Fliashnick v. United States

223 F. 736 | 2d Cir. | 1915

COXE, Circuit Judge.

The two letters in question were decoy, or test, letters prepared by Inspectors Jacobs and James and mailed by them in letter boxes located, respectively, at the corner of Convent-avenue and 133d street and at the corner of Amsterdam avenue and 133d street. The letter mailed at the latter place contained a half dollar silver piece. The inspectors saw the defendant collect the letters from these boxes and, after waiting for his next trip, found that he had not returned the letters to the station. They then apprehended the defendant and found that he did not have in his possession the letters or the contents thereof. The inspectors looked through his mail bag and locker and found no mail there or on his person.

Inspector Jacobs testified:

“I saw the defendant collect the mall from, the box, loo*k it over and throw the majority of it in, the hag. A manila colored envelope together with another piece of mail the defendant placed in his bag in that fashion (illustrating), the other he threw in.”

Inspector James corroborates Inspector Jacobs in the important parts of his testimony. Maurice Schlewger, a substitute letter carrier, was told by the assistant superintendent to collect route 3, and look for the missing letters. When he reached the box at Convent avenue and 133d street he found the missing letter addressed to the Telephone Company face up and close up against the back of the box; there were no oilier letters in the box. He did not find the other letter addressed to Ludwig Bauman & Co. until he reached the box at 131st street and Amsterdam avenue; there were about 20 letters in the box besides the Bauman letter. His testimony is corroborated by Vath, a substitute letter carrier. There was also testimony that in November, 1913, about three months prior to the transactions in question, a letter *738addressed to the Pease Piano Company, West Forty-Second Street, New York, and .containing a coin and a bill, was mailed about 2:30 p: m. on November 14th at a letter box at 121st street and Mt. Morris Park West. This letter should have been received at Times Square station about 4:15. The mail on the carriers’ desk was searched but the letter was not found.

The defendant was sworn and denied all knowledge of the letters referred to in the two counts of the indictment and of the letter addressed to the Pease Piano Company. He made no objection fi> being searched and a thorough search was made, but nothing was discovered having any tendency to incriminate him. Evidence was introduced to show his good character in the community in which he lives.

[1, 2] The case presented by the government rests at best upon inconclusive testimony. The defendant is charged with delaying and detaining two letters. The mere fact of detention is insufficient to constitute the crime as it must be accompanied by proof that the letter was detained by the defendant for some unlawful purpose. The evidence may be circumstantial, it may depend upon presumptions, but there must be some proof from which the jury can draw the conclusion that the defendant acted unlawfully and with guilty intent. The proof here is that after the defendant had collected the mail from the boxes where the decoys were placed, these boxes were examined and the letter which is the subject of the first count was found in the box where it was deposited, lying face up on the bottom of the box and as near the back of the box as possible. There were no other letters in this box.

The prosecution was only permitted to prove one similar transaction which occurred about three months before. The proof, however, was wholly insufficient to connect the defendant with the transaction. A letter addressed to the Pease Piano Company was mailed at one of the boxes on the defendant’s route; it should have been delivered at Station J and should have arrived at the Times Square station in the usual course. It did not arrive there. Such proof, assuming that a single instance is sufficient to establish intent, was wholly inconsequential for the reason that it failed to connect the defendant with the transaction. No one saw him collect the mail from the box in question or embezzle it or delay its delivery. It may have been stolen or lost at the distributing office, the evidence being that the Times Square station is one of the largest and most busy stations in the city. There being, then, no competent proof of a similar transaction and no predominating proof that the Telephone Company letter was unlawfully delayed by the defendant, the conviction upon that count must be reversed. The fact that the letter was found in the box where it was deposited offers no conclusive presumption of guilt. Its presence in the box may have resulted from inadvertence, carelessness or mistake. Surely it cannot be said that a carrier who leaves a letter which he should have collected in a letter box is guilty of a crime, beyond a reasonable doubt.

[3, 4] The testimony regarding the letter which is the subject of the second count is somewhat stronger for the government for the reason that the letter was not found in the box in which it had been deposited, but in the box at 131st street and Amsterdam avenue, with *739about 20 other letters. Assuming that the defendant placed the Ludwig Bauman letter in the box, it is difficult to understand what illegal purpose he sought to accomplish by doing so. However, the jury may have found that he placed it there knowingly and with intent to delay its delivery within the meaning of the statute. In reaching this conclusion they may have been influenced by the testimony offered to establish proof of a similar transaction relating to the Pease Piano Company letter, which, as we have seen, wholly failed to connect the defendant with any unlawful act or purpose. In a case where the proof of intent is evenly balanced such testimony as this may have misled the jury.

The judgment is reversed.