In the first count of a two-count indictment Major Becton, then age 23, was charged with a violation of 26 U.S.C. § 4744(a) in that, on or about January 31, 1967, being a transferee required to pay the transfer tax imposed by 26 U.S.C. § 4741(a), and not being registered with the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate, and not having paid the tax imposed by § 4741(a), he unlawfully acquired at Saint Louis, Missouri, a specified quantity of marijuana. The second count jointly charged Major Becton and his brother, Roosevelt Becton, then age 25, with a like offense on or about February 9, 1967.
With retained counsel, the defendants entered pleas of not guilty. Their motion for a severance was denied. At the ensuing jury trial in June 1967 both defendants testified. Major’s defense on the first count was entrapment (he conceded making the sale) and on the second count was non-possession. Roosevelt’s defense was mistaken identity and an alibi, with the intimation that it was a third brother, Stanley, who was in the bar-restaurant at the time of the February incident. However, each was convicted on the counts or count on which he was charged. The district court gave Major a 3-year sentence on each of the counts, the sentences to run concurrently. It gave Roosevelt a 2-year sentence. Both defendants appeal.
The Bectons have been at large on bonds pending their appeal. Within a month after the case was argued orally to us the Supreme Court,
The defense here urges (1) entrapment with respect to Major Beeton and the first count; (2) the insufficiency of the evidence with respect to Major and the second count; (3) the deprival of a fair trial on stated procedural, non-witness-producing, court comment, and instructional grounds; and (4), because of self-incrimination aspects, the Fifth Amendment unconstitutionality of §§ 4741(a) and 4744(a).
We turn at once to the constitutional issue.
The defense concedes that unconstitutionality was not urged in the trial court. This immediately raises the question of waiver. Inasmuch as there is no factual dispute about the issue’s being ignored at the trial level, “the question whether the privilege [against self-incrimination] has been waived * * * is one of law * * United States v. Cov-ington, supra (
The government, commendably, states in its brief, “we do not here press a contention that appellants’ failure to raise or preserve any objection to the constitutionality of either the indictment or their conviction bars further consideration of the questions raised by” Mar-chetti v. United States,
Having reached this point, it is equally clear that the attempted application of the statutes in question to the Bectons, and each of them, is unconstitutional as violative of the Fifth Amendment’s privilege against self-incrimination. The indictment’s reference in each count to unlawful acquisition is obviously directed to § 4744(a) (1) rather than to § 4744(a) (2). It is § 4744(a) (1) which was under challenge in United States v. Covington, supra, although the Court observed
Upon the conclusive authority of Covington, Leary, Marchetti, Grosso, and Haynes and in line with the rulings in our Harris and succeeding cases, cited above, the Bectons’ convictions must be reversed.
This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the other issues raised by the defense.
The judgments of conviction are reversed.
