The appellant was indicted and convicted for violation of the Mann Act, 18 U.S.C.A. § 398. Being without representation, he was defended by counsel appointed by the court, and uрon the jury’s verdict of guilty was sentenced to four years imprisonment to begin upon the completion of a prison term imposed for violation of the Dyer Act, 18 U.S.C.A. § 408. His counsel wаs then relieved of further duties. Being permitted to prosecute an appeal in forma pauperis, the appellant was again without counsel, and a lawyer was assigned to him by this court. At the hearing there was no record, and we were without light on the points in issue and affirmed the judgment. 3 Cir.,
Out of a welter of conflicting evidence it sufficiently appears that while the appellant, a resident of Erie, Pennsylvania, was visiting in New Lexington, Ohio, he met onе Irene Starner with whom, on a number of occasions, he had sexual intercourse. On the night of Sunday, April 26, he decided to return to his job in Erie and started back with Miss Starner accomрanying him. They drove without stopping to Ritman, Ohio, where the appellant claims they visited friends by the name of Plough; that while in Ritman he asked Miss Starner to marry him and declared to the Plоughs that he intended to marry her when he got to Erie. When they arrived at the state line he had Miss Starner get out of the car and hitch-hike across, after which he picked her up in Pennsylvania. Reaching Erie they went to the home of one Driscoll where Helwig introduced the young woman as his fiancee and asked Driscoll to keep them until he could get а marriage license. Driscoll testified that Helwig introduced the girl as his wife, though this the appellant denied. While at the Driscoll home in Erie the two had intercourse. Helwig claims that hе endeavored to secure a license but was unsuccessful because the girl was Under 21 and heir parents were not available to give consent to the marriage. A few days later he took the Starner girl back to Ohio.
*839 Little attention need be given to most of tlie 31 points of error scheduled in the wordy and confused brief of tlie appellаnt. His counsel concentrates on three, urging that the judgment be reversed because of insufficient evidence, error in the charge of the couit as to the nature of the offense created by the statute, and the denial of a morion for new trial based upon newly discovered evidence. The first ground need not detain us. The evidence, whilе circumstantial, pointed strongly to violation of law, and the jury could well have found the interstate transportation to have been motivated by one of the immoral purposes condemned by the- Act.
The challenge to the court’s instructions concerns itself primarily with the failure of the court to differentiate between the pupose аnd intent of an interstate journey, and to advise the jury that an immoral purpose must be the dominating and not merely the incidental purpose of the trip. It is true that Courts of Appeals, in applying the Act in cases of non-commercial vice, have drawn a fine line between immoral purposes harbored at the beginning of a journey, and one аrising during transportation and being but incidental to its main purpose. Sloan v. United States, 8 Cir,
The reluctance of some courts to sustain cоnvictions in casts where no pecuniary gain is involved, is doubtless due to the fact that the impact oí the decision in Caminetti v. United States,
While the district judge in his instructions to the jury in the present case did not expressly chаrge that the unlawful immoral purpose must be the dominant purpose of the transportation in order to justify a verdict of guilty, his instructions were equivalent thereto. He told the jury that thе statute makes intent and purpose an element of the crime; that if the journey was planned with no immoral purpose, no crime was committed no matter what may have been done thereafter. Fie told the jury that it is the immoral purpose which renders such interstate commerce act criminal and that to constitute a violation of the statute there must be such intent at tlie outset. We think these instructions not lacking in clarity and that to enlarge upon niceties of distinction between purpose and intent would makе for confusion rather than understanding. We should be reluctant to base reversal upon errors in the charge, especially when not complained of at the time of trial.
More important is the third grievance of the appellant. Affidavits of Audrey Plough and Edwin J. Plough, both of Ritman, Ohio, a.re to the effect that both the appellant and the Starner girl, оn their trip
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from New Lexington, Ohio,-to Erie, Pennsylvania, told them during their stop at Ritman, that they intended to be married in Erie. These affidavits were presented to the district judge in support of а motion for new trial as newly discovered evidence. Of course they do not qualify as su'ch because at the time of the trial what the Ploughs would be able to say was known to thе appellant. In any event, the motion was directed to the discretion of the trial judge and is revicwable only for manifest abuse. Barber v. United States, 4 Cir.,
It is now urged, however, that the appellant had sought to have the Ploughs summoned as witnesses at the trial, hut that this was not done. It does not clearly appear upon the record why the Ploughs were not summoned as witnesses. The incarceration of appellant upon another conviction doubtless contributed to this failure. It would seem to be clear, however, that this evidence, if it had been produced, would have had a material hearing upon the issue as to whether thе interstate transportation had a dominant legitimate purpose. Of course the jury might still have found that the transportation of the Starner girl was for one of the condemned purposes, in view of all the circumstances including the previous relations of the parties, their subsequent conduct and the return of the girl to Ohio without any further effort to accomplish a valid marriage. We are, of course, unable to say that the jury would have so found, even though an intent to pursue sexual relations prior to marriage may still bе in pursuit of an immoral purpose according to prevailing mores. In view of this aspect of the case we conclude, in the exercise of judicial supervision оf the administration of criminal justice, 1 that the verdict and sentence should be set aside and the cause remanded to the district court for retrial at which process of the court will issue to bring the Ploughs in as witnesses.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in conformity herewith.
Notes
McNabb v. U. S.,
