230 P. 221 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1924
The defendants, together with one C. J. Driscoll were prosecuted under an indictment returned by the grand jury of the county of Sacramento, charging the crime of criminal syndicalism, as follows, to wit: "The said H. B. Stewart, C. J. Driscoll and Pete Wukusitch on the *623 __________ day of December, A.D. 1922, at the County of Sacramento, in the State of California, and before the finding of this indictment were and each of them was, then and there willfully, unlawfully, and feloniously and knowingly a member of an organization, society, group, and assemblage of persons known and designated as 'The Industrial Workers of the World,' sometimes known and referred to as the 'I. W. W.' and sometimes known and referred to as 'One Big Union'; which said organization, society, group, and assemblage of persons was then and there organized and assembled to advocate, teach, and aid and abet Criminal Syndicalism, . . ."
Upon trial the defendant Driscoll was found not guilty and the appellants guilty. The appellants' motion for a new trial having been denied, an appeal was taken therefrom, and from the judgment of conviction to this court, and is now pending for consideration.
As reasons for a new trial five specifications of error are assigned, to wit:
"First: The trial court erred in denying defendants' application for a commission to take a deposition;
Second: The trial court erred in the reception and exclusion of evidence;
Third: The evidence is insufficient to support the verdict;
"Fourth: The trial court erred in giving and refusing instructions to the jury;
"Fifth: The district attorney was guilty of prejudicial misconduct."
[1] It appears from the transcript that at a reasonable time before the date set for the trial that an application was made for the issuance of a deposition to take the testimony of a witness residing in the state of Minnesota. The affidavit in behalf of such application is as follows:
"T. F. Allen, being first duly sworn, deposes and says:
"That he is attorney for the defendants in a certain action now pending in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Sacramento, wherein the People of the State of California is plaintiff and H. B. Stewart, Pete Wukusitch, and C. L. Driscoll are defendants; that said defendants are prosecuted in said action upon an indictment accusing said defendants of the crime of felony, *624 to-wit, criminal syndicalism; that the said defendants have, and each of them has, duly pleaded not guilty to the said indictment, and that the said action has been set for trial before the above entitled Court for the 26th day of November, 1923; that an issue of fact has been joined, and issues of facts have been joined upon the said indictment and the said pleas; that Dr. Walter E. List is a material witness in behalf of said defendants in said action and for the presentation of their defense therein; and that the said Dr. Walter E. List resides out of the State of California, to-wit, in the City of Minneapolis, in the State of Minnesota, and affiant verily believes that the said Dr. Walter E. List will not be within the State of California before or during the trial of said action, and that the testimony of said Dr. Walter E. List is and will be material on behalf of the said defendants and without the said testimony said defendants will be unable to fully and fairly present their defense upon the trial of said action."
This application was denied and the ruling of the court thereon is assigned as error.
Section
Basing their argument upon the case of People v. Lundquist,
The affidavit in the instant case follows the literal wording of the statute. No facts or circumstances are set forth from which the trial court could determine whether the examination of the witness referred to was necessary to the attainment of justice, nor were any facts whatever stated in the affidavit other or further than the conclusion of the affiant that the testimony of the witness referred to was necessary or material. In the Lundquist case, all the proposed testimony to be elicited from the witness to be examined was set forth in the affidavit. Its materiality and admissibility plainly appear. It directly bore upon the issues or questions of fact which the defendant sought to submit to the jury for consideration. In the instant case there is not a scintilla of evidence, or anything whatever, from which the court could conclude that the testimony of Dr. List would either be admissible or material. In the case of People v. Young,
[2] We agree with the appellants that the court erred in the reception of testimony, but not with the conclusions sought to be deduced therefrom. It appears that the prosecution, over the objection of the defendants, was allowed to introduce in evidence a certain paper or document issued in 1917, called "The Deadly Parallel." In this document the position of the American Federation of Labor and also the position of the I. W. W. toward possible war with Germany were set forth. The declaration of views set forth by the American Federation of Labor in every word breathes loyalty *627 and patriotism, and tendered support without stint or limitation to the government of the United States. The document issued by the I. W. W., opposed war in every form, discounted the nationalistic spirit and strongly advocated internationalism. However objectionable and however much it shows a want of proper spirit that should actuate every citizen of the United States, it in no particular tended to show that its advocates were assembled to teach, aid or abet criminal syndicalism, or bring about a political change by violence or terrorism.
What we have said in relation to this document applies also to that portion of the literature introduced in evidence in relation to the home life as it would exist under the communistic doctrine as taught by the I. W. W., were that system in operation. However much at variance with the accepted ideas governing the home life at the present day, it is not within the penal provisions of the syndicalism law. The views of the I. W. W. on religious matters were excluded and the same ruling should have been made concerning the two documents herein just considered. Their tendency could only be to arouse antagonism or prejudice.
We come next to the consideration of the testimony of the witness Hynes, wherein he was allowed to state in detail a conversation had by the witness at San Pedro, in the state of California, at a considerable period previous to the trial, with one A. W. Sodling, in which the latter, referring to one William E. Townsend, who had testified against the I. W. W. in a number of cases, said: "He should be put out of the way in some way, some of those fellows ought to dump him in the bay, and that applied to Jack Dymond as well." There was some further testimony of this witness along the same lines, but it was all in the nature of recital of what should be done and not that the I. W. W., or any of the defendants in this case, proposed to do anything of the kind. There was nothing to show that it was in anywise connected with, or a part of the conspiracy or alleged conspiracy of the organization maintained by the defendants and others to subvert government by force, violence or terrorism, and under the cases which were considered by this court in the case of People v. Erickson,
Were the foregoing a full statement of all that must be considered by the court in this case, then a reversal of the judgment would necessarily have to be ordered, but the case does not stop here. The evidence, excluding all that we have referred to, brings home to us the fact that the jury under the testimony set out in the transcript could not have brought in any other verdict than the one which was returned as to the two defendants appearing as appellants herein. An abundance of testimony appears from which the jury might come to the conclusion as to the illegal character of the organization and of the illegal character of its purposes and aims and its violation of the penal provisions of the Criminal Syndicalism Law (Stats. 1919, p. 281), as alleged in the indictment. We do not need to set out the testimony in detail. Suffice it to say that the same witnesses appeared in this case as have appeared in former trials, and that the testimony tended to bring the illegal character of the organization down to and including the time when both the appellants admitted the continuance of their memberships therein. Both appellants have been members of the organization for a considerable period of time. One defendant had made a study of the literature of the I. W. W. for a period of some two years, had been a member for a period of some two years, and the other defendant had been a member for a period of between two and three years, and more or less active in the organization. The criminal character of the organization was shown by testimony, other than the hearsay matter to which we have adverted, with sufficient certainty and particularity to call for a verdict of guilty, and, therefore, for the application by the court of the provisions of section 4 1/2 of article VI of the state constitution. We may also add that there was introduced in this case testimony from which the jury might conclude that the I. W. W., as an organization, advocated the Bolshevik tactics applied in Russia, and its attendant horrors, in accomplishing a change of political and economic conditions. The defendants *629 themselves testified that they did not believe in violence. It is probably true that many members of the I. W. W. do not believe in acts of violence, but this does not alter the punitive character of the syndicalism law, or relieve one from the pains and penalties of such membership, if the jury finds the existence of the criminal character of the organization. Lack of criminality of the organization, not lack of knowledge, appears to have been the defense.
[4] The third objection, that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, is answered in what we have just said, and calls for no further consideration.
[5] We do not agree with the contention that there should have been any different or additional definition than that contained in the statute of the term "sabotage." The statute defines that term and we think the definition as given by the legislature is the one which should be applied to these cases irrespective of what writers and lexicographers may set forth as expressing their ideas. The statute defines the word "sabotage" as a ". . . willful and malicious physical damage or injury to physical property or unlawful acts of force and violence or unlawful methods of terrorism as a means of accomplishing a change in industrial ownership or control, or effecting any political change." In order to warrant a conviction, the jury must find that the acts of the defendants, or the organization come within that definition, and the fact that other people give other definitions is wholly immaterial.[6] The defendants offered two instructions which, under the ruling of this court in the case of People v. Flanagan,
"The offense charged in this indictment comprises three material elements. Before you can convict any one of these defendants you must find, to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt, the existence of each of these elements — that is to say, you must find from the evidence in this case, in order to warrant a conviction of such defendant, first, that the defendants were members of the Industrial Workers of the World in the County of Sacramento, State of California, at or near the date charged in the indictment; second, that at the time such defendant was a member of the Industrial Workers of the World, the Industrial Workers of the World was organized or assembled to teach, advocate, or aid *630 and abet criminal syndicalism, as that term has elsewhere been defined to you in these instructions; and, third, that at the time such defendant was such member such defendant knew that the Industrial Workers of the World was then and there organized or assembled to do the things above stated. Unless you find the existence of each of these elements from the evidence in this case to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt, you must acquit such defendant."
And also the following instruction: "The word 'knowingly' imports only a knowledge that the facts exist which bring the act or omission within the condemnation of the law. It does not require any knowledge of the unlawfulness of such act or omission; and, so, in this case it is immaterial whether any of these defendants knew, or had reason to know, of the provisions of the Criminal Syndicalism Act. The material thing for you to determine in this respect is whether each defendant at the time he was a member of the Industrial Workers of the World, within three years prior to the date of the finding of this indictment, if you find from the evidence that he was such member, knew that the Industrial Workers of the World was organized for the purpose of advocating, teaching, or aiding and abetting the doctrines and precepts of criminal syndicalism, as the term 'criminal syndicalism' has elsewhere been defined to you in these instructions."
Instruction number 2 would be clearer if the word "while" were inserted after the word "world," so as to read, "that the defendants were members of the I. W. W. while in the County of Sacramento, State of California, at or near the date charged in the indictment." It is probable that the same meaning is imported by the words used, but the insertion of the word "while" would make the instruction conform absolutely to the testimony, which showed membership in the organization while the defendants were in the county of Sacramento, and not that they were members of a branch of the I. W. W. organized and located at or in the county of Sacramento.
Was the refusal of the court to give these instructions prejudicial? For the reasons which we have hereinbefore stated, and in view of the testimony which we have referred to, we think not. The testimony shows, as herein stated, *631 that the defendants had both been members of the I. W. W. for a period of over two years preceding the date of the finding of the indictment against them. That one of the appellants had made a special study of the purposes and aims of the I. W. W. and familiarized himself with its literature, that the other had taken such a part in the proceedings of the I. W. W. and the advocacy of its cause that he must necessarily have known of its purposes and aims and its illegal character, and its objects and aims to accomplish political changes and revolutions by other than peaceable and orderly processes. Thus, again, we are bound by the provisions of section 4 1/2 of article VI of the state constitution, wherein it is provided that: "No judgment shall be set aside or new trial granted in any case on the ground of misdirection of the jury or the improper admission or rejection of evidence . . . unless after an examination of the entire cause, including the evidence, the court shall be of the opinion that the error complained of has resulted in a miscarriage of justice."
The jury could not have concluded that the defendants were ignorant, or wanting in knowledge of the aims and purposes of the I. W. W. organization. Their admitted study and activities were such as to preclude such a finding by the jury. It therefore follows that the failure to give the instructions requested caused no miscarriage of justice. Some minor reasons, including the alleged misconduct of the district attorney, are assigned as error, but we do not deem them of sufficient importance to warrant any further addition to the language of this opinion. The order and judgment appealed from are hereby affirmed.
Finch, P. 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 November 10, 1924. *632