free() uses data prepended to the allocated block to manage the heap. If the memory pointed to was not allocated by a heap allocation function such as malloc() or calloc(), then the data preceeding the block will be meaningless as heap management data.
Some libraries will detect invalid heap data and yieled a runtime error, otherwise the behaviour is undefined. Often the consequences of such an error will remain unnoticed until you later attempt to allocate further memory. This can make debugging such errors very difficult.
You would not get a compiler error because it is not a syntactic error and is not detectable at compile time. The compiler has no knowledge of the semantics of library functions. All it knows is that malloc() returns a void* and that free() accepts a void*; there is no way of knowing at compile time whether the pointer refers to a dynamically allocated block because the memory is by definition allocated at runtime. Also a pointer may be modified at runtime to point to any memory type, or may be aliased - copied to another pointer and then free'd through the second pointer. You expect a lot of the compiler if you expect an error message; however some static analysis tools may be able to warn if such an error may occur, and dynamic analysis tools such as valgrind may detect the error when and if it actually occurs during testing.
freewithout callingmalloc, but only if the value you pass tofreeis a null pointer. So not useful if what you want is a pointer which might point to an allocated block, but might point to a local array. – Steve Jessop Nov 5 '10 at 22:58