258 F. 588 | 2d Cir. | 1919
(after stating the facts as above). The indictment charges as overt acts eight several happenings occurring at sundry dates between June 26, 1916, and October 1, 1917. None of the overt acts alleged to have taken place in 1916 were proven; most of those not proven being appropriate (if at all) only in respect of the defendants as to whom there had been a severance.
*590 “If one of these overt acts was performed by one of the parties, or one or more of the parties, then that is sufficient under the statute, providing you find there is a conspiracy, to make out the crime as charged.”
He also said:
“If any of these overt acts that I have called your attention to, and such others as you may find from the evidence here, were performed by any of the defendants after the conspiracy had been entered into and during the life of the conspiracy, then, gentlemen, that overt act is binding upon them all, because that you may say was an act in furtherance of the conspiracy.”
At the close of the charge counsel for the plaintiffs in error took this exception:
“I desire to except to that part of your honor’s charge in which you said that it will be sufficient for the purpose of the charge, as against these defendants, if any one or some of the overt acts alleged in the indictment is established,”
It is now asserted that under this charge Gilson and Duffy may have been convicted of a conspiracy without the jury’s finding as a fact the commission of an overt act by any conspirator; and this is said to follow from the generality of the court’s language, which left-the jury to fasten upon some overt act that had not been proven, or one performed by a codefendant who was acquitted, as a means or ground for convicting Gilson and Duffy or one of them.
On due request the trial judge might, and doubtless would, have descended into greater particularity in respect of the overt acts charged and proven. But as a general proposition of law the charge was so plainly right as to need no justification; and in so far as it was insufficient, or too general in respect of this particular case or these particular defendants, the exception did not fairly or at all direct the attention of the court to the insufficiency now complained of. The exception was not sufficiently definite to call the court’s attention to the particular matter objected to, and give opportunity to correct it. Hindman v. First National Bank, 112 Fed. 931, 50 C. C. A. 623, 57 L. R. A. 108. It is the rule that an exception must be specific, and not general (Morse v. Tillotson, 253 Fed. 340, - C. C. A. -, 1 L. R. A. 485), and there is no difference on this point between the civil and criminal side of the court.
Much reliance is placed by plaintiffs in error upon Nash v. United States, 229 U. S. 373, 33 Sup. Ct. 780, 57 L. Ed. 1232. That case arose
In various forms the plaintiffs in error assert that there was no evidence or no sufficient evidence of a conspiracy on their part.
Tudgments affirmed.