229 Wis. 644 | Wis. | 1939
The following opinion was filed November 9, 1938:/
The appellants’ first assignment of error is that the court erred in overruling their motion to dismiss the
“Although the common law in regard to conspiracy in this commonwealth is in force, yet it will not necessarily follow that every indictment at common law for this offense is a precedent for a similar indictment in this state. The general rule of the common law is, that it is a criminal and indictable offense, for two or more to confederate and combine together, by concerted means, to do that which is unlawful or criminal, to the injury of the public, or portions or classes of the community, or even to the rights of an individual. This rule of law may be equally in force as a rule of the common law, in England and in this commonwealth; and yet it may depend upon the local lazos of each country to determine, whether the purpose to he accomplished by the combination, or the concerted means of accomplishing it, he unlawful or criminal in the respective countries. . . . This consideration will do something towards reconciling the English and American cases, and may indicate how far the principles of the English cases will apply in this commonwealth, and show why a conviction in England, in many cases, would not be a precedent for a like conviction here.”
On behalf of five of the appellants, Martin, Buckeye, Woodruff, Nowatske, and Voss, it is contended that their conviction cannot be sustained because the prosecution of them under the indictment for conspiracy placed them in double jeopardy for the reason that each of them had theretofore been tried and convicted in other actions fo.r violations of sec. 348.07, Stats., by setting up and maintaining slot machines at the same times and places as the times and places at which each was charged and proven in this action to have set up and maintained such machines in violation of that statute. In explanation of this contention the following facts must be noted. Each of those appellants had been tried and convicted, under an indictment returned solely against him, charging that he had unlawfully set up and maintained slot machines for gambling purposes in certain specified months in 1937 at taverns conducted by certain proprietors at specified locations in Waukesha county; and in addition Martin was charged in the indictment against him with having kept and maintained such machines on specified dates in each of the five months from July to November, 1937, at a tavern of which Ben Minten was the proprietor. On the
“A conviction or acquittal upon one indictment is no bar tO' a subsequent conviction and sentence upon another, unless the evidence required to support a conviction upon one of them would have been sufficient to' warrant a conviction upon the other. The test is not whether the defendant has already been tried for the same act, but whether he has been put in jeopardy for the same offense. A single act may be an offense against two statutes; and if each statute requires proof of an additional fact which the other does not, an acquittal or conviction under either statute does not exempt the defendant from prosecution and punishment under the other.”
That rule was approved and applied in State v. Brooks, 215 Wis. 134, 254 N. W. 374; Eastway v. State, 189 Wis. 56, 206 N. W. 879; Schroeder v. State, 222 Wis. 251, 267 N. W. 899; and in the following cases it was applied in criminal actions for conspiracy in which a former conviction or acquittal in a prosecution for either burglary or larceny was held not to bar the subsequent action for a conspiracy with others to commit the burglary or larceny. Whitford v. State, 24 Tex. App. 489, 492, 6 S. W. 537; State v. Sias, 17 N. H. 558; Davis v. People, 22 Colo. 1, 43 Pac. 122.
The appellants further contend that the evidence did not establish the conspiracy because the court by discharging the defendants Liskowitz and Salen, — who were, respectively, the sheriff of Waukesha county, and the attorney retained by the conspirators ’ h> attend their meetings, prepare their articles of organization, and defend prosecutions for the keeping of their gambling machines and the confiscation thereof, — eliminated from the case the evidence as to the
“These other men [referring to appellants] are law violators, admitted to' be such; there isn’t any question about it. They were desirous of protecting the operation of their slot machines in the county; the evidence establishes that to my mind beyond all question of doubt. They are guilty of confederating together with that end in view. If any of them did not have that end in view at the start, the evidence establishes they immediately took that position, for they proceeded to collect dues on the basis of slot machines that they owned. The evidence is undisputed as to that. The evidence is undisputed that they reimbursed this man Manhardt for the loss of a machine he sustained, and that they agreed with one another that they would not interfere with the locations that they had, or they wouldn’t cut prices. I take it that these things constitute overt acts in carrying out the purposes of their organization.”
The appellants also make the same contention that was made in the case of Liskowits v. State, ante, p. 636, 282 N. W. 103, in respect to the proper venue for the trial of this-action in view of the division of Waukesha county into two districts with separate municipal courts having jurisdiction in criminal actions of this nature. That contention cannot be sustained for the reasons stated in the Liskowits Case.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, without costs, on January 10, 1939.
Sec. 348.40 Common-law conspiracy. Any person guilty of a criminal conspiracy at common law shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail not more than one year or by fine not exceeding five hundred dollars; but no agreement, except to commit a felony upon the person of another or to commit arson or burglary, shall be deemed a conspiracy or be punished as such unless some act, beside such agreement, be done to effect the object thereof by one or more of the parties to such agreement.