Allen BENTON, Appellant, v. UNITED STATES of America, Appellee.
No. 12728.
United States Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Nov. 18, 1955. Decided March 1, 1956.
232 F.2d 341
The judgment of the Municipal Court of Appeals on rehearing should be reversed and the case remanded to that Court for consideration of any questions left undisposed of on the rehearing.
It is so ordered.
Mr. Charles R. Cutler, Washington, D. C., appointed by this Court, with whom Mr. Herbert J. Miller, Jr., Washington, D. C., was on the brief, for appellant.
Mr. John D. Lane, Asst. U. S. Atty., for appellee.
Messrs. Leo A. Rover, U. S. Atty., Lewis Carroll, and Frederick G. Smithson, Asst. U. S. Attys., were on the brief for appellee.
Before WILBUR K. MILLER, BAZELON and FAHY, Circuit Judges.
BAZELON, Circuit Judge.
“No person shall have in his possession in the District any instrument, tool, or other implement for picking locks or pockets, or that is usually employed, or reasonably may be employed in the commission of any crime, if he is unable satisfactorily to account for the possession of the implement. Whoever violates this section shall be imprisoned for not more than one year and may be fined not more than $1,000, unless the violation occurs after he has been convicted in the District of a violation of this section or of a felony, either in the District or in another jurisdiction, in which case he shall be imprisoned for not less than one nor more than ten years.”1
These are the pertinent facts concerning this appealed conviction. An unidentified woman informer, who was a narcotics addict under arrest, told the police that appellant carried two guns, had a bag of burglar tools in the trunk of his car, and had threatened to kill the first policeman who looked in his car; that he gave her some narcotics bearing the label of a pharmacy which she and he had previously “cased“; and that he was presently in his girl friend‘s apartment. He was apprehended in the hallway of the apartment by the police who had no search or arrest warrant.
The police thereupon broke down the apartment door, and conducted a search which netted a knotted rope, some costume jewelry and a loaded revolver. Appellant was then taken to his car on the street outside the apartment. Inside the trunk of the car the police found a bag containing a sledge hammer, an axe, two wrecking bars, a hacksaw with several blades, a length of knotted rope, a brace and bit. It is these tools which constitute the basis for the charge under review.
According to police officers, Benton admitted at police headquarters that the tools were his; when asked to explain why he had them, he answered, “What do you think“; and when asked what he was using them for, he answered, “You know what they are used for.”
Appellant urges that his convic
But the constitutional issue cannot be avoided in like manner here. For even assuming, without deciding, that the challenged statute requires a similar “order or demand“,2 we think this requirement was satisfied. The police asked appellant to “account” in circumstances which made clear that he knew a straight and serious answer was required. He was questioned in police headquarters after he had been taken into custody because he was found in possession of the implements. Moreover the questions themselves, far from being “casual or bantering“, appear to have been direct and serious.3 Appellant could hardly have understood them differently.
We turn then to the constitutional attack we must consider. Appellant‘s contention, which rests on the premise that criminal intent is an essential element of the crime proscribed by
Appellant is correct in his premise that proof of intent is an essential element of the Government‘s case under
The issue here is whether Congress has, consistently with the due process clause, made intent an element of the crime the statute defines. According to the literal language of
The validity of a presumption created by statute depends on the presence of a “rational connection between the fact proved and the ultimate fact presumed * * *.” Tot v. United States, 1943, 319 U.S. 463, 467, 63 S.Ct. 1241, 1245, 87 L.Ed. 1519. It cannot be sustained “if the inference of the one from proof of the other is arbitrary because of lack of connection between the two in common experience.” Id. Applying this test in Tot, the Supreme Court invalidated a statute providing that mere possession of a firearm or ammunition by a person previously convicted of a crime of violence is “presumptive evidence” of its shipment or receipt in interstate commerce. The necessary connection which the Court found lacking in Tot between the fact presumed and the fact proved is similarly lacking here.
No rational inference of criminal intent can be drawn from the mere possession of tools which “reasonably may be employed” in crime. Such a definition encompasses a wide variety of implements, possession of which does not in itself give rise to sinister impli
We think this conclusion is sound whether the statute is construed as shifting the burden of proof or only the burden of going forward with the evidence. On either theory, the defendant‘s guilt is established if the Government, offering no evidence on intent, rests its case on proof of possession, and the defendant fails to counteract the presumption of felonious intent arising therefrom.
Since the jury was instructed only in terms of the statutory language, which improperly places the burden of proof with respect to intent on the defendant, it follows that the conviction must be reversed.
The remaining question is whether a new trial should be ordered. We would be justified in remanding for that purpose only if the statute can be saved by construing it to impose on the Government the burden of showing that possession of the tools described was for an illicit purpose. But it seems clear, from the “satisfactorily to account” clause, that Congress meant to place the burden of proof with respect to intent on the defendant. We cannot strain construction of the statute so far as to avoid that conclusion. It follows, in our opinion, that the statute as applied here is unconstitutional. This makes a new trial unnecessary.
We need not decide whether the “reasonably may be employed” phrase with which we are concerned, or any other phrase in the statute, could validly be applied to tools or implements which in themselves give rise to sinister inferences.11
Reversed.
WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge (dissenting).
My view that the majority err in holding the statute unconstitutional is sustained by Maynard v. United States, 1954, 94 U.S.App.D.C. 347, 215 F.2d 336, and the numerous cases there collected. The appellant interposed no defense. His guilt was clearly shown. I think we should affirm the conviction.
