226 P. 634 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1924
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *345 The defendants were convicted of violation of the Criminal Syndicalism Act. (Stats. 1919, p. 281.) They have appealed from the judgments of conviction and the orders denying their motions for new trials.
In the month of June, 1923, the criminal syndicalism case ofPeople v. Stewart and others was on trial in the superior court of Sacramento County. The defendant Wood was then a resident of Alameda County and the other defendants herein were residents of Los Angeles County. It does not appear that any of them had ever been in Sacramento County. In obedience to subpoenas regularly issued and served upon them they all appeared as witnesses for defendants in the Stewart case and testified, among other things, that they were members of the I. W. W. Immediately after leaving the witness-stand, though not in the courtroom or in the presence of the jury, the defendants were arrested and thrown into jail and the indictment herein was thereafter found against them. *346
It is urged that, since the defendants were in Sacramento County under compulsion, and not voluntarily, they were not willfully and intentionally members of the organization in that county and that, therefore, the superior court of such county was without jurisdiction of the offense charged. [1] It may be observed at the outset that the words "willfully and intentionally" in an indictment relate to the mental attitude of the offender rather than to the place of the offense. Section
[5] On the first day of November, 1922, in the county of Los Angeles, the defendants Ross, Johansen, and Bratland were indicted on a charge of being members of the I. W. W. on the twenty-fifth day of October, 1922. They were duly tried and were acquitted on the eleventh day of May, 1923. On their arraignment herein they pleaded such acquittal as a bar. In support of their contention that such acquittal was a bar, appellants quote from 12 Cyc. 281, as follows: "An acquittal or conviction is no bar to a subsequent indictment for the same offense or the same species of crime, where the latter is alleged to have been committed at a different date from that previously tried, unless the offense is continuous." The statement as to continuing offenses has relation, of course, to the continuance thereof up to the time of the charge and not to its continuance thereafter. If an acquittal or a conviction were a bar to prosecution for the subsequent continuance of the offense, then such acquittal or conviction would constitute, in effect, a license to so continue the offense. The jury in the Los Angeles case may have acquitted the defendants on the ground that they were without guilty knowledge of the character of the organization. Such acquittal would afford no protection to the defendants in the continuance of their membership after acquiring such knowledge. [6] The conspiracy is a continuing one and its illegality is not alone in the act of engaging therein as a member, but in the continuance of such membership. (People v. Steelik,
[7] Complaint is made of the admission in evidence of certain literature published and circulated after the arrest *348 of defendants. The court instructed the jury that this evidence was admitted for the sole purpose of showing the character of the organization. Its admission for the limited purpose stated was not error. The character of the organization at a particular time must be determined by inferences to be drawn from proof of its acts and conduct within reasonable limits before and after the time in question. The question is not unlike that of proof of mental capacity at a particular time, in which case it has always been held proper to admit proof of acts and conduct both before and after the time in dispute.
[8] Evidence relative to the attitude of the organization toward churches and religion was erroneously admitted. (People
v. Flanagan,
[9] At the request of defendants the court instructed the jury as follows: "Evidence has been introduced to show and purporting to show that the Industrial Workers of the World advocate the general strike as a means of accomplishing industrial and political ends, and changes of control. The adoption of such a strike for such purposes if unaccompanied by illegal acts would not be violative of law." The court added to the instruction a statement to the effect that if such general strike be conducted in such a manner "as to amount to unlawful methods of terrorism for the purpose of bringing about a change in industrial ownership or control, or affecting any political change, then the use of the general strike under such conditions is a violation of the Criminal Syndicalism Act." While the addition to the instruction may not add anything to its clarity, it does not contain any incorrect statement of the law.
[10] The instructions given and refused upon the question of intent and guilty knowledge are unlike those of the Flanagan case and are substantially the same as in People v. Bailey,ante, p. 1 [
The further contentions of appellants which would merit discussion if presented for the first time are fully considered and overruled in one or more of the following cases:People v. Steelik, supra; People v. Taylor,
The judgments and the orders are affirmed.
Plummer, J., and Hart, J., concurred.
A petition by appellants to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on May 21, 1924, and the following opinion then rendered thereon: *350
THE COURT. — The petition for a hearing by this court after decision by the district court of appeal is denied. We do not approve the following statement contained in the opinion of that court: "The case of People v. Martin,