87 F. 446 | 5th Cir. | 1898
Lead Opinion
after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
By the nineteenth and twentieth assignments of errors it is set out that: the court erred in permitting evidence as shown in bills of exceptions Nos. 2 and B, which errors, it would seem, this court was expected to ascertain by a careful reading of over 60 pages of record, and an inspection of the questions and objections and the rulings of the court, and exceptions thereto taken by the defendant below, contained therein. By the twenty-third and twenty-fourth assignments of errors we are informed that the court below erred in its charge given to the jury in each portion thereof marked by lines in said written opinion -and marked 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9, and shown in the bill of exceptions No. 5. and the court erred in refusing each of the several charges and instructions in Nos. 2 and 5 as shown in the bill of exceptions. ■ Rules 10 and 11 of this court (21 C. C. A. cxi., and 78 Fed. cxi.) are as follows:
(10) “The judges of the circuit and district courts shall not allow any 1)111 of exceptions which shall contain the charge of the court at large to Hie jury in trials at common law, upon any general exception to the whole of such charge. But the party excepting shall be required to state distinctly the several matters of law in such charge to which he excepts; and those matters of law, and those only, shall be inserted in the bill of exceptions and allowed by the court.”
(11) “The plaintiff in error or appellant shall file with the clerk of the court below, with his petition for the writ of error or appeal, an assignment of errors, which shall set out separately and particularly each error asserted and intended to be urged. No writ of error or appeal shall be allowed until such assignment.*448 of errors shall have been filed. When the error alleged is to the- admission or to the rejection of evidence, the assignment of errors shall quote the full substance of the evidence admitted or rejected. When the error alleged is to the charge of the court, the assignment of errors shall set out the part referred to totidem verbis, whether it be in instructions given or in instructions refused. Such assignment of errors shall form part of the transcript of the record and be printed with it. When this is not done, the counsel will not be heard, except at the request of the court; and errors not assigned according to this rule will be disregarded, but the court, at its option, may notice a plain error not assigned.”
The assignments of errors Nos. 19, 20, 23, and 24 being in violation of the above rules 10 and 11 of this court, we decline to examine and pass upon the questions attempted to be raised thereby-
The first nine, and the 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 22d, 26th, and 27th assignments of errors raise the question so often repeated in the record of the right of the defendant, Louis G-allot, to be tried, under section 5209, as an aider and abettor of Louis Oolomb, who was then dead, and had not been indicted or prosecuted during his lifetime. The ingenious and able argument of counsel for plaintiff in error was interesting, and, had it not been for the statute (section 5209) in question, would be effective. He seemed to be thoroughly familiar with and dwelt at length on the decisions at common law, and even extended his argument to the consideration of accessories to crime both before and after the fact. Without attempting to review the numerous cases cited and commented upon, we think a consideration of the statute above quoted and some of the decisions relating thereto will dispose of the question. The act (section 5209) in question was passed by congress for the purpose of sustaining and protecting national banks created by and under its authority, and by its express language the crime charged is made a misdemeanor. Whether this was done to prevent persons charged with crime from availing themselves of the pernicious technicalities that had crept into the common-law decisions and practice in regard to principal and accessory, we are not now called upon to decide; but no one can question the authority of congress to make such classification, or the binding force of it in reference to the application of different rulings that belong thereto. Hence the able argument of counsel for defendant, both oral and printed, directed to the common-law decisions of principal and agent, does not apply to this case. Congress has established the offense here charged to be a misdemeanor, and he who aids or abets in committing such an offense can be tried independently as a principal, irrespective of the presence of the one he aided. The supreme court of the United States, in U. S. v. Gooding, 12 Wheat. 475, passes upon a similar statute, and declares:
“The fifth instruction turns upon a doctrine applicable to principal and accessory in cases of felony, either at the common law or by statute. The present is the case of a misdemeanor, and the doctrine, therefore, cannot be applied to it; for in cases of misdemeanor all those who are concerned in aiding or abetting, as well as in perpetrating the act, are principals. Under such circumstances there is no room for the question of actual or constructive presence or absence, for, whether present or absent, all are principals. They may be indicted and punished accordingly. Nor is the trial or conviction of any actor indispensable to furnish a right to try the person who aids or abets the*449 act. Each, in the eye of tlie law, is fieomed guilty as a principal. In the present indictment, the offense is in the third and fourth counts laid, by aiding and abetting, in the very lenas of the act of congress. If the crime, therefore, could he supposed to bo of an accessorial nature, it is truly alleged, according to the fact, not merely according to the Intendment of law. We do not consider iliat the terms ‘aid’ and ‘abet,’ used in this statute, are used as technical phrases, belonging to common law, because the offense is not made, a felony, and therefore the words require no such interpretation. The statute punishes them as substantive offenses, and not as accessorial, and the words are, therefore, to be understood as in common parlance, to import assistance, co-operation, and encouragement.”
The plaintiff in error in this case is indicted under a special statute (Eev. St. § 5209), and it is evident upon inspection of this statute that its spirit and purpose is to punish every president, officer, cashier, or agent, etc., and likewise to punish every person who aids or abets said officer or agent in any violation of the section. There is no difficulty about the definition of the word “aid,” and "abet” is defined as follows: “To aid, countenance, encourage in, to incite, stimulate, or instigate to a criminal act.” Therefore the purpose of this trial was to ascertain whether any such officer, clerk, or agent had violated the act, and whether Louis Gallot, the plaintiff in error, had aided him in doing so; not for the purpose of convicting the officer or agent, but for the sole purpose of ascertaining the guilt or innocence of the plaintiff in error; and the objection that Louis Colomb was dead, and had passed beyond the realm of human courts, so often repeated, without being indicted or tried, and that he could not now be tried because the presumption of his innocence that existed in his lifetime had followed and attached to his record after death, and that he could not be tried as a principal, therefore the question as to whether the plaintiff in error liad ever aided him in the _ commission of such offense was beyond the power of the federal courts to determine, we think was not well taken. The offense charged against the plaintiff in error is a misdemeanor. He was properly tried under the circumstances, and he was the only person on trial; and the only necessity of inquiring into the record of the doings of Louis Colomb was to ascertain whether or not a crime had been committed, not for the purpose of convicting the said'Colomb, but for the purpose of enabling the jury to determine whether or not the defendant below had aided in the commission of the offense as charged in the indictments. Plaintiff in error’s rights on the trial as to the admission of evidence and in all other respects were equal to and as well protected as if Louis Colomb had been in court and on trial with him. He suffered no disadvantage from his absence, and had no right to complain because he was tried alone.
The next question of law raised by the 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th assignments of error is to the competency of certain jurors impaneled in the case, on the ground that they had previous to the trial formed an impression from newspapers and rumors and other sources as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. They also stated that these impressions and opinions would yield to evidence, and that they could and would give the defendant a fair and impartial trial according to the evidence that might be
“The juror against whom the objection is ruled answered on his voir dire, and stated that he had formed an opinion from conversing with one of the witnesses for the state, but that he could lay aside the opinion he had formed, and decide the case on the law and the evidence adduced on the trial. The defendant had exhausted his challenges when he challenged the juror for cause, which was overruled. The answer of the juror disclosed that he was a competent juror, that he was free from bias or prejudice, and his mind in that condition to impartially try the defendant. In the case of State v. Dugay, 35 La. Ann. 327, this court' said: ‘Our last researches on this point were suggested in the case of State v. De Rance, 34 La. Ann. 186, in which we took occasion to make a thorough review of previous opinions on this subject, and in which we reaffirmed the rule, sanctioned in numerous eases, under which jurors who had formed and expressed opinions as to the guilt or innocence of the accused, but who asserted that they felt able to do impartial justice according to the law and the evidence in the case, were ruled to be competent jurors. We distinctly and emphatically reiterate that this is the correct rule, with the reasonable hope that it will be understood by the profession.’ State v. Dent, 41 La. Ann. 1083, 7 South. 694; State v. Dorsey, 40 La. Ann. 740, 5 South. 26; State v. Ford, 42 La. Ann. 255, 7 South. 696; State v. Garig, 43 La. Ann. 365, 8 South. 934. The answer of the juror brings him within the rulings of the cases cited.” ,
In Spies v. State, 123 U. S. 179, 8 Sup. Ct. 30, Chief Justice Waite, speaking for the court, says:
“In Reynolds v. U. S., 98 U. S. 145, we said ‘that upon the trial of the issue of fact raised by’ a challenge to a juroi" in a criminal case, on the ground that he had formed and expressed an opinion as to the issues to be tried, ‘the court will practically be called upon to determine whether the nature and strength of the opinion formed are such as in law necessarily to raise the presumption of partiality. The question thus presented is one of mixed law and fact, and to be tried, as far as the facts are concerned, like any other issue of that character, upon the evidence. The findings of the trial court upon that issue ought not to be set aside by a reviewing court, unless the error is manifest. * * * It must be made clearly to appear that upon the evidence the court ought to have found the juror had formed such an opinion that he could not, in law, be deemed impartial. The case must be one in which it is manifest the law left nothing to the “conscience or discretion” of the court.’ ”
The language of the late Chief Justice Agnew of Pennsylvania is so appropriate,- and expresses our views so correctly, upon this subject, in which some commendable progress has been made in this country during the last half century, that we adopt it in this connection:
“We must either recede, and go back to the practice of an age when ignorance of passing events constituted a characteristic of the time, and exclude every juror who has formed any opinion, even the slightest, or we must stand abreast with the present age, when every remarkable event of to-day is knowm all over the country to-morrow, and exclude those only whose opinions are so fixed as to be prejudgments, or have been formed on the known evidence in the ease. It is needless to say the world moves and carries us with it, and if we lag behind we must commit the trial of the most important causes in life to*451 those so ignorant their dark minds have never been smitten by the rays of intelligence.” O’Mara v. Com., 75 Pa. St. 424, 428.
The twenty-first assignment of errors is as follows:
“(21) The conrt erred in allowing the district attorney to state the indictments herein to the jury after partial reading- thereof, as shown in bill of exception No. 1 herein.”
It appears from the record that the first count of each indictment was read to the jury in full. Then it was explained to them that the only difference between the counts read and the remaining counts in the indictment was the respective amounts and dates, and the amount and date charged in each count was then stated in their respective order. This method gave the jurors a perfect and clear understanding of the contents of the indictments, — an understanding that would not have been improved by reading the whole of the indictments in full, with all of the legal verbiage contained therein, — and this was a method which in no way prejudiced the defendant, and gave him no canse oí complaint. See Agnew v. U. S., 165 U. S. 44, 17 Sup. Ct. 235, and cases cited therein.
The remaining question of law raised by the twenty-fifth and part of the twenty-sixth assignments of error is that the verdict in the case was not responsive to the issues in the indictments, and was uncertain and indefinite, and was a double conviction on each and every specific sum named in the indictments. As we have, already seen, the indictments in this case and the charges contained therein are clear and specific. The verdict of the jury is as follows: “New Orleans, June 29th, ’97. We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as charged. Geo. Norton, Foreman.” Briefly, it is as clear and positive and emphatic as the English language can express it, and it is in the usual, proper, and legal form. As to the question of double conviction, it has been abundantly established that a verdict of guilty upon the whole indictment must stand if any one of the counts is sustained by competent testimony; and the sentence imposed by the court of eight years in the penitentiary at Columbus, in the state of Ohio, being two years less than the maximum penalty that could have been imposed upon him upon any one count of the indictments, gives him no cause for complaint. For the reasons given in Gardes v. U. S. and Girault v. Same, 87 Fed. 172, the sentence imposed on the prisoner is modified by striking out the words “at hard labor,” and, thus modified, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). While congress may have the power to make the aiders and abettors of national bank officials in the embezzlement and misapplication of bank funds principal offenders, and triable as such, yet. in section 5209, Rev. St., it has not done so. This appears from the plain reading of the section, and is the construction given by the supreme court of the United States. In Coffin v. U. S., 162 U. S. 664, 669, 16 Sup. Ct. 943, 946, that conrt, in considering the proper construction of section 5209, says:
*452 “However, the real premise upon which the whole argument rests, Is that, If the accused was guilty at all, he was guilty as a principal, and not as an aider and abettor. But it is not necessary to give much time to the consideration of this claim, in view of the clear intent of congress as expressed in the statute under review. It is evident that, no matter how active the co-operation of third persons may have been in the wrongful act of a bank officer or agent, such third person is required to be charged as an aider and abettor in the offense, and prosecuted as such. The primary object of the statute was to protect the bank from the acts of its own servants. As between officers and agents of the bank and third persons co-operating to defraud the bank, the statute contemplates that a bank officer shall be treated as a principal offender. In every criminal offense there must, of course, be a principal, and it follows that without the concurring act of an officer or agent of a bank third persons cannot commit a violation of the provisions of section 5209. If, therefore, a violation of the statute in question is committed by an officer and an outsider, the one must be prosecuted as the principal and the other as the aider and abettor.”
There is no warrant in the common law, nor in any statute of the United States, for indicting, trying, and convicting an accessory or aider and abettor, or a subordinate offender, when the principal offender dies before indictment and trial. In the same case the following instruction to the jury was approved:
“The burden of proving Haughey and the defendants guilty as charged rests upon the government, and this burden does not shift from it. Haughey and the defendants are presumed to be innocent until their guilt in manner and form as charged in some count of the indictment is proved beyond a reasonable doubt. To justify you in returning a verdict of guilty, the evidence should be of Such a character as to overcome this presumption of innocence, and to satisfy each one of you of the guilt of Haughey and the defendants as charged, to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt.”
Without warrant from the common law, and in the absence of statutory authority, and in the teeth of the presumption of innocence, how can a court and jury find a dead man guilty of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt? Congress has seen fit to declare the offenses denounced by section 5209 to be misdemeanors. All the same they are conceded to be infamous crimes, because of the punishment awarded, and offenders under the statute must be tried accordingly. It is submitted that if congress, by naming an offense, can place infamous crimes in the category of misdemeanors, congress can also provide for principal and subordinate offenders' in misdemeanors, and intend that the trial and proceedings under the statute shall be according to the well-known and understood rules heretofore governing the trial of subordinate offenders. I do not deem it necessary to further elaborate my reasons. The exhaustive brief of the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error deals with, this question, in a masterly manner, and the convictions resulting from its study compel me to announce my very respectful dissent from the opinion and judgment of the court.