259 F. 460 | 3rd Cir. | 1919
The following outline statement of facts presents the questions involved in this writ of error:
The defendant in the court below was a saloon keeper. Two boys had stolen a bale of silk. This they took to Le Fanti’s saloon, to be turned over to him. He was, in the slang of the underworld, the “fence.” They had before brought silk to him, for which he had afterwards paid them $120, or some such sum. When they brought the bale with which we are now concerned, they told him they had “another bale.” He warned them that he and his place was being watched, and directed them to take the bale to “the dumps,” and that he would follow them in his automobile to get it. He did follow and overtook them, and signaled them to go in the same direction he was going. Later on he signaled them to drop the bale, which they did, leaving it among some bushes or weeds. The boys then left the place, and the defendant returned to his saloon. The boys were taken into custody on their way back from the dump, and Le Fanti at his home. The silk was not found at his place, but was found where the boys had left it. There was no evidence that the stolen property had ever been in the actual, physical, personal possession of Le Fanti. The three were indicted jointly as receivers, and the" guilty possession charged to be the possession of all. The stolen property was part of an interstate shipment, and no question of the federal character of the offense is raised. Le Fanti (who sued out this writ of error) was separately tried under the indictment; the other defendants not being at the time brought to trial.
The questions raised by the assignments of error (so far as they were raised at the trial) were raised by objections to the introduction of evidence, by motion to strike out evidence, by motions for a directed verdict, by requests for charge, and by exceptions to the charge of the court. The court afterwards, in order to give opportunity for a full argument of all the questions involved, allowed a rule to show cause why the verdict of conviction should not be set aside because of alleged errors. This rule was discharged, and the defendant sentenced. The opinion accompanying the discharge of the rule is reported in (D. C.) 255 Fed. 215. The propositions discussed by counsel for plaintiff in error will be considered in a different order from that of the several assignments of error on which they are based.
“Where two or more persons are charged jointly with having the possession of stolen property, the prosecution must prove a joint possession in order to warrant the conviction of the defendants; if the proofs show a separate and successive possession, then only the first offender can be convicted of having such possession.”
The question which, in the view of counsel, is involved in the proposition thus formulated, is presented and discussed in several different forms. It is not entirely clear just what application the stated principle has to the facts of this case, nor, indeed, just how far the principle, as it is stated, is meant to go.
The argument proceeds upon the fact that the three persons indicted were jointly indicted, charged with the offense (stripped of its other features) of jointly receiving and having in their joint possession stolen property, etc., and upon the other fact that the proofs were that two of the defendants had stolen, and the other indicted defendant (the plaintiff in. error) had received, and the conclusion reached is that “the defendants” could not be convicted under this indictment of receiving, because the proofs showed, not a joint possession, but separate successive possessions. The argument admits, however, that the “first offender can be convicted of having such possession.”
Just what application the proposition, as above stated, has to the facts of this case, is not clear. It is coupled,with the second proposition that the possession of the thief cannot be also held to be the possession of a receiver. Neither this second proposition, whether well or ill founded, nor the proposition above quoted, has any relation to the facts of this case, otherwise than in their possible bearing upon the proposition which counsel has dropped.
The plaintiff in error is charged in the indictment to have been a receiver. He was not shown to have been the original thief. The only bearing of either of the points attempted to be made is, in consequence, that as the other defendants were proved 'to have been the thieves, if their possession as thieves (as the second proposition asserts) negatived their possession as receivers, there could be no joint possession as receivers in them and the plaintiff in error
This brings us to the proposition which we have described as dropped. It means that no one of a number of defendants jointly indicted as receivers can be convicted without proof of a joint possession, and is the equivalent of saying that good pleading' would require that, in addition to charging all the defendants with having the stolen property in their possession, they should be further charged so as to meet all the possibilities of any two or more (less than the whole number) having such possession, or any one of them having the property in his sole and separate possession. This is so because (if the' proposition be Sound), if more than one be charged with the of
This position was taken before the court below on the motion for a new trial, and was discussed and disposed of by the trial judge in a clear statement of his views. The position, as already stated, was not taken at the trial, and the question involved has not been presented to this court. The proposition first quoted, however, admits that “the first offender” may be convicted, and the cases cited in support of it show, what is very often the result of trials on joint indictments, that some of the defendants may be (and are) found guilty and the others indicted with them acquitted.
The propositions thus advanced can have no other bearing than whatever support they give to the propositions next discussed, involving and raising the questions of whether there was such possession in the plaintiff in error to constitute the crime of receiving, and whether the evidence of this possession was sufficient to warrant his conviction. This is the main point attempted to be made.
The fourth possibility referred to is that the stolen property was hidden for the purpose of being placed in the possession of some one else. Of this there was no evidence.
The complaint of the charge of the court in the argument at bar (no trace of which is, however, to be found in the assignments of error) that the court had instructed the jury that the property had been stolen, instead of submitting the question of theft as one of fact to be found, is based upon a misunderstanding of the charge. The question was submitted and left wholly to the jury.
The complaints of the charge (voiced in the sixth and other assignments of error) have no other basis than the assignments of error which have already been considered. The charge was clear, fair,
We see no error in the admission of this evidence. It was permissible to show all the knowledge which the receiver of this stolen property had. A part of his knowledge was his knowledge of the boys who brought him the silk. The previous sale was evidence of his acquaintance with them. They were not strangers. This fact bore upon the question before the jury. It was in itself a mere circumstance. It may have had very little, if any, appreciable value as evidence in itself. This, however, would go to the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility.
The prior transaction had another significance. The boys had brought and turned over to Ee Fanti this first bale. There was no agreed sum which he was to pay them. He afterwards paid them $120 (or whatever the sum was). They afterwards brought the bale which figures in this indictment, and (as the jury has found) delivered it to him with the statement that this was “another bale.” Had the instant transaction been an honest one and the defendant sued for the price, evidence of the former transaction would have been admissible as bearing upon the right of the vendors to receive the same price before paid. It, therefore, had a bearing upon the question of the sale of the stolen property, and because of this upon the question of its delivery and possession.
The assignments of error are all overruled, and the judgment of conviction and sentence affirmed.