If any person shall unlawfully and wilfully burn, destroy, pull down, injure, or remove any fence, wall, or other inclosure, or any part thereof, surrounding or about any yard, garden, cultivated field, or pasture, ... he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. C. 4317. *635The indictment charges the defendant with pulling down, injuring, and removing a fence surrounding a cultivated field in breach of this statute. He was convicted, and from the judgment pronounced he appealed to this Court.
His Honor gave the jury this instruction: “I charge you that if you find from the evidence and by its greater weight that they moved the fence from the place where it was, or tore down the fence and put up some other fence, they would be guilty of moving a fence surrounding a cultivated field; a pasture field is a cultivated field in law, because a man could not have a pasture unless he cultivated it; and if you find by the greater weight of the evidence that they tore down this fence as described by the prosecuting witness and Tway Cornett; if you find that to be true beyond a reasonable doubt it will be your duty to return a verdict of guilty; and if nothing to the contrary you will return a verdict of guilty.”
The defendants cannot be convicted unless their guilt is proved beyond a reasonable doubt; but under the instruction given it was permissible to establish their guilt by the greater weight of the evidence. Through an inadvertence the burden imposed upon the plaintiff in a civil action is that which was imposed upon the State in the first part of the charge. The subsequent imposition upon the State of the proper burden of proof did not cure the error. How can it be determined which of the conflicting instructions the jury adopted?
The indictment charges the removal of a fence surrounding a cultivated field. According to the fevidence the fence surrounded a “pasture field,” in which there was turf grass, but no crops. The statute forbids the injury, removal, or destruction of a fence surrounding ... a cultivated field or pasture. If the words “cultivated field” and “pasture” are synonymous, why distinguish the terms by a disjunctive? If land is cleared, fenced, and cultivated, or is kept and used for cultivation according to the ordinary course of husbandry, although nothing is growing within the enclosure at the time of the trespass, it is a cultivated field within the meaning of the statute. S. v. Allen, 35 N. C., 36; S. v. McMinn, 81 N. C., 585; S. v. Campbell, 133 N. C., 640; Combs v. Commissioners, 110 N. C., 87. The word “pasture” is defined as ground for the grazing of domestic animals. New Standard Dictionary; 1 Thomas, Coke, Litt., 202. It includes also the grass growing upon the ground. Gulf, etc., Ry. Co. v. Jones, 21 S. W., 145; 47 C. J., 1376. Eut a pasture is not cleared ground under cultivation. S. v. Perry, 64 N. C., 305.
New trial.