Williams v. State

58 So. 921, 177 Ala. 34, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 6, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 58 So. 921 (Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. State, 58 So. 921, 177 Ala. 34, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 254 (Ala. 1912).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

The Court of Appeals has certified to the Supreme Court the following -questions of law, for its decision, under the proviso of section 2 of- the act creating said Court of Appeals (Laws 1911, p. 96); such questions of law being thus presented in the certificate: “In the above-entitled cause, the judges of this court being unable to reach a unanimous conclusion [36]*36or decision, the undersigned judges of said court, pursuant to the provision of the statutes in such cases made and provided, hereby certify to the Supreme Court of Alabama the following questions of law, as to which the undersigned judges differ: First. The appellant was indicted for the offense of arson in the second degree. The indictment was in the following language: ‘The State of Alabama, Calhoun County, City Court of Anniston, September Term, 1910. The grand jury of said county charge that before the finding of this indictment James Williams, alias Jim Williams, willfully set fire to or burned an uninhabited dwelling house of Mrs. J. E. Williams, whose Christian name is to the grand jury otherwise unknown, in which there was at the time no human being, against the peace and dignity of the state of Alabama. W. C. Tunstall, Jr., Solicitor. A true bill. C. F. Wilson, Foreman Grand Jury. Filed in open court on the 20th day of September, 1910. A. H. Shepperd, Clerk.’ There was evidence tending to show that the appellant willfully set fire to and burned an uninhabited dwelling house of Mrs. J: E. Williams under such circumstances as constitued arson in the second degree. The evidence, however, disclosed that Mrs. J. E. Williams was the wife of the appellant at the time of the commission of the alleged offense. Section 6301 of the Code of 1907 provides that ‘any person who willfully sets fire to or burns the property of his wife or her husband, or of his landlord, without the express consent of the owner to so burn such property, shall be guilty of arson in the same manner and in the same degree as if the relation of husband and wife or landlord and tenant did not exist.’ Form 9 under section 7161 of the Code provides a form of indictment for arson in the second degree. Was there a variance in this point between the allegations and the proof un[37]*37der the facts as we have above stated them? Second. If section 6301 of the Code creates a new offense, is it necessary for an indictment charging the hnshand or the wife with the offense of arson as to the property of the other to allege the relationship of the parties, and that the property was set fire to or burned without the express consent of the owner to so burn such property?”.

At common law it was necessary that the ownership of the property burned be alleged to be in some person other than the defendant. It Avas not then necessary, hoAvever, that the OAvnership be in fee or in reversion. It Avas the right of possession, suo jure, at the time of the offense, Avhich constituted the OAvnership required by the common laAV. The crime at common law could therefore be committed by one who was the OAvner of the reversion, if not in possession; and, on the other hand, the tenant or lessee in possession Avas not guilty of arson if he burned the dAvelling of Avhich he was in the possession. — 3 Green. Ev. § 54.

At common law it was not arson to burn any other building than a dAvelling.

“ ‘The offense Avas a crime against the security of the dAvelling house as such, and not against the dwelling as property. In case Avhere the ownership is in one and the occupancy in another, the indictment properly avers that the dAvelling house belongs to the latter. If the occupant is in possession rightfully, and burns the house, he cannot in legal sense be guilty of burning the dAvelling of another; he burns his own dAvelling house.’—State v. Hannett, 54 Vt. 83, 86.” — I Words & Phrases, 509.

. “If the landlord of reversioner sets fire to his own house, of which another is in possession under the lease, etc., it is arson, for during the lease the house is the property of the tenant.—Harris’ Case, Foster, 113; 4 [38]*38Bl. Comm. 222; Roscoe’s Crim. Ev. 199. So if it is in the possession of a copyholder.—Spaulding’s Case, 1 East, P. C. 1025; 1 Leach, Cr. Law, 218. The principle of the rule is that it was for the protection of the person in the actual and immediate possession of the house. The offense is against the possession of another.—Breeme’s Case, 1 Leach. 220; 2 East, P. C. 1026; Peddey’s Case. 1 Leach, 235; 1 Hale, P. C. 567, note; 3 Chitty, Chim. Law, 1106. And the court will not inquire into the estate or interest which such person has in the house burned. It is enough that it was his actual dwelling at the time.—People v. Van Barcum, 2 Johns. (N. Y.) 105; State v. Roe, 12 Vt. 93; State v. Fish, 27 N. J. Law, 323, 324.”—1 Words & Phrases, 509.

In the case of Snyder v. People, 26 Mich. 111, 12 Am. Rep. 302, it is said: “If therefore the husband shall be guilty of the great wrong to his wife and family of setting fire to the house they inhabit, he is no more guilty of arson in so doing than the wife was at the . common law for a like wrong to the dwelling house of the husband. The case is a very proper one for a penal statute, but none has yet been enacted to meet it. The house, in legal contemplation, as regards the offense under consideration, is the dwelling house of the husband himself. But, in so holding, we do not decide that if the family relation is broken up in fact, and the husband and wife are living apart from each other, Avhether under articles of separation or not, the same exemption from criminal liability can exist. There is much reason for holding that the Avife’s dwelling house can be considered that of the husband only while he makes it such in fact, and that there is no such legal identity as can preclude her house being considered, in legal proceedings against him, as the dwelling of ‘another/ when it is no longer his abode.”

[39]*39English and American statutes have wrought many -changes in the common-law offense of arson. Many of the changes- it is unnecessary now to notice, but we will here treat of some of them.

Many of the states by statutes have made it an offense to burn one’s own dwelling, if with the intent to injure or defraud the insurer thereof. We have such a statute in section 6300 of the Code. This statute was construed in the case of Heard v. State, 81 Ala. 55, 1 South. 640. This statute was in that case correctly held to constitute a different offense from common-law arson, and from the statutory offense of arson in the ■second degree; the court saying: “The section declares an offense separate and distinct from arson as designated in the three sections immediately preceding. * * * The indictment therefore required different allegations and different proof.”

As was said by the Supreme Court of Indiana in the case of Garrett v. State, 109 Ind. 527, 10 N. E. 570, whatever may have been the rules of law and pleadings at common law as to arson, our statutes have wrought a radical change both as to the substantive law and procedure.

We now have statutes defining arson or declaring what acts shall constitute arson, and dividing the offense into three grades, first, second, and third, and fixing different punishment as for each.

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 921, 177 Ala. 34, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-ala-1912.