318 Mass. 453 | Mass. | 1945
The first count of the indictment in this
Both defendants were found guilty on both counts of the indictment. The defendant Lopes was sentenced. to imprisonment for six months in the house of correction under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 279, § 5, and brings his case here by exceptions.
Conspiracy to commit a crime is itself a misdemeanor at common law. Commonwealth v. Hunt, 4 Met. 111, 121-123. Fox v. Commonwealth, 264 Mass. 51, 53. Commonwealth v. Pelletier, 264 Mass. 221, 227. The decisive question in this case is whether either of the defendants alleged to have conspired would have been guilty of crime by withholding information of what had happened to the Frances McGrath named in the indictment. The question is raised by a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant, which was denied subject to his exception.
There was evidence tending to prove the following facts. On June 10, 1944, a child of ten named Frances McGrath was reported to the police as missing from her home in Scituate. A widespread search resulted, in which police, firemen, the Coast Guard, the Massachusetts State Guard, the United States Army, and many volunteers took part. The search was given great publicity throughout eastern-Massachusetts, by newspaper and by radio. Whether the child was alive, or had died of accident or exposure, or had been murdered, was not known. It was not until June 16 that the dead body of the child was found in a sparsely settled wooded area near Winter Street in Norwell. The defendant Lopes led police to the body.
The defendant had sufficient public spirit to wish to assist the police in recovering the body, but did not wish to injure Bertha Pina or himself by disclosing their relations. Accordingly, he went to the police on the morning of June 16, and told them that he had found the body on that morning while going into the bushes “to relieve himself.” The defendant told the police that his attention was directed to the body by its strong odor. There was testimony, however, that the body when found had no odor. There was medical testimony that the child had been raped, but probably was alive on June 13. The defendant adhered to his story until July 17, when he confessed to something like the facts hereinbefore stated.
We may disregard the second count of the indictment, which added to the same charge already quoted from the first count the words “and in pursuance of said conspiracy did agree to make false statements to the law enforcement officers, to the interference and obstruction of the due course of justice.” There is no evidence that Bertha Pina participated in any plan to make false statements. The only plan known to her was a plan to keep silent. The defendant could not conspire alone. For this reason a conviction would not have been warranted upon the second count. It is at least doubtful whether the motion for a directed verdict required consideration of the evidence as
It may be conceded that by the common law of England every man was bound, under pain of punishment, to make himself an informer as to any treason or felony that he witnessed, or that came to his knowledge. His failure to give information as to such a crime made him guilty of the misdemeanor called misprision
Turning to America, the original settlers, when they came here, brought with them the common law of England and, as part of it, such English statutes as were in force at the time. Certain later English statutes enacted prior to the American Revolution were adopted and acted upon here without reenactment, and are made part of our law by the Constitution of Massachusetts, c. 6, art. 6. But not every principle of the English common law became part of the common law of Massachusetts. Some doctrines were judged inapplicable to the “new state and condition” of the settlers in this country, were rejected, and were never acted upon.
Except when based upon statute, American eases recognizing the offence of misprision of felony are hard to find. State v. Hann, 11 Vroom, 228, was based upon a statute applicable only to persons having knowledge of the “actual commission” of certain crimes. A Federal statute, first enacted in 1790, provides that “whoever, having knowledge of the actual commission of the crime of murder or other felony cognizable by the courts of the United States, conceals and does not as soon as may be disclose and make known the same to some one of the judges or other persons in civil or military authority under the United States” shall be punished. Under this statute, mere omission to
On the other hand, Chief Justice Marshall said, with the apparent concurrence of that learned Massachusetts judge Joseph Story, that a law punishing the mere failure to proclaim every offence that comes to one’s knowledge “is too harsh for man.” Marbury v. Brooks, 7 Wheat. 556, 575, 576. A number of American text writers have stated that the offence of misprision of felony is obsolete. 1 Wharton, Crim. Law (12th ed. 1932) § 289. 2 McClain, Crim. Law (1897) § 938. May, Law of Crimes (4th ed. 1938) § 12. In State v. Graham, 190 La. 669, 680, it was said of that statement that “the reason for that is that, in the modern acceptation of the term, misprision of felony is almost if not identically the same offense as that of an accessory after the fact,” as indeed it is under the Federal statute already quoted. And in People v. Lefkovitz, 294 Mich. 263, 270, it was held that “In modern criminal law mere nondisclosure of knowledge of crime committed by another is not misprision of felony nor any substantive crime.”
We need not decide in this case whether misprision of felony is a common law crime in this Commonwealth. Neither need we decide whether, if it is, the possible suspicion of the defendant that the body was that of Frances McGrath and that she had met with foul play was sufficient knowledge of a felony to make his silence criminal under
Exceptions sustained.
The word misprision has a broader meaning, immaterial in this connection, in which it signifies any misdemeanor, delinquency or failure of duty, particularly one that bears no specific name. 3 Holdsworth, History of English Law (3d ed. 1923) 389, note. 3 Co. Inst. 36, 139. 1 Russell, Crimes & Misdemeanors (7th ed. 1910) 10. United States v. Perlstein, 126 Fed. (2d) 789, 798.
3 Holdsworth, History of English Law (3d ed. 1923) 309, 388, 389. 8 Ibid. 323. 2 BI. Com. Book IV, 120. Stephen, Digest Grim. Law (1877) Art. 157. 1 Hale, P. C. 374, 439. 2 Hawk. P. C. c. 29, §§ 10, 23. 3 Co. Inst. 139. 1 East, P. C. 377. It may be that “misprision of felony as defined by Blackstone is merely one phase of the system of communal responsibility for the apprehension of criminals which received its original impetus from William I, under pressure of the need to protect the invading Normans in hostile country, and which endured up to the Seventeenth Century in England.” 8 Univ. of Chicago L. Rev. 340, 341, citing Morris, The Frankpledge System (1910), 29, 30.
Commonwealth v. Knowlton, 2 Mass. 530, 534, 535. Sackett v. Sackett, 8 Pick. 309. Going v. Emery, 16 Pick. 107, 115, et seq. Commonwealth v. Churchill, 2 Met. 118, 123, 124. Tyler v. Sturdy, 108 Mass. 196. Russ v. Alpaugh, 118 Mass. 369, 373-375. Phillips v. Blatchford, 137 Mass. 510, 513, 514, Crocker v. Justices of the Superior Court, 208 Mass. 162, 166, 167,