233 F. 201 | 4th Cir. | 1916
In these contempt proceedings the plaintiffs in error, defendants below, were found guilty of violation of a temporary restraining order of September 29, 1913, made in the case
This court reversed the judgment for the following reasons: First. Incompetent evidence was received; although the District Judge recited in his decree that his findings were based on “the legal evidence produced at the trial, rejecting all improper and irrelevant parts thereof,” it was impossible for this court to say what testimony the District Court ultimately rejected, and whether any of the incompetent testimony influenced his findings as to the extent of the punishment inflicted. Second. The District Judge, as one of the grounds of his findings, took judicial notice of certain propositions of law laid down by the District Court in the case of Hitchman Coal & Coke Co. v. Mitchell et al., 202 Fed. 512, which were afterwards held by this court' to be erroneous. Third. The District Court imposed a general sentence for the separate acts of contempt alleged and found against the defendants, whereas, under the rule laid down in Gompers v. Buck’s Stove & Range Co., 221 U. S. 418, 31 Sup. Ct. 492, 55 L. Ed. 797, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 874, the punishment for the different offenses should have been so separated that this court could analyze the evidence and determine which, if any, of the charges were sustained. It was accordingly adjudged that:
“The judgment of the District Court must be reversed, and the causes remanded, so that the District Judge may reconsider them, indicating in Ms findings the evidence rejected as hearsay, announcing his conclusions of fact in view of the judgment of this court in Hitchman Coal & Coke Co. v. Mitchell et al., supra, and imposing sentence in accordance with the view of the Supreme Court of the United States in Gompers v. Buck’s Stove & Range Company, supra.”
At a subsequent hearing the District Court indicated plainly the testimony struck out as incompetent, and on the remaining evidence made the following definite findings of violations of the order of injunction against the plaintiffs in error:
“That the defendant James Oates did, by establishing and maintaining a camp near the West Virginia-Pittsburgh Coal Company’s Locust Grove mine, occupied by turbulent, disorderly men, intimidate the said company employes at said mine, in violation of the injunction and restraining order, with full knowledge of said injunction.
“That the defendant James Oates did, at the strikers’ headquarters at Wells-burg, advise and incite the strikers there assembled to prevent the employes of the West Virginia-Pittsburgh Coal Company .from working at the La Belle mine, by assaulting and beating them, and he did thereby incite the said strikers to acts of violence in violation of the injunction and the restraining order, with full knowledge of said injunction.
“That the defendant Hiram Stephens did, in company with the other strikers, follow a number of the employes of the West Virginia-Pittsburgh Coal*204 Company’s employés to the ferryboat at Wellsburg, when they were returning from work at the said company’s mine, and attempted to intimidate them, in violation of the injunction, and that he then knew of the said injunction.
“That the defendant Hiram Stephens did also participate in a procession of 150 or more men and women carrying a flag and singing ribald songs, who marched from Wellsburg to the West Virginia-Pittsburgh Coal Company’s mines at Colliers, known as its Locust Grove mine, for the purpose of intimidating said company’s employés employed at the said mine, in violation of the injunction, and that he then knew of the injunction.
“That the defendant Frank Ledvinski did, at the strikers’ headquarters at Wellsburg, advise the strikers there assembled to prevent the employes of the West Virginia-Pittsburgh Coal Company from working at its La Belle mine, by assaulting and beating them, and he did thereby incite the said strikers to acts of violence in violation of the injunction and restraining order, and with full knowledge thereof.
“That the defendant Fanny Sullens led a mob of about 150 men to a road leading to the mine of the West Virginia-Pittsburgh Coal Company, known as the Gilchrist mine No. 3, for the purpose of intercepting- said company’s employés and assaulting them, in violation of the injunction, and that she then knew of said injunction.”
Fanny Sullens was found guilty of the following charge also:
“The said Fanny Sullens has, during nearly all of the time the said restraining order and the said temporary injunction has been in force, with full •knowledge of the said restraining order and of said temporary injunction, resorted to the camp maintained by James Oates and others near your petitioner’s Locust Grove mine at Colliers, Brooke county, W. Va., and has aided in inciting of force in the camp there, to force, violence, threats, intimidation, and assaults against your petitioner’s employés at its said mine, and against other mine workers desiring to enter your petitioner’s service at its said mine. The said Fanny Sullens has also been during nearly all of the said time with James Oates and others, aiding him, and has aided and assisted them, in inciting a force of men at Wellsburg, W. Va., to resort to force, threats, violence, intimidation, and actual assaults against your petitioner’s employés at its two mines near Wellsburg, W. Va., and against other mine workers desiring to enter the service of your petitioner at its said two mines near Wellsburg.”
The court then sentenced each of the defendants to imprisonment for six months and payment of costs; a separate sentence being imposed for each offense found. The marshal was directed in the execution of the sentences to allow credit for the time which each of the defendants had been imprisoned under the sentences passed on April 25, 1914, set aside on writ of error.
Indeed, had the admission of incompetent testimony been the only matter involved when the cases were here before, this court would not have been justified in sending the cases back for the correction of that error; it would have been our duty to review the record and decide whether there was sufficient competent testimony to support the judgments. When a judge hears a case without a jury, he is supposed to act only on proper evidence, and if on review it is found that the evidence properly admitted justifies the decree it ought to be affirmed, and if not it ought to be reversed. Weems v. George, 13 How. 196, 14 L. Ed. 108: Mammoth Min. Co. v. Salt Lake Machine Co., 151 U. S. 447, 14 Sup. Ct. 384, 38 L. Ed. 229; West v. East Coast Cedar Co. (C. C.) 110 Fed. 725; Streeter v. Sanitary Dist. of Chicago, 133 Fed. 124, 66 C. C. A. 190; Ware v. Pearsons, 173 Fed. 878, 98 C. C. A. 364. In all these and many other cases the rule laid down by Chief Justice Marshall in Field v. United States, 9 Pet. 202, 9 L. Ed. 94, has been followed:
“As the cause was * * * not tried by a jury, the exception to the admission of evidence was not properly the subject of a bill of exceptions. But if the District Court improperly admitted the evidence, the only effect would be that this court would reject that evidence, and proceed to decide the cause as if It were not on the record. It would not, however, of itself constitute any ground for a reversal of the judgment.”
The wisdom of the rule that a new trial is not to be granted because of the admission of incompetent evidence, when the trial is by the judge without a jury, is forcibly illustrated by the cases now before us. The testimony had been taken by the District Judge, and he had made his findings on what he regarded the competent testimony. Had this court determined that certain testimony should have been excluded and the cases sent back for a new trial, the parties would have been put to the expense and trouble of producing all of the witnesses before the same judge, who would have excluded the testimony found by the appellate court to be incompetent. It is manifest that the same result was effected by striking from the record as it stood all of the incompetent evidence and leaving the competent evidence for consideration. Any impression made by the incompetent evidence could not have been better effaced by a new trial than by excluding it from consideration.
The action of this court in directing that the District Judge indicate the testimony'designated as incompefent was taken in abundance, if not excess, of consideration for the rights of the defendants, because the liberty of citizens was involved, and because there were findings of
"The court erred in admitting to hearing of the trial judge during the trial of this case a large amount and mass of irrelevant, improper, and prejudicial evidence, the admission of which evidence tended to prejudice and improperly affect the mind of the trial court and to interfere with a fair consideration of all the legitimate evidence in the case.”
As we understand, this means that the court should have rejected portions of the testimony in addition to that which was rejected. It is sufficient to say that the District Judge, in disposing of the cases and pronouncing judgment, indicated plainly the portions of the testimony rejected as incompetent. Any other portions of the testimony, which counsel thought should be .rejected, should have been called to the attention of the court, and the point raised by exception.
“When judgment is rendered against the defendant in a prosecution for any fine or forfeiture incurred under a statute of the United States, he shall be subject to the payment of costs; and on every conviction for any other offense not capital, the court may, in its discretion, award that the defendant shall pay the costs of the prosecution.”
While not deciding the point, this view is strongly intimated by the Supreme Court. In re Swan, 150 U. S. 637, 14 Sup. Ct. 225, 37 L. Ed. 1207. The Circuit Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit has expressly decided the point contrary to the position of the defendants. Whitworth v. United States, 114 Fed. 302, 52 C. C. A. 214.
“The statutes of the United States have been framed upon the theory that a person accused of crime shall not, until he has been finally adjudged guilty In the court of last resort, be absolutely compelled to undergo imprisonment or punishment, but may be admitted to bail, not only after arrest and before trial, but after conviction and pending a writ of error.”
Hardesty v. U. S., 184 Fed. 269, 106 C. C. A. 411; Ex parte Harlan (C. C.) 180 Fed. 119, affirmed 218 U. S. 442, 31 Sup. Ct. 44, 54 L. Ed. 1101, 2 Ann. Cas. 849; 2 Foster’s Fed. Practice, 1652.
The record shows that the proceedings were conducted with the utmost care and pains, and rigid scrutiny of it discloses no error.
Affirmed.
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