133 Iowa 478 | Iowa | 1907
As the facts were fully stated on the former; • appeal (121 Iowa, 395), it will be enough now to advert to the circumstances briefly.
But it does not follow that she may not engage in an unlawful conspiracy with another to perpetrate the offense upon herself. Section 5059 of the Code declares that, if any two or more persons conspire and confederate together to commit a felony, they are guilty of the crime of conspiracy. This offense is distinct from the crime, which it is the .object of the conspiracy to commit, and the acquittal of one is not a bar to the prosecution of the other. State v. Brown, 95 Iowa, 381. Though she may not be guilty of committing an abortion upon herself, it is a crime for another to do so, and, if she conspires with others to perform the act, there is no escape from the conclusion that she is a co-conspirator, and that her declarations in promotion of the common enterprise are admissible in evidence against another conspirator on trial for the commission of the substantive crime. Underhill on Ev. 412. Solander v. People, 2 Colo.
Decatur, Iowa, Jan. 15, 1900. Miss Maude Stone — ■ Dearest Maude: Well this is Wed eve & I am going to write you a little bit although I am pretty D tired. I got home 0 K Sun eve but it was rather late. How did you feel Mon morn let me tell you I felt pretty tough but Maude my darling I never begrudge the time I spend with you 1 hope it wont be long until I can spend it all with you. Of course I know Maud you would rather wait till I am of age but I can get as much now as I can when I am 21 and maybe more we dont know what will happen between now and then. Say Maude my dear sweet girl I would give a good deal to know how you are. I do hope that Medicine will fix you out all right. I don’t know how I*483 will get away to go out there but Maude if you hafto go I will take you, but I wont tell the folks where I am going I dare not. But we will get out of it wont we darling. I hate to see our children go that way but we have-got to do it so let it go. If we get married this spring we wont hafto do that way any more will we darling. But Maude I think more of your name than I do of the child. I wouldnt have you ruined by having a child before we were married for anything Maude. You know as well as I do what people would say dont you. . . . Maude I wish you would tell your mother,that if Bony leaves we are going to get married and see what she says will you ? ... So good by dear sweet wife I am as ever your loving Hd. Ira.
Decatur, Iowa, Jan. 17, 1901. Mr. I. L. Hammond —■ My dear Ira. This is Thur. eve and I am going to write you a letter if some one don’t bother me. How are you getting along. All right I hope. I am just the same not a bit of change in any way. You know what. Verne and Shorty have gone to Leon. I hope you didn’t go and I am pretty sure you didn’t. I have been washing today. I never ironed Monday as I said I was going to. I done it yesterday. Eue has been gone every day this week. He went down to Mary’s fathers Monday and never came back until Thur noon & then Mary 'and him both went away that evening & never came back until today noon. They went to see about getting a place but they never got' one. I don’t believe they are going to try to buy a place now. I think they will build. I wish they would buy but if they don’t I can’t help it. It would be a whole lot better for them to get away from here as soon as possible. I told Mary today that they had all been visiting but me & that I was going to go. I told Ma I wanted to go & she said all right, but Ira I am going to go two places. I am going to Gainesville & Mt. Avr, the reason I am going to Mt. Ayr is because it is right on the road to Lamoni. I am going Tues. & I am going .to start for Mt. Ayr. Of course you know where I will stop & as soon as I can leave there I will go on to Mt. Ayr & you see the folks will never know but what I have been there all the time & from there go to Cainesville. I will not be gone only one Sun. Now I dont hardly know which would be the best for me to go on the*484 train or have you take me but if you don’t take me Ira my dear one won’t you please come out there Wed. and stay until I leave. Please do Ira. I know you can. Your folks may give you h— but I have stood more from my folks than you have from yours so darling please go. It will be lots of company for me to have you there & I want you to be with me as much as you possibly can. I hope I can get away from here Thur. I am not going to take all the money with me to pay him because I am afraid the folks will catch on about me spending so much money. I am going to write Dock a letter and tell him I am coining so he will be prepared for me. We can talk it all over when I see you Sun night. Ira I was just thinking today how happy you and I would be when we get married. . If Hue and Mary don’t move away from here next fall I don’t know, what they will do. Do you suppose your folks would care if we stayed over there till they did move out; if they cant get a place we can or else we can build. . . Well my dear sweet boy it is getting late and I am tired and will close and go to bed. Wish you were here to go with me. Will bid you kind good night with lots of kisses. I am your loving sweetheart and w — . Answer soon and be careful of this letter. Maude S.
Appellant contends that the first letter should have been excluded because written before the conspiracy is claimed to have been formed. The date of- the letter was not conclusive as to when it was written. The circumstances were such that the jury might well have found that a mistake was made in the date; the error being the insertion of “ 1900,” instead of “ 1901.” Such mistakes are not unusual at the beginning of the year. The evidence tended to show that the 15th day of January in neither year was Wednesday, the day on which the letter purports to have been written; that the parties did not begin corresponding until May or June of 1900; that “ Bony ” mentioned therein was Maude’s brother, who was not married until in December 25, 1900, and had no talk of leaving home until after that date; and the letter of Maude bears internal evidence
In the trial of Eichard Hardy for treason a letter had been written by a co-conspirator to one Margrot, but not sent, and the question was to whether it might be received in evidence against the defendant on trial. There was a disagreement among the judges, one holding that the evidence was not admissible because in the nature of a confession of a stranger, while two of the judges took the view that it was in the nature of “ an act introduced as subservient to the proof of the general .nature and tendency of that conspiracy which was alleged and endeavored to be proved as the foundation of affecting the principal prisoner with a share in that conspiracy.” Lord Chief Baron Macdonald stated that it seemed to him “ that one conspirator addressing a paper to another conspirator having relation to that con
This letter is not in the nature of a confession, but is material ■ as tending to show the deceased’s consent to the design formed by Hammond and the accused, and is connected with the defendant by the act of the deceased in going to Lamoni as stated in the letter and later submitting to an abortion. It may Se, as contended by the appellant, that there is little in the letter by way of declaration in promotion of the conspiracy, but the writing of such letter was one of the acts of the deceased indicating her connection therewith, and, in view of the other circumstances established in the case, was admissible for the one purpose of proving that the conspiracy in fact existed.
The court in receiving the letters in evidence suggested that they might be admissible at least as tending to establish the pregnancy of Maude Stone. An erroneous reason for a correct ruling never furnishes a ground for reversal.
The record is without error, and the judgment is- affirmed.