208 F. 4 | 9th Cir. | 1913
The plaintiff in error was convicted on two counts of an indictment charging him and one Henry Gallagher with a conspiracy, as well as with the actual participation in the act of unlawfully receiving, concealing, and facilitating the transportation and concealment, after importation, of certain opium known by them to have been imported into the United States contrary to law.
It is assigned as error that the trial court overruled the objection of the plaintiff in error to questions propounded to the witness Powers by the district attorney as follows:
“Q. Mr. Tidwell never spoke to you about this matter until he sent for you after he seized these letters that had gone out from the .tail which disclosed Mr. Donaldson’s connection, did he? (Question objected to on the grounds that it is immaterial and irrelevant, not redirect, is leading, and is based on something that is not in evidence; there is nothing here about letters being seized. Objection overruled and exception.) A. No, sir. Q. And it was only after he had this positive information in these letters relating to Mr. Donaldson and Mr. Gallagher that he ever sent for you at all? (Question objected to on the same grounds. Objection overruled and exception.) A. Xes, sir.”
To understand the relevancy of this testimony, it is necessary to review briefly the evidence in the case. Powers, who was testifying at the time, had been indicted and convicted and had served his sentence in jail for his complicity in removing the opium which it was charged that the plaintiff in error had conspired with Gallagher to import unlawfully. He testified that the plaintiff in error approached him and finally induced him to lend his aid in disposing of opium which was then on board the steamship Siberia in the San Francisco harbor, and that thereafter the plaintiff in error took him to the Siberia and introduced him to Yung Tai, a Chinaman, the chief boatswain of the Siberia. He testified to conversations between the parties on that occasion in regard to getting the opium off the vessel; that the plaintiff in error told him where the opium was to go; that he (the witness'), and Gallagher and one Fiedler, who was also in the scheme, thereafter
“Q. I understand certain letters were written liy Mr. Fiedler in jail? A. Yes, sir. Q. That is the way in which your connection with these people was learned? A. Yes, sir.”
We find no error. The judgment is affirmed.