Thе Old Monastery Company, a corporation (hereinafter called Monastery), Harold Ostrow, Walter Renken and Joseph Davis were indicted by a grand jury of the United .States District Court for the Western District of South Carolina for a conspiracy to violate Section 4(a) of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix § 904(a), and Maximum *906 Price Regulations Numbers 193 and 445. Ostrow and Davis entered each a plea of nolo contendere, the charge was dismissed as to Renken. The case proceeded to trial with, a jury against Monastery alone, the jury brought in a verdict of guilty, and Monastery was duly sentenced by the District Court. Monastery has appealed.
Monastery’s first point is that the indictment is defective because “it wholly omits to plead any facts showing the plan and schеme by which the alleged conspiracy was to be consummated.” This point, we think, is entirely lacking in merit.
True it is that a sale, unlike many acts such as smuggling and counterfeiting, is not in itself illegal. But the indictment does not stop in alleging a mere conspiracy to effectuatе a sale; it goes further in alleging a conspiracy of a number of people “that they would in the course of trade or business buy, sell and deliver packaged distilled spirits at prices in excess of the maximum price established by said Maximum Price Regulations.” Thе indictment also sets out in detail ■ various overt acts, with place and date, committed within the Western District of South Carolina by parties to the conspiracy. ' There can be no real doubt that Monastery was fully and fairly apprised by the indictment of the specific charge against it. It is well settled, too, that in conspiracy cases the details need not be described with the same particularity as is required in charging the commission of a substantive offense. Hill v. United States, 4 Cir.,
Monastery next complains of the refusal оf the District Court, on the score of lack of jurisdiction, to pass upon the question of the invalidity of the Regulation involved. We think this ruling was correct.
In United States v. Chicco and Stauss, (decided August 31, 1944),
See Yakus v. United States,
We cannot agree with Monastery’s broad contention that the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States utterly deprived the Congress of power tо legislate in the field of intoxicating liquors. In Washington Brewers Institute v. United States, 9 Cir.,
Equally strong are the words of Circuit Judge Simons in Jatros v. Bowles, 6 Cir.,
And see, also, Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co.,
Monastery next contends that “the conspiracy here charged required рarticipation in the consummated substantive offense of the same participants and hence the conviction for conspiracy to commit the identical substantive offense is erroneous.” This principle, we think, is inapplicable to the cаse before us. Usually the principle is applied to situations in which the concurrence (or agreement) and the substantive crime (or consummated offense) are so intimately and so closely connected that they in reality constitute a single aсt. Adultery is frequently cited as probably the clearest of such cases. See 2 Wharton on Criminal Law, § 339; Clark and Marshall on the Law of Crimes, 2d Ed., § 134, p. 195. See, also, Shannon v. Commonwealth,
But, as Circuit Judge Parker pointed out, this principle is to be confined to very narrow limits. Lisansky v. Unitеd States, 4 Cir.,
When, therefore, as in the instant case, the conspiracy embraces not merely the necessary pаrties to the illegal sale, the seller and the buyer, but other conspirator’s as well, we think that Monastery’s alto
*908
gether technical contention is of no avail. In Clark & Marshall, supra, the rule is thus stated: “If, however, the contemplated crime be one of which concert or consent is a constituent part, such as fornication, adultery, bigamy, incest and the like, the mere
agreement or accord of the parties to the offense
cannot be so separated from the offense itself as to support an indictment for conspiracy.” (Italics ours.) Then in a footnote to this statement .it is said: “But the implication of a third person will make it a conspiracy. State v. Clemenson,
The final contention of Monastery is “there was a total failure of evidence to show that the defendant corporation was to receive any benefit- from the conspiracy. * * * The governmеnt’s case, instead of showing benefits to the corporation growing out of the personal acts of its then president, demonstrates conclusively that the acts attributed to him by Davis, if true, were definitely to its detriment.” We do not accept benefit as a touchstone of corporate criminal liability; benefit, at best, is an evidential, not,an operative, fact.
The generally accepted rule is thus laid down: “A corporation may be held criminally responsible for acts committed by its agents, provided such acts were committed within the scope of the agents’ authority or course of their employment.” 19 C.J.S., Corporations, § 1362. In New York Central & Hudson River R. Co. v. United States,
Peculiarly applicable here are the words of District Judge Baltzell (in a case of corporate criminal liability for conspirаcy in an illegal sale of liquor) in Zito v. United States, 7 Cir.,
And this is also true of the statement ox Circuit Judge Biggs, in Mininsohn v. United States, 3 Cir.,
We think the District Judge properly submitted the question of the criminal responsibility of Monastery to the jury. And we further think there was ample evidence to sustain the finding of the jury that Mоnastery was criminally liable here for the acts of its president, Ostrow.
At a time when whiskey was very scarce, when there was not only a strong seller’s market but also a thriving black market, Davis crossed the continent for the purpose of buying whiskey. Davis was told (and subsequent еvents proved this to be true) that Monastery had whiskey for sale. He did not then know personally any of Monastery’s officers. When Davis got in contact with the office of Monastery, he was definitely assured that Monastery (the corporation, not Ostrow) had whiskey for sаle but that Ostrow, Monastery’s president, was the only officer of Monastery who had authority, on behalf of the corporation, to sell Monastery’s whiskey.
Davis promptly called upon Ostrow and an agreement was made, with a stipulated “kick-in”, for the sale of a large quantity of whiskey. Mоnastery, through Ostrow, “welshed” on this contract. Davis made another transcontinental trip, another contract was made (this time with a higher “kick-in” than before) and performed. And Ostrow gave Davis (in a seller’s market) Monastery’s check (not his own personal cheсk) for $1,800 for commissions and expenses of Davis! There was other evidence tending to prove, and altogether consistent with the idea, that Ostrow, both in the negotiations and also in the carrying out of this contract for the sale of whiskey, acted, not as an individual, but in the role of president and representative of *909 Monastery, within the scope of his corporate capacity, both actual and apparent.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
