charged the jury that the offense imputed to the prisoner was an attempt to commit arson in the second degree.
To make out the offense the jury must he convinced that an attempt was made, but not consummated, to set fire to or burn the opera house in the night-time.
There was no doubt that the prisoner did. gather together the combustible material and set fire to it, and that his doing so might, under some circumstances, have set fire to or burned the building; but the- question for them was whether that was an attempt to set fire to or burn the building, or was an attempt, merely, to escape from his imprisonment, or obtain his release from his manacles?
Every kindling of combustible matter in a building was not arson, though it might possibly, or even probably, set fire to and burn it. To constitute arson there must be a design to burn the building. It was, therefore, a necessary inquiry, for what purpose was the combustible matter set fire to ? If to warm himself, if to cook victuals, or if to escape from con*131finement, it did not follow that the purpose whs to burn the building, though it might so result.
Intention was the very soul of crime under the law—its essence, its sine qua non — and unless the jury could say, in this case, that there was a purpose to set fire to and burn the opera house, the prisoner could not be convicted. .
It was true such an intent might be inferred from the act itself, if the inevitable consequence of the act would have been the burning of the building, or if the particular purpose could not have been effected without such burning, for every man is to be held responsible for the necessary and natural consequences of his acts, and be held to intend to produce such consequences.
If, therefore, the jury believed that the prisoner’s purpose was merely to release himself from imprisonment, and that the means he resorted to would necessarily and naturally set fire to or burn the building, they would convict him; otherwise they would acquit.
The prisoner was convicted of an attempt to commit arson in the third degree.
[At the General Term of the Supreme Court, held in May, 1850, before Edmohds, presiding justice, and Edwabds, and Mitchell, justices, this case was brought up from the Oyer and Terminer on a bill of exceptions. After argument and deliberation, the court held that on an indictment for arson in the first degree, there may be a conviction for an attempt to commit arson in any of the lesser degrees.]