On March 16, 1944, these appellants were convicted with three other defendants on an indictment containing nine counts, eight of which charged violations of 18 U.S.C.A. § 409 [now §§ 659, 2117} and the ninth a violation of the conspiracy statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 88 [now § 371]. Oddo received a total sentence of 15 years, and DeNormand a total sentence of 17 years. Their convictions were affirmed on May 14, 1945. United States v. DeNormand et al., 2 Cir.,
Before passing on the merits of the appeal we must consider the appellee’s contention that appellate jurisdiction is lacking because the appeal was taken too late. Rule 37(a) (1) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides that an appeal “is taken by filing with the clerk of the district court a notice of appeal in duplicate” ; and subdivision (a) (2) of Rule 37 requires an appeal to be taken within 10 days after entry of the judgment or order appealed from. Oddo’s notice of appeal was not received by the clerk of the district court until March 29, 1948 and was not formally filed by the clerk until April 7th because the $5 filing fee did not arrive until that date.
2
Either date was more than 10 days after entry of the order of March 15th. However, Rule 49(c) provides that “Immediately upon the entry of an order * ■ * * the clerk shall mail to each party affected thereby a notice thereof and shall make a note in the docket ■of the mailing.” By letter dated March 18th the clerk notified Oddo of the order denying his motion. This was not received by him in the Penitentiary at Alcatraz, California, until March 22nd or 23rd and on the latter date Oddo wrote a letter to the clerk enclosing the notice of appeal and stating that the filing fee was being forwarded through official prison channels.
3
It would seem pointless to require notification by the clerk of the court unless the party for whose benefit the provision exists is entitled to rely on receipt of the -notice. We believe that, under the circumstances of the appellant’s imprisonment, the ten day period mentioned in Rule ■37(a) (2) did not start to run until receipt of the notice required by Rule 49(c). Such appears to be the view of the Sixth Circuit in Remine v. United States,
The fact that the notice of appeal was unaccompanied by the filing fee does not in our opinion impair its validity. It is true that we do not find in the Criminal Rules the equivalent of Civil Rule 73 (a) which provides that the failure of the appellant to take further steps after filing notice of appeal does not affect the validity of the appeal; it is likewise true that Smith v. Johnston, 9 Cir.,
The total 15 year sentence imposed on Oddo was made up as follows; 10 years on counts 1 and 2 to run concurrently; 5 years on counts 3 to 8 to run concurrently but to be served consecutively to the sentence on counts 1 and 2; and one year and one day on count 9 to run concurrently with the sentence on counts 3 and 8. The appellant’s motion to vacate as illegal that *856 part of the sentence based upon counts 3 to 8 rests on the theory that it amounts to a second punishment for the same offense charged and proved under count 1. Count 1 charged the theft from “certain trailer trucks” of an interstate shipment of freight from 'Park & Tilford Import Corporation’s place of business in New York to itself in New Haven, Connecticut, consisting of 1005 cases of whiskey. At the trial it was proved that 590 of such cases were in one truck referred to as truck 3,. and 415 in another truck referred to as truck 4. Each of counts 3 to 8 charged the theft from “a certain trailer truck” of an interstate shipment of freight from a named consignor to a named consignee, consisting in count 3 of 200 cases of Vermouth, in count 4 of 100 cases of Sherry and Muscatel Wine, in counts 5, 6 and 7 of cases of tomato puree, and in count 8 of cases of Marsalla Tonic. The proof showed that all of the merchandise mentioned in counts 3 to 8, as well as 415 cases of Park & Tilford whiskey mentioned in count 1 was in truck 4. 5 The appellant and his co-defendants “hijacked” the two trucks on the night of November 30, 1943 in the manner described in our former opinion. Before any of its contents was removed from either truck, the conspirators were apprehended.
The appellant now argues that the seizure of truck 3 and its contents was a single crime, and similarly the seizure of truck 4 and its contents, and since count 1 covered some of the goods in each truck, the ten year sentence imposed under count 1 was in part for the theft of the contents of truck 4, and the imposition of the additional five years under counts 3 to 8 was a second sentence for the same offense. In substance the contention is that a thief who steals a vehicle and its contents commits but one theft, even though the vehicle contains packages of different kinds of goods belonging to different owners. The appellant places great reliance on the case of Robinson v. United States, 10 Cir.,
“Merely because one element of a single criminal act embraces two persons or things, a prosecutor may not carve out two offenses by charging the several elements of the single offense in different counts and designating only one of the persons or things in one count and designating only the other person or thing in the other count.”
That case held that it was a single crime to transport in interstate commerce several prostitutes in the same vehicle at one time. Kerr v. Squier,
9
Cir.,
The question whether the stealing of the goods of different owners at one time and place constitutes several offenses or only one has been much mooted in the courts and has produced divergent answers. In United States v. Beerman, 24 Fed.Cas. 1065, No. 14,560, Chief Judge Cranch, with whom Circuit Judge Morsell concurred, reviewed at length the early English cases
*857
and held that multiple offenses were committed, while Circuit Judge Thurston filed a vehement dissent.
6
It is seldom that by a single act a thief can take possession of the property of two persons; usually the thefts are accomplished by successive acts, as where two persons in the same room are held up at the point of a pistol and money taken first from one and then from the other. Such a case presents no logical difficulty in finding separate crimes, for separate acts are committed each with a criminal intent.
7
When the goods of different ownership are in one container, as stock certificates in a single envelope or separate interstate shipments in one vehicle, by his act of seizing the envelope or vehicle the thief takes possession of its contents whosoever may own them. This was the character of the taking of the goods in truck 4 in the case at bar. A somewhat analogous case is Commonwealth v. Sullivan,
“The stealing at the same time and by one taking of several articles belonging to different persons is larceny of the whole and of each article; and may be indicted in either one aspect or the other — as one entire crime, or as several distinct offenses. If indictments or counts for one taking of several articles are unreasonably multiplied, the court, in superintending the course of trial and in passing sentence, will see that justice is done and oppression prevented.”
On the other hand, in Henry v. United States,
The test of the identity of offenses, when double jeopardy is set up, is whether the evidence sustaining one indictment or count would have proved the other indictment or count. Morgan v. Devine,
“So if the man who stole the several goods of A and of B, should be indicted for *858 stealing the goods of A, and should be acquitted, he could not plead his acquittal in bar of an indictment for stealing the goods of B, although stolen at the same time; because the evidence of stealing the goods of B, would not support the indictment for stealing the goods of A.”
Other decisions to the same effect are Phillips v. State,
DeNormand has appealed from an order of March 9, 1948 denying what he styled “a supplemental motion to a motion for a new trial.” 8 A notice of appeal from this order was enclosed in a letter to the clerk of the district court dated March 13, 1948. This letter was evidently received by the clerk on March 18th, as on that date the clerk wrote DeNormand with regard to the lack of a filing fee. Such fee was received by the clerk on April 7, 1948, and the notice of appeal was then placed on file. For reasons already given in the Oddo appeal, the delay in receipt of the filing fee should not vitiate an appeal otherwise timely.
The appellee suggests that DeNormand’s “supplemental motion to a motion for a new trial” was in reality a motion to reargue the motion for a new trial denied by Judge Brennan in September 1947 and from which no appeal had been taken. Without passing on the validity of this suggestion, we shall in misericordiam treat the “supplemental” motion as an original motion for a new trial. As such it was properly denied because brought too late. Rule 33 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure requires a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence to be made within two years after final judgment. This period had clearly run out whether the date of “final judgment” be deemed to be the date sentence was imposed, March 16, 1944, or the date of entry of this court’s mandate of affirmance, June 2, 1945. Although the first sentence of Rule 33 declaring that a new trial may be granted to a defendant in the interests of justice contains no time restriction it seems clear that the opening sentence was meant to be limited, in the case of newly discovered evidence, by the two year period and, in other cases, by the five day period, as expressly stated in later sentences of the Rule. See United States v. Smith,
Both orders on appeal are affirmed.
Notes
Certiorari denied
See 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 548, 552 [now §§ 1914, 1917]. The filing fee was sent by the prison warden by means of a transmittal slip dated March 25, 1948.
The letter was dated March 23, 1945; its envelope was postmarked March 25th and marked received March 29th.
Oddo obtained an order on April 26, 1948 permitting him to prosecute his appeal in forma pauperis.
In the opinion affirming the convictions, United States v. DeNormand, 2 Cir.,
The Beerman case was disapproved in Hoiles v. United States,
Even in such a case the authorities are divided. See annotations in 31 L.R.A.,N.S., 693 at page 723, and 42 L.R.A.,N.S., 967. Frequently the precise issue presented is not double jeopardy but whether an indictment or count is demurrable when it alleges that the separate property of two persons was taken, at the same time and place.
The appellee’s brief states that motions previously made by DeNormand for a new trial were denied in June 1944, June 1945, May 1946, July 1946, and September 1947.
