196 F. 459 | 6th Cir. | 1912
(after stating the facts as above).
To say that this testimony was not relevant to the issue is to take too narrow a view of relevancy, and to look only at the form of the issue and not at the essence. Daniels did give the check to Hassel. That was not in dispute. The thing in controversy was whether Daniels testified to the truth wdien he said that he did owe Hassel this amount of money, or whether Hassel spoke the truth when he denied such indebtedness. We need look only at the situation to see that the real issue was the affirmance on one side that the debt existed and that the check was a good-faith transaction in discharge of the debt, and the assertion, on the other side, that the giving of the check was a step in a scheme by Daniels to defraud his creditors by pretending to pay a debt when he was really getting the cash into his own hands to keep it there. It was impossible to try one half of this issue, without trying the other half; and whatever was relevant to show that the check was given by Daniels as a step in a scheme to defraud his creditors was relevant to show that the check was not given in good faith for an honest debt.
Where the situation involves two inconsistent alternatives, the existence of one of which would make the other impossible, and the direct thing to be proved is that one did not exist, evidence directlj tending to show that the other did exist is inherently relevant The principle that is thus stated must be applied with due regard to the rule of remoteness, and much evidence, not too remote and therefore properly admissible if the primary issue were as to the existence of the other, must be excluded on the trial of the issue as to the nonexistence of the one, for the reasons which exclude evidence bearing only remotely on the issue. As applied to the present case, the rule would not permit the general trial of .the question whether Daniels was engaged in a scheme to defraud his creditors, to the same extent as if that were the primary dispute, but it would permit testimony directly tending to show that the check was given as a part of such scheme; and to this conclusion the existence of the scheme is essential. The proofs that Daniels gave this check, that it practically exhausted his money in the bank, that he executed an assignment for creditors, and that, instead of turning over to his assignee the large amount of cash and convertible property he had on hand, he took it with him, and his creditors never got it — all these things occurring practically simultaneously — do tend to show that they were all interwoven as parts of one transaction, and all have a direct bearing on the character of the check.
We do not overlook the fact that' the existence of a scheme to defraud creditors, and in that connection taking the money away, is
We refrain from any discussion or analysis of the many decisions on the subject of relevancy, cited in the briefs. Each case involves an application to its facts of the well-understood general rules. These are well stated in Elliott on Evidence, vol. 1, p. 143 et seq., where the conclusion is reached (section 44):
“Facts relevant to tlie issue are facts from the existence of which inferences as to the truth or existence of the facts in issue may justly be drawn. As a general proposition, therefore, it may be said that any evidence that tends in any considerable degree to establish the probability or improbability of a fact in issue, no matter how slight its weight may be, is relevant * * * It is not necessary, however, that it should in itself bear distinctly upon the point in issue, for if it is but a link in the chain of evidence tending to prove the issue by reasonable inference, it may nevertheless be relevant.”
Again, Prof. Thayer, in his Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at Common Law, p. 265, after saying that matters not logically probative are forbidden, continues:
“How are we to know what these forbidden things are? Not by any rule of law. The law furnishes no test of relevancy. For this, it tacitly refers to logic and general experience — assuming that the principles of reasoning are known to its judges and ministers, just as a vast multitude of other things are assumed as already sufficiently known to them.”
In' reaching our conclusion that the evidence was relevant, we have, as we think, applied the proper inferences drawn from “logic and general experience.”
2. The same considerations dispose of the exceptions based upon the admission of evidence to show that this check practically exhausted Daniels’ bank deposit, and left only an inconsiderable balance, and also those based upon the claim that Hassel’s testimony was not corroborated.
This holding of the Supreme Court cannot be treated as merely a decision that, because of the necessities of the case, perjury will lie; it must be treated as holding that, because of the necessities of the case, the language of the statute will receive a reasonable rather than a literal construction, and that, as the result of such reasonable construction, it is found that perjury may be so predicated. What, then, is this reasonable construction, to be applied to other situations as well as to the Glickstein Case? It is that the purpose of the so-called immunity clause is to supplement the constitutional provision against compelling self-incriminating evidence, or, rather, to minimize the possible obstructive effect of this provision; that this constitutional provision can have reference only to crimes which have already been committed at the time when the evidence is compelled; that this statute must have the same construction; and so that it does not have reference to any criminal proceeding based on a crime inherent in the bankrupt’s examination. Applying this construction, it is manifest that, where the bankrupt is indicted for testifying falsely in one part of his examination, his testimony in other parts of the same examination, if tending to support the indictment, may be given m evidence against him. Edelstein v. U. S. (C. C. A. 8) 149 Fed. 636, 642, 79 C. C. A. 328, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 236.
Counsel for Daniels urge that the crime of perjury was complete and finished (if ever). when, in the early part of his examination, Daniels testified that he did owe Hassel the debt purporting to be paid by check, and hence that his later testimony, over which this controversy arises, referred to a crime then completely committed and in the past. No such arbitrary dividing line can be drawn through the bankruptcy examination. The result would be that in a prosecution based on the earlier testimony, the later inconsistent statement could not be received, while in a prosecution based on the later statement, the earlier one would be admissible. The examination may last over several hours or several days; but it must, for the present purpose, be considered as an entirety, and all must speak, as of the time when the oath was administered and the testimony commenced.
We do not fail to observe that it follows, as a necessary corollary
“The government is not restricted to the averment as to that amount. I have said it is for you to determine whether or not there was anything owing to Hassel, and, if so, the amount, and a considerable variation from that amount would not, in and of itself, operate against the government in this-case.”
Objection is now made that this charge led the jury to find Daniels guilty, though the government had failed to prove its allegation as to the nonexistence of any debt in excess of $50.
We see no reason why the government should be held to the exact limits of these figures stated in the indictment. The essential thing charged was that Daniels did not owe the debt which he was pretending to pay, but that such debt, or a substantial part of it, was fictitious, and it was not necessary to allege that whatever real debt, if any, existed did not exceed any particular amount. Even so, such an allegation might sometimes mislead a respondent or confuse the jury as to the real issue, so that respondent would have a right to complain; but we think not in this case. There is nothing in the record. indicating that Daniels claimed the existence of any debt except the entire, full debt which he was assuming to pay, and nothing to indicate the existence of any other debt, save the one which Hassel
The judgment is affirmed.