Lead Opinion
(after stating case as above). There is and has been for many years a tendency to liberality in pleading, both civil and criminal. Many of (he states have adopted the code system, supposed to be lite simplest known to the profession, bidden
“No indictment found and presented by a grand jury in any district or circuit or other court of the United States shall he deemed insufficient, nor shall the trial, judgment or other proceeding thereon he affected by reason of any defect or imperfection in matter of form only, which shall not tend to the prejudice of the defendant.”
There are other provisions applying to specified offenses, such as perjury, showing the same tendency to liberality in criminal pleadings in the courts of the United States. The section quoted has been often invoked, and almost universally construed to mean mere matters of form should, not avail a criminal if the bill charges the offense in such a way as to fully inform Mm of the violation of law with which he is charged, and protect Mm, in the event of acquittal or conviction, against a second trial for the same offense. U. S. v. Jackson,
For the purpose of the demurrer, the facts alleged in the bill are admitted. The first paragraph of the bill alleges that the plaintiff in error was engaged in carrying on an unlawful business by means of the post-office establishment of the United States and the use of a false and fictitious name, and then proceeds to describe the business, —a lottery. The second paragraph, in even more specific terms, sets out that, being engaged in carrying on an unlawful business by means of the post-office establishment of the United States and the use of a false and fictitious name, he received from the post office a letter addressed to the false and fictitious name, and sets out the letter; and the third paragraph is the conclusion that he was violating the statute. Language could hardly state the charge plainer. Congress has not made carrying on a lottery business unlawful per se, and could not do so; but congress has made carrying on, promoting, and conducting a lottery business, by means of the post-office establishment, not only unlawful, but criminal. Rev. St. § 3894; Act Sept. 19, 1890. The act is constitutional, and the power to regulate what shall or shall not be carried in the mails is vested in congress. In re Rapier,
The rule that penal statutes must be strictly construed is still in force, but has been much relaxed and given a more liberal applicafion than in days when there were a great many more offenses punishable with death. The rule is laid down by the chief justice, delivering the opinion for the court, in U. S. v. Lacher,
*328 “The rule that statutes of this class are to be construed strictly is far from being a rigid or unbending one; or, rather, it has in modern times been so modified and explained away as to mean little more than penal provisions; like all others, are to be fairly construed according to the legislative intent, as ■ expressed in the enactment, — the courts refusing, on the one hand, to extend the punishment to cases which are not clearly embraced in them; and, on.the other hand, equally refusing, by any mere verbal nicety, forced construction or equitable interpretation to exonerate parties plainly within their scope.”
And the reason for the less rigorous application of the rule is well given in Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statutes.
Applying 'the rule to the case under consideration, what was the legislative intention in the act of 1889 ? The first section of that act was not intended (as a casual reading will show) to make dealing, in counterfeit goods, or the devices therein mentioned, penal offenses, —there was legislation sufficient on that subject, — but to make the use of the mails for the purpose of promoting or carrying on the devices enumerated unlawful and criminal. The gravamen of the offense was the use of the mails. Then section 2 provides;
“That any person who, in and for conducting, promoting or carrying on, in any manner by means of the post-office establishment of the United States, any scheme or device mentioned in the preceding section, or any other unlawful business whatsoever, shall use, assume or request to be addressed by any fictitious, false or assumed title, name or address, or name other than his own proper name, or shall take or receive from any post office of the United States any letter, postal card, or packet addressed to any such fictitious, false or assumed title, name or address, or name other than his own lawful and proper name, shall, upon conviction, be punishable as provided in the first section of this act.”
Section 3894, Rev. St., amended by the act of September 19, 1890, provided that no letter, etc., concerning a lottery, shall be carried in the mail. In short, the legislative intention seems to have been to punish by fine and imprisonment the use of the mails for just such acts as plaintiff in error is charged with. The crimes are in pari materia, and the use of the mails for the promotion of a lottery scheme, and in an assumed name, as charged in the bill of indictment, is clearly within the meaning of the words, “or any other unlawful business whatsoever.”
The exceptions to the refusal of the trial judge to give the special instructions asked for were not pressed in the argument. The charge was fair, full, and in accord with the law. A trial judge is not required to give special instructions in the exact language of counsel, often formulated with the purpose to mislead, or calculated, if not intended, to confuse, but to state the law in a way to be understood by the jury, and by them applied to the testimony, so as to intelligently find the facts. This seems, from the charge set out in the record, to have been done in an eminently proper and full manner.
The exceptions are overruled, the appeal dismissed, and the judgment of the district court affirmed. Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I am unable to concur in either the reasoning or the judgment of the court in this case. In my opin
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result.
