Court Opinion

ID: 6508765
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:20:30.263459+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:48.659262
License: Public Domain

B. F. SAFFOLD, J.
The offence alleged in the indictment is declared by the first section of the act approved February 25, 1871, entitled “ An act for the protection of the fire companies in the city of Mobile,” which is in these words: “ Be it enacted,” &c., “ That any person or persons giving, or causing to be given, a false alarm by the fire-alarm telegraph in the city of Mobile, knowing the same to be such, or who intentionally injures or defaces any portion of said fire-alarm telegraph, must be punished, on conviction, at the discretion of the jury, by fine and imprisonment in the county jail, for not less than six, nor more than twelve months, or by hard labor for the county for not more than one year.”
The indictment charged, in one count, that the defendant “ gave a false alarm by the fire-alarm telegraph in the city of Mobile, knowing the same to be such; ” and in another that he caused the alarm to be given. The operation of the telegraph was explained to the court and jury. , There was a chief bell, which sounded the alarm throughout the city, and was set in motion by a proper manipulation of any one of several boxes placed at the various buildings containing the fire-engines. This manipulation not only sounded that bell, but struck its own number on it, and on the apparatus attached to every other box, so that the firemen were apprised, not only of a fire, but also of its location or vicinity. The ringing of the bells at the time of the false alarm charged was also described by the witnesses, and some of the evidence tended to prove that the sounds made by it “ were confused and unintelligible.” Whoever tampered with box No. 18, on the occasion referred to, by applying pieces of wood under the wire, contrived that it should not strike its own number correctly, but should ring the chief bell, and perhaps those at the other boxes, continuously. *8The gist of the several charges asked by the defendant was, that a false alarm was not given, unless the signals were correctly made.
The consideration of all the charges asked may be included in a criticism of the third, which was in these words: “ The fire-alarm telegraph is used only for the purpose of giving alarms of fire; and when the act speaks of a - false alarm,’ it means a false alarm of fire ; and if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the ringing of the bell caused by the manipulation of box No. 18 did not give such an alarm as would cause the firemen to believe there was a fire in the city, then they must find the defendant not guilty.” This is a very ingenious charge, and would be correct under some circumstances; but, construed in connection with the evidence in the case, we think it was properly refused. As the sounding of the bells betokened fire somewhere, their irregular ringing would increase the excitement and alarm of the citizens and firemen, from not knowing where the fire was. The indication of the place of the fire was secondary, and was devised to save time and.prevent confusion. If the firemen, in consequence of having been frequently imposed on, had adopted a practice of not turning out until the signals were repeated, it only proves that any ringing of the fire-bells constituted an alarm of fire, and that they had learned somewhat to distinguish between a true alarm, given by a policeman, or some other authorized and reliable person, and a false alarm, given by mischievous meddlers. The defendant certainly cannot have the benefit of this caution of the firemen ; yet this is what the charge means, construed by the evidence. The practice into which the firemen had fallen was a bad one, causing injurious delay, for which the tamperers with the telegraph were responsible. The statute was designed to put a stop to this intermeddling, which can only be characterized as wicked. We cannot so construe the law as to make it inoperative against those persons who purposely gave the signals incorrectly. In returning a verdict of guilty, the jury were obliged, both by the indictment and the law, to find that the defendant knew he was giving false information of a fire. If he meant to do so, and used the ringing of a bell, exclusively devoted to that purpose, to carry out his intention, it is nothing to his advantage that the firemen were not deceived by him, especially if the reason why they were not was because they had been repeatedly deceived before. The several charges were properly refused.
The judgment is affirmed.