State v. . Battle

CLARK, J., dissents. Upon the trial in the criminal court the solicitor offered to prove by the witness Thomas Tanner, as furnishing a motive for the criminal act, that the defendant told him last year that he was mad with Bullock (superintendent of the owner).

The evidence was objected to, but allowed. Defendant excepted. After conviction and judgment the defendant appealed to the (1037) Superior Court. His Honor, Judge Bowman, sustained the ruling and affirmed the judgment, and defendant appealed to the Supreme Court.

The defendant also excepted to the bill of indictment because found by a grand jury brought over for service from the preceding term.

The defendant also claimed that there was a variance between the offense charged and the proof made, owing to the phraseology of the indictment, which has resulted in his being sentenced excessively under the wrong act. The defendant was indicted under subsection 6 of section 985 of the Code, but it appears from the statement of the case on appeal made up by his Honor who presided that the trial was conducted in respect to the evidence offered by the State as if the indictment had been found under subsection 2 of that section. The stable was burnt on 13 May, 1899, and belonged to Frederick Philips, and was situated on his plantation in Edgecombe County.

Evidence was introduced going to prove that about a week before the fire the defendant, a cropper on the plantation, had had a difficulty with William Philips, his father-in-law and laborer on the farm, and had become mad with Bullock, the superintendent of the farm, because he interfered in the trouble between the defendant and William Philips (1038) that the defendant asked Bullock to discharge one of the sons of William Philips, saying he would not live on the farm with such rascals, and that Battle told one Mangum that he, the defendant, had told Bullock that he must get rid of William Philips's boys, and Bullock *Page 673 "would give him no satisfaction," and that he was mad about that. That evidence was not objected to by the defendant; but when the solicitor offered to prove by Thomas Tanner that the defendant "told him last year that he was mad with Bullock," the defendant objected to the evidence, and upon its being received entered an exception. The ruling was sustained by the Superior Court, which we think was an error. The objection was well taken. In no conceivable aspect could the anger or vicious temper of the defendant toward Bullock furnish any motive for the defendant to burn the property of Judge Philips. It is idle to argue that because one may have a dislike for the manager of a farm that feeling could be allowed as evidence against one charged with burning the property of the owner of the farm as tending to show a motive for the burning; and the principle is not altered because the accused might be a cropper on the farm. So far as the evidence objected to is concerned it had no connection with Bullock as manager of the farm. Indeed, it was not attempted to show by the witness Tanner that the defendant gave him the reason for his dislike of Bullock. The State was not bound to furnish a motive in the breast of the defendant for the commission of the crime with which he was charged; but as long as it was thought necessary because (except as to an alleged confession made by the defendant to Rowe, the detective), the evidence was entirely circumstantial, to prove a motive it devolved upon the State to show the motive by proper testimony. The jury understood that that part of the testimony which was received over the objection of the plaintiff was considered material and incompetent by the court, and that it was introduced (1039) for the purpose of showing a motive for the act; and it must have influenced the jury in their verdict of "guilty" against the defendant. As it was incompetent it ought not to have been received, and as a new trial is to be had for that error it will be proper for us to discuss the whole evidence bearing on the question of the ill-will of the defendant to Bullock, including that which was received without objection. The principle of evidence which the trial court adopted in receiving testimony of a person's ill-will toward one who is an agent simply for another as proof going to show a motive for burning the property of the principal, and the affirmation of that doctrine by the Superior Court on appeal, is a matter of so vital importance to the people of the State that we feel it our duty to consider it. It seems to us that it can not be a true principle of evidence, and that if it is so acted on, great injustice is certain to be done to those who may be indicted for crime, and especially to people who are in service and who are subject to the discipline and control of bosses, superintendents, overseers or managers. Common observation teaches us all that hot-tempered and hasty words towards managers are not of infrequent occurrence whenever men who labor are *Page 674 undertaken to be controlled, and that oftener than otherwise those frictions are harmless and not founded on malice even against the superintendents. Therefore it would be a harsh and cruel rule to infer, on the part of those employed, malice against the owners and a motive for the injury or destruction of their property in such cases. We are of the opinion that the whole of the evidence bearing upon the question of the ill-will of the defendant against Bullock was incompetent. As we have seen, there were no threats made by the defendant to do any injury (1040) to the person or to the property of the owner of the farm — or to the manager either, as to that. Neither was there any evidence that the defendant contrived to have Judge Philips informed of the difficulty on the farm, and of the defendant's request that the manager should dismiss a laborer from the premises. If the defendant had taken such a course, and the owner of the plantation had declined to order Bullock to dismiss the laborer, then evidence of such facts might have been competent and sufficient to warrant the jury in drawing the inference that the defendant's ill-will had extended to the owner of the property; that it might be inferred that such a course on the part of the defendant amounted to a threat to do some damage to the owner or his property, and furnish a motive for the crime. But it may be argued that the defendant, because of his ill-will toward the manager, determined that the manager should lose his place, and to produce that result, burnt the barn, the object being to terrify the owner of the property, and compel him to dismiss the manager for fear of further injury to or destruction of his property if he kept him in his service. The answer to that argument is that malice or ill-will is evidence upon which a jury might infer a motive a commit a crime against a person or the property of the object of ill-will or malice; but the commission of the crime for the purpose of compelling the injured person to punish the enemy of the criminal, can not be a matter of inference of the motive to commit the crime. It is too remote. Such a conclusion must be based upon evidence, not of motive, but of the fact as to the object on the part of the criminal committing the crime. And in the case before us, as we have said, so far as the record shows, the owner of the property did not know of the defendant's trouble with William Philips, or of the request made of the manager to discharge Philips's sons, or that he had even heard that the defendant wished him to discharge Bullock from his employment. This case is nothing like the cases of S. v. (1041) Rhodes, 111 N.C. p. 647, and S. v. Thompson, 97 N.C. 496. In both those cases, the indictments being under subsection 6 of section 985 of the Code, there was not only ill-feeling but there were open threats made by the defendant. In the first-mentioned case it appeared that the wife of the defendant was living on the land of the prosecutrix — *Page 675 Mrs. King — and the defendant complained that her son was keeping defendant's wife away from him. It appeared in the evidence in that case that the defendant, before the outhouse was burnt, had made threats against Mrs. King and her son, who was her agent and manager, and lived on the land. There were several witnesses who testified that they had heard the defendant, while talking about his wife and complaining because King let her live on his land, say that "he could do King a private injury and the law wouldn't hurt him." The son and mother lived on the premises, the son being her manager, and threats to injure the person and property were made against both by the defendant.

In S. v. Thompson, supra, threats which were made against the sons and grandsons of the owner of the house which was burned, were admitted as evidence against the defendant, and this Court affirmed the ruling of his Honor in receiving the evidence on the ground of general ill-will toward the family, and as furnishing a motive. The language of the Court was: "The proof of threats directed against the son and grandson from their near relationship to the owner of the burned house was also relevant though perhaps feeble in showing general ill-will to the family, and a motive for the act." We are not saying that the ill-will of the defendant in this case toward the owner of the plantation could not have been shown on the trial, if it existed. It could have been, for there was evidence against the defendant tending to show (1042) that he burned the barn; but we mean to say that ill-will on the part of one accused of the crime of burning property toward an agent of the owner of property is not sufficient evidence to go to the jury from which an inference might be drawn of a motive to commit the crime.

We will not conclude this opinion without considering two other important questions which will be certain to arise again on the next trial. One of them is, whether or not the latter part of section 19, chapter 471, of the Laws of 1899, establishing the Eastern District Criminal Court is constitutional. The clause reads as follows: "In the event the grand jury at any term have not been discharged by the court, but retained for service at a subsequent term or terms, then there shall be drawn by the county commissioners, or sheriff and commissioners, as aforesaid, only eighteen jurors for service as petit jurors at any such subsequent term; Provided, said grand jury shall not be retained for more than one term subsequent to the term at which they were originally drawn." This case was tried at a special term of the criminal court held in July, 1899, the same at which the bill of indictment was found, and there was no grand jury drawn and sworn at that term of the court. But at May Term, 1899, a regular term of the court, a grand jury was drawn and sworn. After the grand jury had concluded its work at the May term, they were notified by the judge that they would be continued until the *Page 676 next term under the statute referred to. The grand jury was present at the special term of the court, and the bill of indictment in the case duly returned "a true bill" by them. The retention of the grand jury from one term to another is an innovation upon our custom, but we know of no restriction placed upon the General Assembly which would prevent it from enacting such legislation. It is likely that such a system (1043) will result injuriously in its operation. It is almost impossible that interested parties will not bring influences to bear upon members of the grand jury who are held over from one term to another which they would not be subjected to if they were drawn, and served and discharged as under the old system — the system of the Superior Courts. But with that this Court has nothing to do. The Legislature had the power to enact the statute. The other matter remaining for consideration is the request for a special instruction asked by the defendant which is as follows: "The defendant Drew Battle can not be convicted in this case under section 985, subsection 6, of the Code, for the charge of the State here is the burning of a stable in the night time, containing mules, and this charge is provided for in subsection 2 of said section. That if this is not the State's charge then there is a fatal variance between the charge and the evidence, and the defendant Drew Battle can not be convicted." The instruction was declined, and the ruling affirmed by the Superior Court, and we see no error in that ruling. It is true that in subsection 2 of section 985 of the Code the willful burning of a stable containing a horse or a mule, in the night time, subjects the convicted person to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of not less than five nor more than ten years; and it is true that on the trial the solicitor introduced evidence tending to show that the stable was burned in the night time, and that it contained five mules. It is not stated in the record that this testimony was objected to. The defendant, however, was not indicted under subsection 2, but under subsection 6, of the section referred to above. Subsection 6 has been amended (Laws 1885, chap. 66) by striking out the words "unlawfully and maliciously" in the first, second and third lines thereof, and substituting therefor in both places the words "wantonly and maliciously," and by further striking out the words "with intent thereby to injure or defraud any person or (1044) persons, body politic or corporations." The bill of indictment contains the words "unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously," in addition to the words "wantonly and willfully." But the bill is not affected by the use of the words "unlawfully, maliciously and feloniously"; they are simply surplusage. The indictment under subsection 6 is for the wanton andwillful burning, and subjects the convicted person to a longer term of imprisonment, in the discretion of the trial judge, than for a simple, *Page 677 willful burning under subsection 2. The difference between the meaning of the words "wanton" and "willful" is to be found in S. v. Brigman,94 N.C. 888, and in S. v. Morgan, 98 N.C. 641.

New trial.