The appellant and Wilbur Slade were indicted charged with conspiring with onе Bridges named in the indictment as a conspirator but not charged as a defendant, to violate Section 152, Title 18 U.S. C.A., the object of the conspiracy being to conceal and transfer property of a corрoration adjudicated a bankrupt. The appellant and Slade were placed on trial before a jury. During the course of the trial, the dеfendant, Slade, without notice to or knowledge of the appellаnt, withdrew his plea of “not guilty” and entered a plea of “guilty”; whereupon, the trial proceeded against the appellant alone, with the rеsult that the jury returned a verdict of “guilty” and he was given a substantial sentence. This аppeal resulted.
At the conclusion of the evidence and shortly before the jury was to retire, the following colloquy took place between a juror and the Court:
“Juror: I would like to know if the fact that Mr. Slade pleaded guilty before this trial came into action, before we heard the testimony, does that have something to do with the guilt or guiltlessness of the defendant?
“Court: That is a fact that occurred in your presence. Mr. Slade did enter that plea here, withdrew a plea of not guilty — now, the fact that he is guilty dоesn’t of itself indicate Mr. Trussell is guilty.
“Juror: That’s what I wanted to know.
“Court: He is charged in the indictment with being a party to the conspiracy with Trussell, and he pleads guilty. Yet it is incumbent upon the Government to prove Trussell’s guilty beyond any reasonable doubt. Whatever weight yоu give to the fact that Slade has plead guilty is a matter for you. He did do that in open court in the presence of the jury. He might be guilty of conspiring with Bridges.”
If the Court, in answer to the juror’s question, had contented himself with the responsе, that Slade had withdrawn his plea of “not guilty” and that the fact that he is guilty does not of itself indicate that Mr. Trussell is guilty, the claim of error, based upon the colloquy, would not here have been met. The Court, however, continued its resрonse to the juror with the statement that: “Whatever weight you give to the fact that Slade has *480 plead guilty is a matter for you. He did do that in open cоurt in the presence of the jury. He might be guilty of conspiring with Bridges.”
While the act of one conspirator is admissible against others, if it is in furtherance of the сriminal undertaking, all such responsibility ends when the conspiracy ends. Fiswick v. United States,
The Government makes the additional argument that the appellant cannot now question the Court’s instruction since appellant made no timely objection but the Court, in criminal cases, has thе inherent power to note errors in the record which seriously affeсt the substantial rights of a defendant. Smith v. United States, 6 Cir.,
The judgment is reversed and the case remanded to the District Court for a new trial in conformity herewith.
