
    The People of the State of New York, App’lts, v. Henry K. Stevens, Resp’t.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed April 10, 1888.)
    
    1. Criminal law—Unlawful intrusion on land—Intent necessary— Penal Code, § 467.
    The existence of a criminal intent is a necessary constituent of the offense of an unlawful intrusion on land, although not in terms made a part of the definition thereof by Penal Code, section 467.
    
      2. Same—When necessary to prove intent.
    Where a particular intent is an ingredient of a crime, the mere doing of the prohibited act does not constitute the crime, unless accompanied with unlawful intent.
    3. Same—Advice of counsel.
    Whether the advice of counsel, if honestly given, that the defendant was entitled to possession of the land, if accepted and acted upon in good faith, would constitute a defense. Quaere?
    
    
      Appeal from a judgment of the general term of the superior court of Buffalo reversing a conviction of the defendant and ordering a new trial.
    
      William L. Marcy, asst, district attorney, for app’lt; John Laughlin, for resp’ts.
    
      
       Reversing 10 N. Y. State Rep., 346.
    
   Andrews, J.

The indictment charged that the defendant did unlawfully and wrongfully intrude ” upon certain premises in the city of Buffalo, without authority of the owner. It was found under section 467 of the Penal Code, which is as follows: “A person who intrudes upon any lot or piece of land within the bounds of a city or village, without authority from the owner thereof, or who erects or occupies thereon any hut, or other structure whatever, without such authority; or a person who places, erects or occupies within the bounds of any street or avenue of a city or village, any hut or other structure, without lawful authority, is guilty of a misdemeanor.”

The evidence on the trial clearly established that the defendant, under pretense that he was entitled so to do under a contract of purchase with the owner, entered upon and took possession of a certain house and lot in the city of Buffalo, and remained in possession thereof for more than a year, when in fact the contract gave him no right to the possession, and the owner, a non-resident, had given him no permission to enter.

The evidence further shows that at the time the defendant took possession he had not performed or offered to perform the contract on his part, but without performance or tender, of performance had commenced a suit against the owner for specific performance on his part, and for damages for non-performance. There was not a shadow of right in the defendant to the possession of the premises either under the contract of purchase or under any writing, nor was any oral permission by the owner that he might take possession, pretended.

The trial judge put the case to the jury on the question of intention, and charged in substance that the defendant could not be convicted unless he entered upon the premises knowing that he had no right to do so, and with the intent and purpose of unlawfully depriving the owner of the possession of the property. It is claimed on behalf of the people that the charge in this respect was more favorable to the defendant than the law justified, and that under the statute it is sufficient to constitute the offense of unlawful intrusion; that the defendant entered upon the premises without authority in fact, and that even if the entry was made under a bona fide claim of right, that would be no def ense if in truth there was no such right and the entry was in fact unauthorized. This construction is made as an answer to the point upon which the general term reversed the conviction, viz., that the trial judge erroneously excluded the offer of the defendant’s counsel to show by the defendant that before he took possession, he fully stated the facts to his counsel, and was advised by him that he had a right to take possession of the land, if he could do so without a breach of the peace, and that he entered in pursuance of such advice, honestly believing that he had a right so to do.

We disagree with the view of the counsel for the people, that on an indictment under this statute, the intention of the defendant is immaterial and that although the defendant entered under a bona fide claim of right, which he ■might reasonably believe entitled him to take possession, nevertheless, it would be no defense.

Section 467 of the Penal Code is in substance a re-enactment of section 1, chapter 396, of the Laws of 1857, entitled, “An act to punish nuisances and malicious trespasses on lands.” The words in that act are: “Any person, who shall hereafter intrude or squat upon any lot,” etc. The word “squat,” is omitted in the present statute, but it' cannot be doubted that in both statutes the legislature,had primarily in view, lawless intrusions, especially on vacant lands in cities and villages, without the knowledge of the owner. Intrusion on any lands in cities and villages, vacant or not, is doubtless within the statute. The statute, construed in view of the pre-existing law, was primarily intended to define what was previously known in the criminal law as a criminal trespass, as distinguished from a mere civil trespass. It may include some cases not before criminal, but this we need not consider. But to constitute a trespass on land an indictable offense, the distinguishing feature is an unlawful and criminal intent. It is the criminal mind and purpose going with the act, which distinguishes a criminal trespass from a mere civil injury.

1 Hale’s P. 0., 509. It is not necessary to constitute the crime that a defendant does not know that the statute prohibits his act. It is sufficient if he does the act prohibited, when the statute makes the mere act itself unlawful. But where a particular intent is an ingredient of the crime, the mere doing of the prohibited act does not constitute the crime, unless accompanied. with unlawful intent. The cases of larceny, receiving stolen goods, or passing counterfeit money are illustrations. The same act may in one case be larceny, or forgery, or a guilty receiving of stolen property, and in another, wholly innocent, depending on the intent.

Section 467 of the Penal Code, defining the offense of intrusión on lands, does not, it is true, in terms make the intent a material element of the offense. But it cannot be supposed that, the legislature intended to subject a person to criminal punishment, as when, for example, there being a dispute between neighbors as to the line between them, one moves his fence on to his neighbor’s land under a bona fide though mistaken belief that he was placing it on the true line, or where a lot owner in a city or village, in erecting a building, encroaches innocently although without authority upon the street. Yet both of these cases are within the letter of the statute but manifestly they are not within the statute, because looking at the reason of the thing, the ineffaceable distinction between innocence and crime, and the antecedent law, the existence of a criminal intent as a necessary constituent of the offense, must be implied.

But notwithstanding the conclusion we have reached as to the true construction of the statute, we are nevertheless of opinion that the court was justified in rejecting the proof offered as to the advice of counsel, for the reason that there was no colorable ground for any claim on the part of the defendant that he had any right or authority to enter upon the premises, arising out of the facts existing at the time. The facts were fully known to the defendant. Upon these facts there was no doubtful question of law, nor was the true conclusion to be drawn from the facts, beyond the comprehension of any person of ordinary intelligence. Whatever advice may have been sought or accepted, there was a willful closing of the eyes to the truth, if the defendant assumed to act upon advice that he was entitled to possession. It may have been supposed that the defendant would gain an advantage in the pending litigation if he could get into possession of the premises, but it is impossible that he could have believed that he was of right entitled to the possession. It is unnecessary to consider whether the advice of counsel, if honestly given, that the defendant was entitled to possession of the land, if accepted and acted upon in good faith, would constitute a defense. The circumstances do not permit this assumption is this respect.

We think the judgment of the general term should be reversed. All concur.  