Thompson v. State

CHILTON, J.

The plaintiff in error was indicted for erecting an impediment across a public road. The indictment contains five counts, to each of wbicb there was a demurrer.

It is argued in this court that the fourth count in the indictment is bad, as confounding different clauses of the same section in the statute, and treating them as equivalent, when they are totally distinct. By an examination of the statute in connection with the count, we do not think the objection is well founded. The statute enacts, that if any person shall erect, or cause to be erected, across any public road, a fence, bar, or other impediment, or fell a tree, or brush, or other obstacle on or across the same, and shall not remove it within twenty-four hours thereafter,” &c., that such person shall be liable to indictment, &c. Clay’s Digest, 508, § 7. The fourth count charges that Mrs. Thompson “a certain impediment, to wit: a large quantity of logs, sticks, brushwood and dirt, did erect and cause to be erected across a certain public road, situate,” &c. Now, the impediment thus erected is clearly distinguishable from a fence or bar in the foregoing clause of the act, and also from the felling of a tree, brush or other obstacle, as subsequently enumerated; but it falls directly within the inhibition of erecting any “ other impediment” than such as are particularly mentioned. A much more formidable impediment could be erected of logs, brushwood and dirt, than of rails in the form of a fence or bars, and we doubt not that such impediment was as much within the contemplation of the Legislature, in enacting the statute, as it certainly is within the mischief intended to be remedied.

Neither is the objection, that the indictment does not set out the width or grade of the road, well taken. It is sufficient that it is a public road. Whether it be of the first, second or third grade, can make no difference, since the statute makes tne obstructing of either alike indictable, and visits the offender with the same measure of punishment. We entertain no doubt as to the sufficiency of the indictment.

The main question, and the one principally relied on for a *60reversal by tbe counsel for tbe plaintiff in error, arises out of a bill of exceptions, and may be thus stated: It appears that in August, 1849, tbe road charged to be obstructed was established by tbe Commissioners’ Court of Talladega, and that tbe portion running over tbe land of tbe plaintiff in error bad been cut out by order of tbe court. That at tbe Fall Term of tbe Circuit Court, 1849, these proceedings of tbe Commissioners’ Court were quashed and set aside, at tbe instance of Mrs. Thompson, and that tbe supersedeas to tbe proceedings of tbe Commissioners’ Court was by tbe Circuit Court rendered perpetual. That afterwards, viz: in May, 1850, another application was made for tbe establishment of tbe road, and the same was established by tbe Commissioners’ Court, after a jury of review bad passed upon it, at tbe August Term, 1850. In tbe order establishing it, and which particularly describes where it shall run, it is stated, after tracing tbe road to Mrs. Thompson’s line, “ thence with her line to a stake in tbe rear of W. B. McClellan’s negro cabins, thence along tbe line of tbe road, as it was cut out under a former order of this court, through tbe lands of Mrs. Thompson, to a post oak, marked,” &c. Tbe road was laid off into sections, and overseers were appointed, and ordered to open tbe same according to law. It further appears, that after tbe order of August, 1849, but before that of August, 1850, Mrs. Thompson bad extended her fencing with her lines crossing tbe route of tbe proposed road, uniting her fences on tbe side of tbe mountain in tbe form of an angle. That she thereby enclosed a pond useful for purposes of husbandry, and also the family grave yard. That in this enclosure she sowed in a small isolated patch of an acre and a half, some wheat, which was growing on it in February, 1851, when tbe overseer with bis bands took down her fences where they crossed tbe road, and removed tbe logs, brush, &c., which had been placed across it. It was shown that this crop of wheat was sown after tbe order of August, 1850, bad been passed. After tbe road bad thus been opened, Mrs. Thompson rebuilt her fences across it, and obstructed it otherwise. It was insisted in tbe court below, and is here also contended, that, a,t tbe time tbe overseer opened this road through tbe enclosure of Mrs. Thompson, she bad a growing crop within it, and that *61consequently tbe act of tbe overseer was void, as being opposed to tbe statute, wbicb declares that tbe road shall not be opened between tbe first of March and tenth of July in any year, nor “ through any enclosure whilst there is a crop growing in the same." Tbe ruling of tbe circuit judge, as indicated by tbe charge given to tbe jury, was opposed to this view. Tbe question is, whether, under tbe facts of tbe case, tbe plaintiff in error was justifiable in fencing up tbe road.

As to tbe effect of tbe judgment of tbe Circuit Court, in quashing tbe proceedings of tbe Commissioners’ Court of August, 1849, and perpetuating tbe supersedeas, we need only remark, that it applies only to the proceedings then before tbe Circuit Court, and could have no effect upon an order subsequently made upon a new and distinct application.

Upon tbe main question, we are of opinion that, as Mrs. Thompson must be presumed to have bad notice of tbe order of August, 1850, establishing this road, and designating tbe particular route over wbicb it was to run, after permitting tbe order to pass for opening it, she could not render such order nugatory, and thwart tbe object of tbe statute, by sowing this small patch of wheat.

We need not consider the question whether tbe plaintiff in error, after tbe road has been established by a court of competent jurisdiction, and cut out by an officer of its appointment, can collaterally call in question tbe proceedings of tbe court, or of tbe overseer who has acted in obedience to its command. For, giving to this statute a reasonable construction, we feel constrained to bold that tbe growing crop, mentioned in tbe conclusion of tbe fourth section, does not embrace a crop planted or sowed after tbe order establishing tbe road. Such a construction as tbe. one contended for by tbe counsel for tbe plaintiff in error would enable any person, over whose land a road was established, to thwart tbe action of tbe court in its attempt to provide, as contemplated by tbe statute, for tbe public convenience and necessity, by planting and having some description of crop always growing in bis enclosure, as may well be done in this- climate. Such construction would therefore be unreasonable, as it would frustrate tbe manifest object wbicb tbe Legislature bad in view.

Besides, it would seem to be opposed to tbe concluding *62clause of the next succeeding section, which, says, that the court in the order may appoint the time for cutting out the road. Now, it may happen that at the time the order is granted there is no growing crop, and a time is fixed for cutting out the road, yet before the time arrives the owner of some farm has his wheat, or his turnips, or some other crop growing, and before these cease to grow another crop succeeds, and so on ad infinitum; so that, notwithstanding the county has purchased and paid for the right of way, and a court of competent jurisdiction has established it, and ordered it to be cut out, a capricious individual would have itin his or her power to forestall and frustrate the whole proceeding.

If it be said the letter of the statute is opposed to this view, and that the restriction against opening the road through an enclosure, while there is a crop growing thereon, is general, we reply, that an interpetation should never be adopted which would defeat the purpose of the statute, if any other reasonable construction may be given to it, 9 Wheat. 381; and that the literal interpretation of an act is not always that which either reason or the law approves. The inartificial manner in which many of our statutes are framed, the inaptness of expressions frequently used, and the want of perspicuity and precision not unfrequently met with, often require the court to look less at the letter or words of the statute, 'than at the context, the subject-matter, the consequences and effects, and the reason and spirit of the law, in endeavoring to arrive at the will of the law giver. Stradling v. Morgan, 1 Plowd. 200; 2 ib. 463; 4 Litt. 377; and cases cited, 1 U. S. Dig. 484.

It results from what we have said, that there was no error in the charge which the court gave, and that the charges prayed for were properly refused.

In the progress of the trial below, the State offered the record of the proceedings had in the Commissioners’ Court in August, 1849, establishing a road over the land of Mrs. Thompson, as before stated, which proceedings had been quashed in the Circuit Court. The bill of exceptions shows that these proceedings were offered and admitted, only to show that after the order was made, and while in full force, the defendant had extended her fence across said road, as the *63evidence previously introduced showed, “ so that the' jury might judge of the motive which had influenced her in obstructing this road.” "We are wholly unable to perceive what connection Mrs. Thompson’s violation of the law, or disregard of the order of the Commissioners’ Court in 1849, has with her obstructing this road in 1851. If she committed an of-fence then, by enclosing her land, over which the road had been cut out, she was answerable for that by a distinct proceeding. If, by reason of the irregularity of the proceedings of 1819, she might well disregard them, and go on and erect her fence, then she is guilty of no wrong by so doing, and no inference prejudicial to her could properly have been drawn from it. So that this proof, for the purpose of explaining the motive with which the subsequent act was done, was irrelevant and inadmissible. We think the record of the quashed proceedings might properly have been read, to explain the subsequent order which refers to them, as designating the proposed route for the road through Mrs. Thompson’s land, but the same was not read for that purpose.

It may, however, be argued, that no injury resulted to the plaintiff in error by the improper admission of this testimony. We have considered this point, and are not prepared to say that she could not by possibility have been prejudiced by its admission. It was calculated to impress upon the minds of the jury the belief that she was disregardful of the orders of the Commissioners’ Court, and consequently was a proper subject to be made an example of.

For this error, let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.