193 F. 561 | 9th Cir. | 1912
(after stating tlie facts as above). The indictment in this case is voluminous, and purports to contain 13 counts, but there is only one charge of conspiracy under and in pursuance of which it is alleged in separate subdivisions or counts of the indictment that certain overt: acts were committed in carrying out and accomplishing the object and design of the conspiracy. The court below so construed tlie indictment and instructed the jury that the indictment charged but one offense, namely, that of the conspiracy to defraud the government of certain of its public lands, and that the joining of the several counts was designed to put in the indictment the averment of many acts which it was alleged were done to effect the purpose of the conspiracy.
The court held that the allegations in the' indictment charging overt acts and designated as counts two and six did not constitute overt acts, and that the allegation i'n the indictment charging an overt act and designated as the eighth count had not been proven. These counts were accordingly withdrawn from the consideration of the jury as charging overt acts, but the proof as to the allegations contained in the second and sixth counts was left as evidence in the case. The verdict of the jury was general, finding tlie defendants guilty as charged in the indictment. The sentence of the court in each case was less than the maximum penalty provided in section 5440 of the Revised Statutes for a single offense. That section provides:
“If two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense against the United States or to defraud the United States in any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such parties do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy all the parties to such conspiracy shall be liable to a penalty of not more than ten thousand dollars, or to imprisonment for not more than two years or to both lire and imprisonment in the discretion of the-court.”
In the court below plaintiff in error interposed a demurrer to the indictment, in which objections were directed specifically to the allegations charging overt acts as set forth in what is termed the separate' counts of the indictment. It was objectedl, for example, to the first, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth counts that more than one offense was charged in each count. It was also objected to each of the 13 counts that it was not sufficient, in this: That it did not set out or allege an overt act on the part of the defendants, or either of them, by which the object of the alleged conspiracy might be effected. There were also other specific objections to the separate counts which need not be repeated here. The demurrer concluded with this general objection:
“And defendants say that the indictment as a whole alleges no facts nor acts which would constitute a violation of the laws of the United States. That it alleges a conspiracy was formed hy the defendants to defraud the United States of its lands by means of false, fraudulent, feigned, untrue, illegal, and fictitious entries of, to, for, and on certain lands of the United States subject to entry, but said indictment in no count alleges or sets up any entry by any one of the defendants or by any one thereunto induced or procured in substantiation of such allegation; that the indictment as a whole is insufficient and indefinite to such extent that the defendants are not advised thereby of thejnature of the charges against them, so that they might properly prepare and submit defenses thereto.”
That the objections contained in the demurrer were directed against the allegations charging overt acts is shown by the objection set forth in the demurrer against the first count as follows:
“That such counts should be quashed for the reason that more than one offense is set out and alleged in the same, in this: that an unlawful con spiracy having been properly alleged, it is charged that as an overt act performed for the purpose of effecting the objects of such conspiracy that the defendants induced and persuaded one Eugene L. Bogy to knowingly, willfully, and corruptly make a false and fraudulent timber entry and stone land sworn statement on April 29, 1903, and that said Bogy did on that day sign and subscribe a certain paper called ‘Timber and Stone Land Sworn Statement.’ In the same count, and as a further, different, and separate overt act on the part of the defendants and as a separate and distinct offense, it is alleged that the defendants caused and procured one Chas. Steele to sign and subscribe a certain paper called ‘Timber and Stone Land Sworn Statement’; and as a further and separate overt act committed by these defendants for the purpose of effecting the object of the alleged conspiracy, and as a separate and distinct offense, it is charged that they procured and caused one Mary C. Lewis on May 5, 1903, to sign and subscribe a timber and stone land sworn statement. That said count so charging three separate and distinct alleged offenses is duplicitous, and should be dismissed.”
It wjll be observed that this objection contains the specific statement that, “an unlawful conspirac}'- having been properly alleged,” the objection is then made that more than one offense (overt act) is alleged in the same count. • There was no objection to the sufficiency of the allegations charging a conspiracy, but the objection was to-that
After verdict and before sentence, each of the defendants moved the court for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to law, and not supported in any way by the evidence introduced m the cause, hut no objection was made that the indictment was insufficient. This motion having been denied, each of the defendants moved the court in arrest of judgment upon grounds relating to the proceedings in court, but again no objection was made that the indictment was insufficient.
But it is not necessary to sustain the sufficiency of the indictment upon the ground of the insufficiency of the demurrer or the lack of proper proceedings in bringing the alleged insufficiency of the indictment properly to the attention of the court. We prefer to consider the question upon its merits, upon the assumption that the demurrer to the indictment contained all the objections now urged against it.
It appears that such a conspiracy was in violation of the laws of the state of Idaho, but not in violation of any law of the United States, and it was contended that, while the intent on the part of the defendants to violate the injunction was not to be found in the intent to violate any law of the United States, it was to be found in the intent to commit an unlawful act in the doing of which justice was in fact obstructed in a United States court, and that the intent to proceed in the obstruction of justice was supplied by a fiction of law which would transfer the intent to violate a state law to the violation of a writ of a United States court of which, however, they knew nothing. The court said:
“The combination to commit an offense against the United States was averred to consist in a conspiracy against the state and the completed act to have been in pursuance of such conspiracy; but the pleader carefully avoided the direct averment that the purpose of the confederation was the interruption of the course of justice in the United States court.”
“The unlawful an; which the defendants are charged with conspiring to commit was not an offense against the United States, so that, if the defendants were held guilty of a conspiracy to violate the injunction or interfere with proceedings about which they knew nothing, such conviction would have to rest upon a conspiracy to commit an act unlawful in another jurisdiction, and in itself a separate and distinct offense therein.”
The court concluded its opinion with this observation;
“And neither the indictment nor the case can he Helped out by reference to tiie alleged crime against file slate and the defendants be punished for the latter under the guise of a proceeding to punish them for an offense which they did not commit.”
Upon the facts thus stated, the Chief Justice declared the rule to be that:
“A conspiracy is sufficiently described as a combination of two or more persons, by concerted action, to accomplish a criminal or unlawful purpose, or some purpose not in itself criminal or unlawful, by criminal or unlawful means, and the rule is accepted, as laid down by Chief Justice Shaw, in Commonwealth v. Hunt, 4 Metc. (Mass.) 111, 38 Am. Dec. 346, that, when the criminality of a conspiracy consists in an unlawful agreement of two or more persons to compass or promote some criminal or illegal imrpo.se, that purpose must be fully and clearly stated in the indictment; while, if the criminality of the offense consists iu the agreement to accomplish a purpose not in itself criminal or unlawful, by criminal or unlawful means, the means must be set out."
The rule as tints declared and applied in that case does not determine that the charge of conspiracy alleged in the indictment in the present case is insufficient; on the contrary, by the process of exclusion applied to a charge that is declared to be insufficient, we proceed to find what is sufficient. The charge in the present case is that the defendants conspired together to defraud the United States out of certain of its public lands. That charge is an offense against the United States and made so by section 5440 of the Revised Statutes, under which the defendants were indicted. The section provides:
“If two or more persons conspire * * * to defraud the United «States in any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such parties do any net to effe'-t the object of the conspiracy all the parlies to such conspiracy shall be liable.” etc.
We do not have to look elsewhere for a law making it an offense to defraud the United States in order to have the basis upon which to found the charge of conspiracy to defraud the United States, since we have here the entire offense described and made unlawful. The conspiracy was to accomplish the purpose of defrauding the United States made unlawful by the statute. This brings the charge in the indictment within the first clause of the opinion of the Chief Justice in the paragraph quoted:
“A conspiracy is sufficiently described as a combination of two or more peraons, by concerted action, to accomplish a criminal or unlawful purpose.”
In the case of the State v. Mayberry, 48 Me. 235, also cited by the defendants ns an authority in support of their contention, the charge
“When the act to be accomplished is itself criminal or unlawful, it is not necessary to set out in the indictment the means by which it is to be accomplished, but, when the act is not in itself criminal or unlawful, the unlawful means by which it is to be accomplished must be distinctly set out.”
The indictment did not come under the first clause of the rule, since the act to be accomplished was not in itself criminal or unlawful, or made so by the conspiracy statute, but the court held that the indictment was sufficient under the second clause of the rule because the indictment alleged that the pretenses by which the conspiracy was to be accomplished were charged in the indictment to have been false and fraudulent, and made for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the person against whom the conspiracy was directed. In other words, the act of cheating and defrauding by false and fraudulent pretenses became a crime when committed by an unlawful conspiracy, and the indictment was sufficient when it was so charged. Under this rule, the present indictment is sufficient under whatever aspect it may be considered, since it is distinctly alleged and charged in the indictment that the conspiracy to defraud the United States out of certain of its lands “was to be carried out and accomplished and effected by means of false, fraudulent, feigned, untrue, illegal and fictitious entries to, for, and upon the aforesaid lands of the said United States.” If anything has been clearly and distinctly established in the land laws of the United States, it is that false, fraudulent, and fictitious entries of the public lands are unlawful. Dealy v. United States, 152 U. S. 539, 545, 14 Sup. Ct. 680, 38 L. Ed. 545; Wilson Coal Co. v. United States, 188 Fed. 545, 547, 110 C. C. A. 343. And entries are false and fraudulent when the object is to obtain lands of the United States by the suppression of facts which, had they been disclosed, would have rendered their acquisition-impossible. United States v. Keitel, 211 U. S. 370, 395, 29 Sup. Ct. 123, 53 L. Ed. 230; Perrin v. United States, 169 Fed. 17, 22, 94 C. C. A. 385. The other cases cited by the plaintiff in error are substantially in line with the two cases referred to, and need not be discussed.
“■now, then, at the time you made this entry, in whose interest did you understand you were talcing the claim, if anybody’s but your own?”
The answer of the witness was as follows:
“A. At the time my understanding I was taking the claim in my own interest, or own benefit. There was no conversation with any one about it. That was my impression, my belief, at the time. When I had taken the claim, I realized then and knew that Mr. Kerr expected me, from what he said to others and myself, in talking, that he expected me to deed the claim over to the company as soon as X was able to do so, from the fact that they had advanced me the money that I was by honor obligated to them, and could not honorably sell to anybody else excepting the Pacific Furniture & Lumber Company, as they had advanced the money. Although at the time that he did advance the money he told me it was his own personal funds. But I learned later from different channels that it was not — that it was furnished by the company. He told me that the company wanted to take over or to get all the claims they could. They was in the market to buy up all those timber claims, and wanted the first right or chance to buy the claims. That is, from myself or anybody else that took claims they wanted —expected, where they furnished money, to have the first right to the claims or chance to buy them. That we were not supposed to sell outside without their consent. I would not have taken that claim at all if I had not had that conversation with Mr. Kerr. It was by reason of that conversation that I had with him that I went and took the claim.”
The same witness on redirect examination was asked:
“State whether or not, Mr. Dean, you intended at the time you filed upon those lands to turn them over to the company, and. whether or not the company understood that you were going to do so through Mr. Kerr?”
The witness answered:
“Yes; that is what the company understood from me through Mr. Kerr.”
Similar questions were asked by the prosecution of A. J. Marsh, a witness called on behalf of the prosecution, and substantially the same answers were, made by the witness.
These questions were of the same character as the question that was admitted over objection in the case of Van Gesner v. United States, 153 Fed. 56, 82 C. C. A. 180. In that case this court in passing upon the admissibility of such testimony said:
“All of such testimony was directly responsive to the allegations of the indictment, under which it was clearly competent for the prosecution to prove that the various entrymen swore falsely as to material matters stated in their preliminary applications for the land and in their final proof, and that the real intention of all the parties concerned was the obtaining of the government title to the land by means of such perjury for the benefit of Williamson & Co.”
It was also considered and held to be admissible in the case of Williamson v. United States, 207 U. S. 425, 450, 28 Sup. Ct. 163, 172 (52 L. Ed. 278), where the Supreme Court said:
“The issue being the existence of a conspiracy to suborn various persons to commit perjury in relation to declarations to be made under the timber and stone act as to the purpose for which they desired to acquire land, etc., and as it is conceded that no formal contracts were executed between the alleged conspirators and the proposed entrymen, and the alleged understandings were of an ambiguous nature, and proof of the conspiracy depended upon a variety of circumstances, going to show the motive or intent, we*571 think it was proper to permit the interrogation of the ontrymen concerning their understanding of the agreement with Van (tesner and their intention at the time when they made their preliminary declarations, as the question was relevant to the question of the nature and character of the dealings of the entrymen with the alleged conspirators, and bore on the question of the purpose or motive which influenced the making of the sworn statement required by law as a condition precedent to the acquirement of the land.”
The case was clearly and fairly submitted to the jury and the issues of fact were passed upon by them.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the court below is affirmed.