State v. Horton.

51 S.E. 945, 139 N.C. 588, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 945 (State v. Horton.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Horton., 51 S.E. 945, 139 N.C. 588, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 174 (N.C. 1905).

Opinion

Hoke, J.,

after stating the case: It will be noted that the finding of the jury declares that the act of the defendant was not in itself dangerous to human life, and excludes every element of criminal negligence, and rests the guilt or innocence of the defendant on the fact alone that at the time of the homicide the defendant was hunting on another’s land without written permission from the owner. The act which applies only in the counties of Orange, Eranklin and Scotland, makes the conduct a misdemeanor, and imposes a punishment on conviction, of not less than five nor more than ten dollars.

The statement sometimes appears in works of approved excellence to the effect that an unintentional homicide is a criminal offense when occasioned by a person engaged at the time in an unlawful act. In nearly every instance, however, will be found the qualification that if the act in question is free from negligence, and not in itself of dangerous tendency, and the criminality must arise, if at all, entirely from the fact that it is unlawful, in such case, the unlawful act must be one that is malum in se and not merely malum prohibitum, and this we hold to be the correct doctrine. In Foster’s Crown Law, it is thus stated at page 258: “In order to bring a case within this description (excusable homicide) the act upon which death ensueth must be lawful. For if the act be unlawful, I mean if it be malum in se, the case will amount to felony, either murder or manslaughter, as circumstances may vary the nature of it. If it be done in prosecution of a felonious intent, it will be murder; but if the intent went no further than to commit a bare trespass, it will be *591 manslaughter.” At page 259, the same author puts an instance with his comments thereon as follows: “A shooteth at the poultry of B and by accident killeth a man; if his intention was to steal the poultry, which must be collected from circumstances, it will be murder by reason of that felonious intent, but if it was done wantonly and without that intention, it will be barely manslaughter. The rule I have laid down supposeth that the act from which death ensued was malum in se. For if it was barely malum prohibitum, as shooting at game by a person not qualified by statute law to keep or use a gun for that purpose, the case of a person so offending will fall under the same rule as that of a qualified man. Eor the statutes prohibiting the destruction of the game under certain penalties will not, in a question of this kind, enhance the accident beyond its intrinsic moment.”

One of these disqualifying statutes here referred to as an instance of malum prohibitum was an act passed (13 Eichard II, chap. 13,) to prevent certain classes of persons from keeping dogs, nets or engines to destroy game, etc., and the punishment imposed on conviction was one year’s imprisonment. There were others imposing a lesser penalty.

Bishop in his work, entitled New Criminal Law, vol. 1, sec. 332, treats of the matter as follows: “In these cases of an unintended evil result, the intent whence the act accidentally sprang must probably be, if specific, to do a thing which is malum in se and not merely malum prohibitum.” Thus Archbold says: “When a man in the execution of one act, by misfortune or chance and not designedly, does another act for which, if he had wilfully committed it, he would be liable to be punished — -in that case, if the act he were doing were lawful or merely malum prohibitum, he shall not be punishable for the act arising from misfortune or chance, but if it be malum in se, it is otherwise. To illustrate: since it is malum prohibitum, not malum in se, for an unauthorized person to kill game in England contrary to the statutes, if, *592 in unlawfully shooting at game, be accidently kills a man, it is no more criminal in him than if he were authorized. But, to shoot at another’s fowls, wantonly or in sport, an act which is malum in se, though a civil trespass, and thereby accidentally to kill a human being is manslaughter. If the intent in the shooting were to commit larceny of the fowls, we have seen that it would be murder.” To same effect is Estelle v. State, 21 N. J. Law, 182; Com. v. Adams, 114 Mass., 323.

An offense malum in se is properly defined as one which is naturally evil as adjudged by the sense of a civilized community, whereas an act malum prohibitum is wrong only because made so by statute. Eor the reason that acts mala in se have, as a rule, become criminal offenses by the course and development of the common law, an impression has sometimes obtained that only acts can be so classified which the common law makes criminal, but this is not at all the test. An act can be, and frequently is, malum in se, when it amounts only to a civil trespass, provided it has a malicious' element .or manifests an evil nature, or wrongful disposition to harm or injure another in his person or property. Bishop Cr. Law, supra; Com. v. Adams, supra.

•"'The distinction between the two classes of acts is well stated in 19 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2nd Ed.), at p. 705 : “An offense malum in se is one which is naturally evil, as murder, theft, and the like. Offenses at common law are generally malum in se. An offense malum prohibitum, on the contrary, is not naturally an evil, but becomes so in conse-qixence of being forbidden.”

. We do not hesitate to declare that the offense of the defendant in hunting on the land without written permission of the owner was malum prohibitum, and the special verdict having found that the act in which the defendant was engaged was not in itself dangerous to human life, and negatived all idea of negligence, we hold that the case is one of excusable homicide, and the defendant should be declared not guilty.

*593 We are referred by the Attorney-General to East’s P,leas of the Crown, and ILale’s Pleas of the Crown, as authorities against this position; We would be slow indeed to hold that the law'differed from what these eminent authors declared it to be in their day and time, nor are we required to do’ so, for a careful examination of their writings will, we think, confirm the views expressed by the court. My Lord Hale does say in volume 1, p. 39, that “If a man do ex intentione an unlawful act, tending to the bodily hurt of any person, as by striking or beating him, though he did not intend to kill him, but the death of the party struck, follow thereby within the year and day; or if he strike at one and missing him kill another whom he did not intend, this is felony and homicide, and not casualty or per infortunium“So it is, if he be doing an unlawful act though not intending bodily harm to any person, as throwing a stone at another’s horse, if it hit a person and kill him, this is felony and homicide, and not per in-fortunium,

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 945, 139 N.C. 588, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-horton-nc-1905.