stoutness of the stalks causes a severe strain on the latter implement. They are tied and stooked, and are so left for a considerable time before stacking. There is less fear of injury to the crop through damp than in the case of other cereals. Their value for feeding purposes increases in the stack, where they may remain for a year or more before threshing.”

It thus appears a different name is and has been applied to the stem or stalk of various plants with the seed pods or grain attached and to the stem or stalks after such seeds, kernels or grains have been detached by threshing.

Haulm or halm has been further defined as:

“The dried stalks of peas, beans, and cereals; wheat straw for thatching. A grass culm. Any plant stem.” (New Standard Dictionary.)

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Related

State v. Fitzpatrick
407 P.2d 309 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1965)
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1944 OK 146 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 538, 41 Idaho 251, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-choate-idaho-1925.