134 Iowa 147 | Iowa | 1907
I. The indictment, in two counts, was as follows:
The grand jury of the county of Woodbury, in the name and by the authority of the State of Iowa, accuse D. F. Caine and Charles McGuire of the crime of conspiracy, committed as follows:
Count I. The said D. E. Caine and. Charles McGuire and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, on or about the 1st day of August, 1904, in the county of Wood-bury and State of Iowa, unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously did conspire, agree, and confederate together with the fraudulent and malicious intent and purpose wrongfully,*149 feloniously, and unlawfully to injure the person of H. H. Hawman, S. A. Huntley, Ned Brown, John Stausberry, William Eberline, E. E. Haight, John Limebach, George Buckland, and Charles A. Wagner, and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, by as aforesaid unlawfully assaulting, striking, beating, and wounding the said H. H. Hawman, S. A. Huntley, Ned Brown, John Stausberry, William Eberline, E. E. Haight, John Limebach, George Buckland, and Charles Wagner, and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown.
Count II. And the grand jury of the county of' Woodbury, in the name and by the authority of the State of Iowa, with no intent or purpose of charging any offense or crime other than the offense and crime charged in count I above, but solely in order to meet the testimony, further alleges: That the said D. E. Caine and Charles McGuire, together with divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, on or about the 1st day of August, 1904, in the county of Woodbury and State of Iowa, unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously did conspire, confederate, and agree together with the fraudulent and malicious intent and purpose wrongfully to do an act injurious to the public police, and to injure the business, property, and rights of the property of the Cudahy Packing Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois and doing business at Sioux City, Iowa, in the killing of live stock and the packing and preserving of the products thereof, the particular means agreed upon to carry out, execute, and accomplish said conspiracy as aforesaid, by the said D. E. Caine and Charles McGuire, and said divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, being to unlawfully beat, wound, strike, assault, inflict bodily injury and harm upon, and threaten with bodily harm and injuiy, and to use profane and vulgar and indecent language toward, all persons in the employ of the said Cudahy Packing Company, or who might seek employment of or from the said Cudahy Packing Company, or who might have business engagements with the said Cudahy Packing Company, at their place of business in Sioux City, Iowa, or who might have business engagements in or around the building or property of the said company at Sioux City, and especially to use and employ the particular means above set out toward one C. W. Jackson, who was then and there*150 sheriff of the said county, and H. H. Hawman and S. A. Huntley, who were then and there deputy sheriffs of said county, all of said officers being then and there- engaged in güarding and protecting as peace officers the property and employes of the said Cudahy Packing Company at Sioux City, Iowa, all of said means so agreed upon by said defendants and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, being with the malicious purpose and intent and design on the part of the said Charles McGuire, D. F. Caine, and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, wrongfully to harass and annoy said company and to frighten its said employes and prospective employes from entering or remaining in the employ of said company, and thereby prevent said company from successfully carrying-on its said business, causing loss of property and damage to the business of said company, and with the malicious intent, purpose, and design to hinder, delay, and prevent said company from hiring or securing employes, and from successfully carrying on their said business.
The court overruled a motion for defendant made after the impaneling of the jury and before the introduction of-evidence requiring the State to elect upon which count of the indictment it would proceed, and error is assigned on this ruling. The ground relied on in the motion was that the counts charged different and separate acts, and that it was not made to appear by averment that the acts charged in the first count and those charged in the second count were parts of one and the same offense or transaction, as required by Code, section 5284, which prohibits the charging of more than one offense in the same indictment, but permits one offense to be “ charged in different forms to meet the testimony.” Each count charges a conspiracy. If the two counts charge different conspiracies, the indictment is bad for duplicity, and defendant was entitled to have the State elect on which of them it would proceed; while if they charge the same conspiracy, in different forms, the motion was properly overruled.
The real controversy before us, then, as counsel on the two sides agree, is as to whether the two counts refer to one and the same confederation, for if but one confederation is. alleged, the object to be - accomplished and thé means to be employed may be any of those specified in the section of the Code, provided, of course, they are sufficiently described to bring them within the statutory definition of the offense. Identity of description in the two counts would not alone relieve the State of the duty to elect, for even under one count the State could not proceed to prove two different objects or purposes, although each might be within the statutory definition.' On the other hand, dissimilarity of object or purpose would not necessitate election before the introduction of evidence, for the State would have the right to proceed to prove any one of the objects or purposes charged and could be required to elect only when it appeared that it was seeking to prove two or more distinct acts of confederation. The words relied’ on by the State, as showing that the confederation charged in the second count is the same as that charged in the first, are the following, at the beginning of second count: “ And the grand jury, . . . with no intent or purpose of charging; any offense or crime other than the offense and crime charged in Count I, above, but solely in order to meet the testimony, further alleges.” We think the plain and evident
It is true that the language of an indictment is to be carefully scrutinized to determine whether it does with sufficient definiteness state the facts constituting the offense charged, i. e., whether it does charge the facts “ in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended.” Code, sections 5280, 5289. But the language of the indictment “ is properly to be construed in the sense in which the party framing the charge must be understood to have used it, if he intended his accusation to be consistent.” 1 Bish. New Cr. Proc. section 510, quoting from 1 Chitty, Crim. Law, 231. And see State v. Grant, 86 Iowa, 216, 223; State v. Dow, 73 Iowa, 587. We reach the conclusion, therefore, that the two counts do not necessarily refer to separate acts of confederation, but may relate to the same act, and that defendant must have understood from the language used that they were intended by the pleader to refer to one and the same act; and the State was not therefore bound to elect before any evidence was introduced, upon which of the two counts it would rely for conviction.
Affidavits of the jurors were introduced on the part of the State to show that they were not influenced in their action by the accounts they read; but it was not sufficient to show by them that they were not consciously influenced. The unconscious influence of such accounts would be far more likely to affect the result than an influence of which they were conscious, and which they might the more readily resist.
The motion for a new trial on the ground of misconduct of the jury should have been sustained, and the judgment must therefore be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial. — ■ Reversed and remanded.