153 F. 551 | 8th Cir. | 1907
Lead Opinion
Defendant Chitwood, a clerk in the post office at Hot Springs, Ark., was indicted under section 5467 of the Revised Statutes [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3691] in seven counts: (1) For secreting and embezzling a letter containing a watch fob; (2) for stealing and taking the watch fob out of a letter; (3) for stealing and taking a $10 bill out of a letter; (4) for stealing and taking a $5 bill out of a letter; (5) for stealing and taking another $5 bill out of a letter; (6) for secreting and embezzling a letter containing a post-office money order; (7) for secreting and embezzling a package containing a lady’s belt. He was tried and found guilty on the first count and not guilty on the others. He now prosecutes this writ of error to secure a reversal of the judgment.
There was evidence on the part of the government tending to show that while he was engaged in discharging his duties as clerk in the
We think it was error to exclude that evidence. The defendant was standing on his plea of not guilty, and the burden was on the government to establish his guilt. It produced witnesses who testified directly to seeing the defendant do things consistent only with guilt. The value of their testimony depended upon the accuracy of their observations, the reliability of their memory in describing what they saw, and the credibility due them as witnesses. Defendant denied doing what they swore they had seen him do. A sharp and vital issue was thus presented for the consideration of the jury. We think, if it were true that immediately preceding and up to the time in question it had been and was a common practice in that post office for mail to come into the office in bad condition and with ends and edges so broken or worn out that solid substances might readily fall from them, such fact would be a circumstance tending to support defendant’s theory. Its value might not be great as against the other direct and positive testimony with which the trial court compared it and on account of which rejected it; but that was for the jury, and not for the court, to decide. The defendant had an undoubted right to buttress his own testimony by any and all circumstances and facts fairly tending to support it, and we think the facts offered to be proved by him were admissible for that purpose. For the error in excluding that evidence, the judgment must be reversed.
As one of defendant’s contentions has been earnestly debated before us and probably will be the occasion of controversy at the next trial, we deem it proper to express our opinion concerning it. Witness Reaves
Moreover, the several counts of the indictment under consideration at the time the evidence in question was offered, charging the defendant with secreting letters and packages of mail, charged an offense kindred to that of destroying mail. It is familiar law that in cases both civil and criminal where the intent of a party is in issue evidence of other acts and doings of that party at or about the time in question of a kindred character is admissible to demonstrate the motive and intent which actuated him in .doing the .act or thing charged against him in the case. Exchange Bank v. Moss (C. C. A.) 149 Fed. 340; Wood v. United States, 16 Pet. 342, 360, 10 L. Ed. 987; Coffin v. United States, 162 U. S. 664, 672, 16 Sup. Ct. 943, 40 L. Ed. 1109, and cas.es cited. In an honest and legitimate investigation of that intent a reasonably wide latitude should be indulged by the trial judge, and his discretion, when fairly and urtprejudicially exercised, should not be interfered with by appellate courts. Moore v. United States, 150 U. S. 57, 61, 14 Sup. Ct. 26, 37 L. Ed. 996; Dow v. United States, 27 C. C. A. 140, 82 Fed. 904, 909. The destruction of the circulars, if done by the defendant, was in the legal sense a conversion of them by him. The secreting or stealing of mail, if done by him, was likewise a conversion of it. The acts are not only kindred in their nature, but very obviously may spring from a like motive and intent. The evidence in question was properly admitted, not as evidence of a distinct offense in itself, but as bearing on the 'disposition and intention of the defendant in doing whatever he did do.
Other errors are assigned by defendant, but those already considered are the ones chiefly relied upon by his counsel for a reversal of the judgment. As the case must be remanded for another trial, we deem it unnecessary at the present time to express our opinion upon any other questions. We may properly assume that with the foregoing directions it will be correctly tried.
The judgment must be reversed for the error in excluding the evidence referred to in the fore part of this opinion, and it is so ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). I concur in the result in this case, but am of the opinion that it was error to receive in evidence the testimony relative to the burning of the election circulars
The criminal intent requisite to the commission of the offense in this case was the intent of the defendant to secrete and convert to his own use a valuable article, the intent to secure pecuniary benefit to himself. The evidence challenged was that the defendant after working his time was unable to handle all the election circulars sent through the mail, and he burned some of them. If this be an offense, it is not denounced by either of the sections of the statutes mentioned, and it is not of a like nature or character to that of secretly taking and appropriating the property of another to one’s own use. Its commission neither requires nor evidences any intent to steal or to convert to one’s use anything of value or to derive any pecuniary benefit from the act. It evidences nothing but the purpose to avoid performing a duty assigned. As the reason of the rule which permits proof of similar offenses fails here, it seems to me that the rule is inapplicable.