Mooney v. State

ORMOND, J.

The objection urged against the indictment, is, that it charges several .distinct, substantive offences. The language of the act is, “Every person who shall inveigle, steal, carry or entice away, any such slave, with a view to convert such slave to his own use, or the use of any other person, or to enable such slave to reach some other State, or country, where such slave may enjoy freedom, such person shall, on conviction, be punished by confinement in the Penitentiary, not less than ten years.” [Clay’s Dig. 419, § 18.] There does not appear to be any tangible, or substantial distinction, between the terms “ inveigle” or “entice,” as employed in this act. Both signify to allure, to incite, to instigate, to seduce, to the doing some improper act. It is true, “ entice” may be used in a good sense, but that is not its natural meaning, and when so used, it is figurative, and shown to be so by the context; here it is evidently used in its natural, proper sense. The word “ steal,” being technical, ordinarily imports a larceny ; but here it is evidently employed, as a synonime of “carry away;”for the act declares that the offence shall be complete, though there is no intention to convert the slave to the use of the taker, or of any other person, which is an essential ingredient in larceny. These are, then, all offences of precisely the same grade, although there may be a slight distinction between the two classes of « stealing and carrying away,” and “ inveigling and enticing.” Whether, then, they are considered as distinct offences, or not, as the same penalty is provided for each, they may be included in the same count of the indictment.

Thus, in The State v. Murphy, 6 Ala. Rep 846, it was held, that one might be charged in the same count, with “ receiving and concealing” stolen goods, though the language of the statute was in the disjunctive, “ buy, receive, conceal, or aid in the concealment of stolen goods.”

In The Commonwealth v. Eaton, 15 Pick. 173, an indictment, *332upon a statute forbidding any person from selling, or offering to sell a lottery ticket, which charged, an offering and selling, was held to be good. In Rex v. Hunt, 2 Camp. 583, upon an information for a libel, charging the defendant with composing, printing and publishing a libel, it was held to be sufficient, to prove the publishing and printing. Lord Ellenborough said, “ The distinction runs through the whole criminal law, and it is invariably enough to prove, so much of the indictment as shows that the defendant has committed a substantive crime therein specified.”

In indictments for forgery, the established form is, to alledge that the prisoner “ feloniously, did falsely make, forge and counterfeit, and feloniously did cause, and procure, to be falsely made, forged and counterfeited, and feloniously did willingly act, and assist, in the false making, forging, and counterfeiting, a certain bond,” &c. [3 Chitty’s Crim. Law, 1066.] Here, as in this case, distinct and substantive offences are not charged, but different grades of the same offence, punished by the same penalty, and upon proving either, the State is entitled to a conviction.

The question made upon the charges given, and refused, are, whether, to constitute the offence ' of inveigling, or enticing away a slave, it is necessary that the slave should come to the possession, or be under the actual control of the accused.

To a correct understanding of this statute, it is necessary to look at the condition of our statute law, as to this offence, previous to the adoption of the Penal Code. The statute then in existence, made the offence of stealing a slave, simple larceny, punishable capitally — and in Hawkins’ case, 8 Porter, 461, it was held, that the offence was not complete, as the slave was not to be converted to the use of the taker, but to be conveyed to a free State, and enjoy freedom, and therefore the act was not done lucri causa.

So in Wisdomes’ case, 511 of the same book, it was held, that the offence was not consummated, until the prisoner was sufficiently near the slave to aid him, if pursuit was attempted, or so near as to be capable of taking actual control over him. Such being the state of the law, at the time of the passage of this act, no other construction can be put upon it, than, that it was intended to make a radical change in the law in this particular, and to make the offence consist, not in the actual manucaption, but in the seduction of the slave from his master’s allegiance, and thus *333to strike at the root of the evil. If an actual asportavit was necessary to the commission of the offence, it could scarcely ever be established, as the slave, an intelligent being, could by his cooperation, produce the same result as an actual taking, in the case of the theft of any other chattel.

It is, we think, therefore, perfectly clear, both from the phraseology of the statute, and the mischief intended to be prevented, that it was the intention of the Legislature, to create an offence essentially distinct from larceny at common law: It is not the fraudulent taking the goods of another, with intent to convert them to the use of the thief, which is denounced by the statute, but it is the influence exerted over the mind of the slave, as an intelligent being, to quit his master’s service. This is consummated, when the slave, by promises or persuasions, is induced to abandon his master’s service, with the intent to escape from bondage as a slave; whether the prisoner so having operated on the mmd, and will of the slave, is, or is not present, when the determination to escape is manifested, by the act of leaving the master’s service, or whether he is, or is not, sufficiently near to aid in the escape, if necessary. This is to “inveigle or entice away,” under the statute, according to its strict letter, as well as its obvious intent and meaning; and the construction of the statute, by the Court, in its charge to the jury, being strictly correct, its judgment is affirmed.