Lead Opinion
Robert Michael was convicted of criminal contempt in' the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania. He appeals. The foundation of the discussion of both his rights and liabilities is, of course, the statute, Section 268 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 385, which provides as follows: “The * * * courts [of the United States] shall have power * * * to punish, by fine or imprisonment, at the discretion of the court, contempts of their authority. Such power
The argument for the appellant makes several points, some of which may be disposed of briefly before passing to the one which requires more elaborate consideration. In the first place, he says, alleged acts which constitute the contempt took place in the grand jury room where the judge was not and could not lawfully be present. This, he says, was not in the presence of the court or so near thereto to come within the statute. This point is directly settled to the contrary by this Court in Camarota v. United States, 1940,
Point is made of the fact that there was no formal presentment by the grand jury nor was there a sworn petition by the attorney for the United States. What happened was that with the grand jury present in the court room
We think the defendant has nothing of which to complain because of the procedure followed. The power to punish for contempt in the presence of the court is not controlled by the limitations of the Constitution as to modes of accusation and methods of trial. Ex parte Hudgings, 1919,
The appellant also complains that the judgment does not recite that the court found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
It is also alleged as error that certain letters and accounts of certain conversations were admitted, letters not to or from the appellant and conversations not in his presence. We find nothing in the court’s action here which results in prejudice to the accused. The trial judge accepted the evidence so that he could get the whole picture and we have every confidence in his ability and desire to weed out the relevant from the irrelevant when it came to determining the weighing of the testimony against the accused.
This brings us, then, to the difficult point in the case. Here we pass from allegations of mere irregularities to the difficult question of whether this appellant could properly be convicted of contempt as a result of what he did. He was not contumacious or obstreperous. He did not refuse to answer questions. His testimony cannot fairly be characterized as unresponsive in failing to, give direct answers to the questions asked him.
As Mr. Justice Cardozo said in Clark v. United States, 1933,
As pointed out by the court in United States v. Arbuckle, D. C. D. C., 1943,
Blocking the inquiry can clearly take place by the speaking of words as well as by other acts. If a witness tears up a significant paper in the grand jury room he is blocking the inquiry by destroying evidence. If he refuses to answer he is doing it by failure to furnish evidence. If he denies knowledge of something which it is determined beyond a reasonable doubt that he does know about he is blocking the inquiry just as effectively by. giving a false answer as refusing to give any at all.
It is not without significance, we think, that the majority of the federal cases dealing with perjured testimony as contempt have to do with litigation on the investigatory side of legal proceedings as contrasted with the trial of particular issues of fact. Bankruptcy cases are the most frequent and an imposing array of authorities hold defendants for contempt for false answers in the investigation 'of affairs of bankrupt estates.
In the case at bar there are several places where the defendant gave testimony which, assuming its untruth, was of a type tending to block the inquiry. For instance, he was examined concerning a batch of checks executed by him as trustee in reorganization proceedings of a company. The reason the checks were given and what the money went for were critical points in establishing the principal transaction with regard to the winding up of the reorganization proceedings. The witness either denied knowledge of the checks or gave explanations which could be found to be untrue. False explanation was as obstructive as an attempt to destroy the checks would have been.
The point is not free from difficulty. We have considered it carefully with full recognition of the importance of the constitutional provision for a jury trial of a person charged with crime. Our conclusion is that the appellant’s rights were not disregarded, that he could have not only been found guilty of giving untrue testimony but that such conduct on his part was an obstruction of the administration of justice and that he could be and was properly held liable in the contempt proceedings.
Affirmed.
Notes
This fact was stated in the record for appeal by the trial judge over the objection of the defendant. Defendant makes the further point that it does not appear that the members of the grand jury were in the court room in their capacity as grand jurors rather than spectators. We think there is no substance in the argument.
It is not disputed that this is the test which must be met. Blim v. United States, 7 Cir., 1934,
The decisions, both state and federal, which have dealt with the question are collected and classified in notes, 11 A.L. R. 342 and
In that case the accused by means of false swearing and concealment had accomplished her acceptance as a juror and the court points out that there is a distinction, not to be ignored, in deceit by a witness and deceit by a talesman, since a talesman when accepted as a juror becomes a part of the court.
In re Eskay, 3 Cir., 1941,
In re Meckley, 3 Cir., 1943, 1)
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
With the conclusion here reached by the majority, I dissent. With so much of the opinion as concerns the procedure complained of,- and the admission of certain evidence, I am in agreement. I do not feel, however, that the evidence warranted the Trial Judge in holding the defendant in contempt of court.
The question here posed, while seemingly a simple one, has deeper implications and greater significance beyond the immediate case, for as a precedent it will broaden the field of judicial power in criminal contempt cases beyond its present limitations, and in so doing is portentous of a growing tendency through ■ attrition to wear away the ancient instrument fact finding — trial by jury.
It will serve no useful purpose to review the history of contempt cases in either England or this country. The power of committing individuals for criminal contempt in England, though rather broad in its beginning, became gradually narrower and more confining. Its exercise is best expressed by the great Master of the Rolls of the nineteenth century, Sir George Jes-sel, whose judgments have done so much to build up the fabric of the English law.
In this country judicial authority to punish for contempts does not exempt it from constitutional limitations, since its only purpose is to secure it from obstruc
The power of the court to punish for contempt in “[his] presence, or so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice” extends to witnesses before a Grand Jury. O’Connell v. United States, 2 Cir.,
The function of a reviewing court in a case of this kind is precisely the same as in other cases of a criminal nature, that is, to review questions of law. This includes, of course, the question as to whether there is evidence which supports or tends to support the judgment of the Trial Court. United States v. Brown, 7 Cir.,
Does the evidence in this case support the findings of the Trial Court? I think not. I agree with the findings of the majority that the defendant was not contumacious or obstreperous, that he did not refuse to answer questions, and further that his testimony cannot fairly be characterized as evasive in failing to give direct answers to the questions asked him, nor can it be said that his answers were not responsive. That he did not tell the truth in many instances, I am convinced. However, it is now well settled that a mere act of perjury on the part of a witness does not in and of itself, without something more, amount to contempt of court. Ex parte Hudgings,
It can -be seen from this that it is not every obstruction to judicial power which is punishable by contempt, for perjury, which is the telling of an untruth, under oath, with respect to any material matter, 18 U.S.C.A. § 231, of necessity must be an obstruction in some degree, since by its very definition it is the telling of a falsehood with respect to a material issue involved in the case. What additional element must be present then besides perjury in order to hold a witness in contempt of court? It seems to me, from an analysis of the cases, that the answers to the question or questions propounded to the witness must have a tendency to block the inquiry or to hinder the power and duty of the court in the performance of their functions. That this does not admit of precise definition is obvious. However, precedent has pointed up the essential requisites. It seems to me the answers to the questions by the witness must have a tendency to mislead the court with respect to a material issue, by artful attempts at evasion; or a stalling of the court’s inquiry by a palpable failing of memory concerning events of importance through repeated resort to “I do not remember”; or by destruction by the witness of books and papers material to the issue; or by conduct which is obstreperous or contumacious; or by answers no less, which though responsive, are yet wily and ambiguous and which by innuendo or indirection tend to shunt the focus of the inquiry. Clearly, it seems to me, none of these factors obtain in the instant case.
Some reliance is had by the majority on the fact that the witness could not tell what six checks in number were for, which he had signed as trustee in the reorganization of the Central Forging Company of Cata-wissa, though he testified to signing many checks, as many as one hundred fifty at a time. Wherein these answers could be said to tend to block the court’s inquiry, or obstruct the functions of the court in its investigation, I cannot find, since the answers were not contumacious nor evasive nor artfully or designedly made, which could in any way mislead or have a tendency to forestall the inquiry and at most, if untrue, amount only to perjury.
In O’Connell v. United States, supra, the witness was in attendance at a Grand Jury investigation covering the commission of a federal offense in connection with the “Albany Baseball Pool”. Here, the defendant was held in contempt of court for plainly “holding back what he knew of the extent and duration of his acquaintance with some of the persons in connection with the pool whom he admitted knowing,” and in “his refusal to state his best recollection” which made it impossible to pursue the inquiry further into matters whose relevancy might have clearly appeared. In United States v. McGovern, supra, the witness was held in contempt of court upon his failure to disclose what uses he had made of $380,000 which he withdrew in cash and concerning which he made a claim of privilege and which during the course of the testimony turned out to be a sham and where his answers were generally tantamount to palpable concealment. In United States v. Brown, 7 Cir.,
In United States v. Arbuckle, D.C.,
The use of this drastic power wherein a judge sits as accuser, trier of the fact, and dispenser of punishment should only be exercised when the obstruction to the performance of judicial duty is clearly shown. Ex parte Hudgings, supra. I feel it to be of prime importance, no more and no less, that witnesses called in any inquiry should have ease and freedom of mind in testifying, as well, that they tell the truth and in nowise hinder the seeking of truth. It is in the proper maintenance of this ..balance that lies the security of our courts.
Judgment should be reversed.
In re: Clements v. Erlanger, 46 L.J.(N.S.) (Eq.) 375, 383 (1877): “Therefore it seems to me that this jurisdiction of committing for contempt being practi-eally unlimited should be most jealously and carefully watched, and exercised, if I may say so, with tile greatest reluctance and the greatest anxiety on the part of Judges to see whether there is no other mode which is not open to the object of arbitrariness and which can be brought to bear upon the subject. I say that a Judge should be most careful to see that the cause cannot bo fairly prosecuted to a hearing unless this extreme mode of dealing with persons brought before him on accusations of contempt should be adopted. I have myself had on many occasions to consider this jurisdiction, and I have always thought that necessary though it be, it is necessary only in the sense in which extreme measures are sometimes necessary to preserve men’s rights, that is, if no other pertinent remedy can be found. * * * ”
