State v. Jansen

22 Kan. 498
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 22 Kan. 498 (State v. Jansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jansen, 22 Kan. 498 (kan 1879).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brewer, J.:

Defendant was convicted, in the district •court of Atchison county, of the crime of burglary in the second degree, and from such conviction has brought this .appeal. /■

[505]*505insufficient^^’ defense; when guutiscom[503]*503The first question which we shall notice is that sought to [504]*504be raised in the district court by a demurrer to the state’s-evidence. Waiving any inquiry into the propriety of such a practice as that pursued by counsel, let us inquire whether,, upon the testimony presented, there was a case which ought-to have gone to the jury, and which now will support a verdict of guilty. The facts are these: On the night of the 2d of August, 1878, M. Marcus, the proprietor of a saloon, was-hidden with two policemen in a coal shed in the rear of his saloon. The front door of the saloon was locked; the rear-door shut, but not bolted. About two o’clock, one Samuel Wiles came through the back yard, opened the rear door,, waited a moment, and then closed it and retired. In a few minutes, Wiles and defendant returned (the latter in advance), opened the door, and entered the building. In the-building-was a safe, with some money in it. After Wiles- and defendant had gone into the building, Marcus and the-policemen came out of their place of concealment, and arrested them. On their persons, was found a number of burglar’s tools. Defendant stated to Marcus, after being arrested, that he was hard up, pressed for money, and had come-to make a raise. If these facts stood alone, there could be no question of the correctness of the court’s ruling. Here-were all the elements of the crime of burglary, as charged —a breaking and entering in the night-time, with an obvious and expressed intent to steal. The two points around which the objections of counsel gather are, the relations of Wiles to this matter, and the condition and fastenings of the door through which the parties entered. In relation-, to the former, counsel claim that Wiles was a decoy, leading defendant on to do what he did; that Wiles disclosed the intended visit to the officers, and thus enabled them to-be present and arrest Jansen, as also that when Wiles and defendant were taken to jail that night, the former was not placed in custody, but permitted to go at large, with a firing of pistols under a pretense of an escape; but beyond this, Wiles’s relations to the affair are a mere matter of conjecture. As to-them the record is silent. How long Wiles and Jansen had. [505]*505been acting together, who planned this burglary, who was chief and who assistant, what division of the proceeds had been agreed upon, what motive induced Wiles to divulge the place of the intended crime, are all undisclosed by the testimony. A jury might be justified, perhaps, in inferring that he was a detective, but the court could not say absolutely that he was. Nor could anyone say, from the testimony, that he prompted, planned or induced the crime. Even if he were a detective, and acting solely as such from the commencement to the close of his relations with Jansen, that would not necessarily purge the latter of guilt. The act of a detective may, perhaps, not be imputable to the defendant, as there is a want of a community of motive. The one has a criminal intent, while the other is seeking the discovery and punishment of crime. But where each of the overt acts going to make up the crime charged, is personally done by the defendant, and with criminal inte'nt, his guilt is complete, no matter what motives may prompt , ....... i • • i or what acts be done by the party who is with and apparently assisting him. Counsel have cited and commented upon several cases in which detectives figured, and in which the defendants were adjudged guiltless of the crimes charged. But this feature distinguishes them, that some act essential to the crime charged, was in fact done by the detective, and not by the defendant; and this act not being imputable to the defendant, the latter’s guilt was not made out. Intent alone does not make crime. The intent and the act must combine; and all the elements of the act must exist and be imputable to the defendant.

Counsel for the state has very clearly analyzed some of these cases, as follows: In Regina v. Johnson and Jones, 41 Eng. Com. Law, 123, all that the court pretends to decide is, that where a door was opened by an employé of the owner of the house, acting under the orders of policemen in waiting, and thereafter the accused entered through the door so opened, no burglary was committed. Certainly not; because the opening of the door was legally done by an authorized person, [506]*506without any illegal opening or breaking. The mere fact- that the servant of the owner of the house falsely pretended to sympathize with and participate in the criminal'intent, and to assist in the perpetration of the projected crime, was not, however, held sufficient to discharge the defendants from responsibility for the criminal acts they did in fact consummate. One of them got possession of certain plate, and was arrested instanter and relieved of his booty. The other was arrested before he laid hold of anything. The one was held for larceny in a dwelling house, the other as accessory before the fact. In the case cited, the policemen did direct and dictate the course pursued by the detective. The detective did, by joining the proposed expedition, bring about the alleged criminal act. Nevertheless, as to acts constituting the only crime or apparent crime completed — i. e., larceny — the court disregarded the circumstances securing the apprehension of of the offenders, and held that the crime was in law complete, upon proof of the facts constituting fully its ingredients. To analyze this decision in a few words, it decides — 1st, that inasmuch as the door was opened by a person without criminal intent, and not by persons having a criminal intent, it was not burglariously opened; 2d, that the persons who came to the premises with a criminal purpose, and pursuant to and in the execution thereof did those acts in law constituting larceny, were guilty in law of larceny, notwithstanding the fact that a person they believed an accomplice was in fact, throughout the enterprise, a spy upon their actions, counseling but to deceive them and secure their capture.

The case cited in 40 Ala., p. 344, (Allen v. The State,) is precisely similar. The detective unlocked and opened the door with the keys furnished by the owner, who was the detective’s employer. Here there was no breaking. In this case, the defendant (Allen) was assiduously persuaded to engage in the enterprise by the detective, who was acting under orders from his employer. The defendant was reluctant to undertake and timid in the execution of the alleged criminal act; so reticent and fearful was he, in fact, that about all he did was [507]*507to accompany the detective to the building and witness what* were unquestionably the authorized acts of the detective. The court expressly adopts the rule in the English case above referred to, citing that case and others in its opinion. Here, as in the English case, it is held that there is no breaking of the building, actual or constructive, because the opening of the door was at the request, by the procurement, and with the consent of the owner, and by a person acting in his employment.

In the case cited in the 3d Texas Court of Appeals, p. 157, (Speiden v. The State,) no different rule is announced.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Kan. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jansen-kan-1879.