72 So. 965 | La. | 1916
The relator and one W. J. Leppert were indicted for libel by the grand jury of the parish of East Feliciana. Four indictments were presented, referring to four different publications that appeared in the Times-Picayune in its issues of date, respectively, the 13th, 14th, 15th, and 16th 'of February, 1916. Except as to the date of the alleged crime and the annexed printed clipping of the article complained of in each case, the indictments are alike. The alleged offense is charged in this language, viz.:
“That one D. D. Moore and W. J. Leppert, late of the parish of East Feliciana, within the body of the parish of East Feliciana, on the 13th day of Febx*uax-y, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and sixteen, did, with force and arms, maliciously defame Clarence Pierson by making, writing, publishing, or causing to be published, a certain false and maliciously defamatory libel, which said libel is as follows: [Here is attached the clipping from the Times-Picayune of the article complained of] contrary to the form of the statute of the state of Louisiana in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the same.”
The defendants were arraigned, entered pleas of “not guilty,” and were released on bonds. Thereafter they withdrew their pleas of “not guilty,” and filed pleas to the jurisdiction of the court, and motions, to quash the Indictments and dismiss the prosecutions, on the ground that, if any crime was committed, it was committed, not in the parish of East Feliciana or. within the jurisdiction of the Twenty-Fourth judicial district court, but in the city of New Orleans.
The district attorney entered a nolle prosequi in each case and immediately filed four
The pleas to the jurisdiction and motions to quash the indictments were taken up and tried and submitted on a statement of facts agreed to by the prosecuting attorney and the attorneys for the defendants, and, having heard the arguments on behalf of the state and of the defendants, the court rendered judgment, overruling the pleas to the jurisdiction and motions to quash the indictments.
The defendants promptly took exception to the ruling of the court, overruling their pleas to the jurisdiction and the motions to quash, and gave notice to the presiding judge and to the district attorney that they would apply to this court for writs of certiorari and prohibition, of which applications we are now considering that of Daniel D. Moore.
The case is not submitted upon the allegations contained in the indictments, but upon the statement of facts admitted by the district attorney and the attorneys for the defendants. The facts admitted are that neither Daniel D. Moore nor W. J. Leppert ever went personally into the parish of East Feliciana and circulated the issues of the Times-Picayune in which the alleged libelous articles appeared; that the articles alleged to be libelous were set up and printed in the city of New Orleans, but circulated through the mails in the parish of East Feliciana, where Dr. Clarence Pierson resides; that the Times-Picayune, the newspaper in which the alleged libelous article was published, is printed in the city of New Orleans (though it circulates in the parish of East Feliciana), and has never been printed elsewhere than in the city of New Orleans, where the Times-Picayune Publishing Company, the corporation owning the newspaper, has its domicile; that Daniel D. Moore is the editor and manager of the Times-Picayune, and W. J. Leppert is the reporter over whose signature the alleged libelous articles appeared. They reside in the city of New Orleans.
The defendants allege in their petition to this court, and the allegations are ’in effect admitted in the answer of the respondent judge, that it was shown, on the trial of the pleas to the jurisdiction and motions to quash the indictments, that the Times-Picayune is entirely written, set up, and printed in the city of New Orleans, and in its finished form as a newspaper is deposited in the United States mails, and otherwise in the city of New Orleans, for transportation to its subscribers and purchasers beyond the city of New Orleans; that no part of the newspaper is or was at any time written, set up, typed, or printed in the parish of East Feliciana, or within the jurisdiction of the Twenty-Fourth judicial district court, or anywhere outside of the city of New Orleans; that the indictments are predicated upon the articles appearing in the clippings of the publications of the alleged libelous articles from the Times-Picayune, which were written and published in the city of New Orleans; that the charge is that the crime of defamation or libel was committed by the fact of the distribution to its subscribers of the Times-Picayune, containing the alleged libelous articles. It is alleged, in demonstration of the defendants’ argument, that, if they are subject to prosecution in the parish of East Feliciana, they may be prosecuted in all of the 64 parishes of this state in which the Times-Picayune circulates; that the person alleged to have been defamed or libeled has caused seven indictments to be presented against the defendants in the parish of Rap-ides, based upon the identical articles on which the indictments in the parish of East
“The question thus presented,” say the attorneys for the prosecution, in their brief, “is whether the person who prints matters which are libelous in their character in a newspaper published in the city of New Orleans, and mailed to its subscribers, or to its agents, to be sold to the public, in the parish of East Feliciana, can be held to have committed the offense against the laws of the state of Louisiana within the body of said parish, and be there prosecuted. The charge is of publication in the parish of East Feliciana of the alleged libelous matter, so originated in the parish of Orleans by the publication of the newspaper in the parish of Orleans, to be sold broadcast and circulated, with a libelous intent, in the parish of East Feliciana.”
The district attorney of the Thirteenth judicial district, in his brief in behalf of the state, presents the issue thus:
“The plea to the jurisdiction states that the crime, if any, was wholly perpetrated and consummated in the city of New Orleans, notwithstanding the newspaper has a large circulation in the district in which the indictments were reported.
“The whole question before the court at this time is whether or not the defendants published a libel within the jurisdiction of the court where they have been indicted, and whether, if they did so publish a libel, they can be prosecuted in any jurisdiction other than the place where the newspaper is printed and where the defendants reside.”
The respondent judge gives his reason for overruling the pleas to the jurisdiction and motions to quash the bills of indictment or information thus:
“That said indictments, upon their face, set up an offense against the laws of the state committed within the parish of East Feliciana, and the issues therein presented are to be determined upon the trial of this cause, and the determination of the same is necessarily vested in the court having jurisdiction of offenses charged to have been committed within the body of the parish of East Feliciana.”
It appears from the foregoing quotation from the answer of tbe respondent judge that he has taken the position that a plea to the jurisdiction of the trial court, in a crim-: inal prosecution, merely raises the question of venue, which the state must prove, on the trial of the case upon its merits, in order to convict the party accused; and that, ad* the prosecution for a misdemeanor must be tried by the judge without a jury, the question of jurisdiction must be determined by him on the trial of the case. That view of the law was taken by this court in a number of cases in which the defendants did not file a plea to the jurisdiction of the trial court before going to trial. We will turn from the principal question before us to review the jurisprudence on that subject here.
In the case of the State v. Foster, 8 La. Ann. 290, 58 Am. Dec. 678, the defendant was prosecuted and convicted of the crime of manslaughter, alleged to have been committed in the parish of St. Bernard. He requested the trial judge to charge the jury that, if the evidence showed that the mortal wound was inflicted while the parties were on a schooner on Lake Borgne, the jury should acquit the defendant. This court said that the question of the territorial limits of the parish of St. Bernard was probably a question of law, but that the question of the place where the mortal wound was given
“That when any crime or misdemeanor shall be committed on the boundary of two or more parishes, or within one hundred yards thereof, or within one hundred yards of any other boundary, or shall be begun in one parish and completed in another, it may be dealt with, inquired of, tried, determined, and punished in either of the parishes in the same manner as if it had been actually and wholly committed therein.”
The Constitution prevailing when Act No. 121 of 1855 was enacted, that of 1852, did- not require that all criminal trials should take place in the parish in which the offense was committed. The only requirement in that respect was contained in article 103, that the accused should have a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the vicinage. That provision of the Constitution, however, was changed in article 105 of the Constitution of 1864, so as to read:
“The accused shall have a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the parish in which the offense shall have been committed.”
Article 105 of the Constitution of 1864, therefore, in effect, repealed section 12 of Act No. 121 of 1855. The provision quoted from article 105 of the Constitution of 1864 was embodied in article 6 of the Bill of Rights, in the Constitution of 1868, in precisely the same language but with this addition, “unless the venue be changed.”
Notwithstanding the provisions of article 6 of the Bill of Rights in the Constitution of 1868, and in direct conflict therewith, the Legislature re-enacted section 12 of Act No. 121 of 1855 as section 988 of the Revised Statutes, approved March 14, 1870.
The law enacted as section 988 of the Revised Statutes, however, was again repealed by this provision in article 7 of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of 1879, viz.:
“That the accused in every instance shall be tried in the parish wherein the offense shall have been committed, except in cases of change of venue.”
The same provision was made in article 9 of the Bill of Rights in the Constitution of 1898, and is retained in the Constitution of 1913, in this language, viz.:
“That all trials shall take place in the parish in which the offense was committed, unless the venue be changed.”
In the case of the State v. Tanner et ah, 38 La. Ann. 307 (decided in 1886), it was said that the defendants’ contention that the state had failed to prove the venue was, in effect, that the evidence did not support the verdict; and it was said that if the evidence in the record showed that the crime was not committed in the parish in which the defendants were tried and convicted, this court could not consider it. It sufficed to say, in that case, however, that the question of jurisdiction of the trial court was not properly presented on appeal.
“The complaint of the accused in this case is that there was no proof of the venue of the com*291 mission of the offense charged against hifn. This is a fact which belongs exclusively to the province of the jury, and with which we have no possible concern, under our limited jurisdiction in criminal cases.”
It would have been sufficient to have said, in that case, that the question of venue or jurisdiction of the trial court was not properly presented on appeal. It might have been correct to have held that the question belonged exclusively to the province of the jury, if the constitutional requirement had been that the accused should not be convicted in any other parish than that in which the offense was committed. But the constitutional provision was that the accused should not be tried in any other parish than that in which the offense was committed. To have the benefit of that constitutional right, not to be tried in any other parish than that in which the offense was committed, the defendant had the right to have the question of jurisdiction determined by the court before being put on trial for the offense. The question of venue or jurisdiction is a question of fact, but it does not pertain to the guilt or innocence of the person accused. Article 168 of the Constitution of 1879 provided (and article 179 of the Constitution of 1913 provides) that the jury in criminal cases shall be the judges of the law and of the facts on the question of guilt or innocence. But there is no constitutional prohibition of the right of the judge to decide questions of fact which do not pertain to the guilt or innocence of the defendant in a criminal prosecution; and this court is considering and deciding such questions in criminal cases every day, in passing upon the correctness of the rulings of trial judges.
In the case of the State v. Starks, 42 La. Ann. 215, 7 South. 540 (decided in 1890), it was again said that the question of venue or jurisdiction of the trial court was a question of fact, affecting the proof of the guilt or innocence of the accused. The question was presented to this court by a bill of exceptions taken to the ruling of the trial judge, refusing to grant a new trial. Mr. Justice Poche, for the court, said:
“The venue, like any other fact in the chain of evidence required to convict the accused, is exclusively within the province of the jury, with which the appellate court, vested with jurisdiction over the law of the case only, has no right to interfere.”
To the same effect was the ruling in State v. Clifford, 45 La. Ann. 980, 13 South. 281, and in State v. Kennon, 45 La. Ann. 1192, 14 South. 187 (in 1893). In the latter case, the court took occasion to say that it was totally useless to have annexed and brought up the testimony taken for the purpose of establishing that there was no evidence on the trial that the crime was committed in the parish in which the defendant was prosecuted and convicted.
In State v. Thornton, 49 La. Ann. 1007, 22 South. 315 (in 1897), it was again held that the question where the crime occurred was one of fact for the jury to decide. The court-went so far as to say (49 La. Ann. 1010, 22 -South. 315, of the opinion) that the question, whene the alleged forgery had been committed, could not have been raised in the court below until the jury had decided it, but that it could have been raised then in a motion for a new trial, and certainly in a motion in arrest of judgment. That doctrine is in direct conflict with all of the previous decisions referred to above, in all of which it was declared that this court could not consider the question, where the crime was committed, when that question was only presented to the court in a motion for a new trial. The court must have overlooked also the constitutional provision, that all criminal trials (not convictions) shall take place in the parish in which the offense was committed.
In the case of State v. Burton, 105 La. 516, 29 South. 970, the defendant was convicted of selling intoxicating liquor without a license
In the case just referred to (State v. Harris) the defendant was prosecuted on two separate counts in the indictment, charging him with (1) forgery; and (2) uttering a forged instrument, in the parish of Natchitoches. The jury found him not guilty of forgery, but guilty of uttering the forged instrument. On the trial, the evidence showed that the uttering of the forged instrument was committed in the parish of Bed Biver, but within 100 yards of the boundary line between that parish and the parish
In the case of State v. Montgomery et al., 115 La. 155, 38 South. 949, the defendants were indicted for the commission of a misdemeanor, alleged in the indictment to have been committed within the parish of Franklin, within 100 yards from the- boundary of that parish. They filed pleas to the jurisdiction of the district court of the parish of Franklin, alleging that the offense, if it was committed at all, was committed in the adjoining parish of Madison. On the trial of the plea to the jurisdiction, it was admitted that, although the offense was committed within 100 yards from the boundary line of the parish of Franklin, as alleged in the indictment, it was not committed within that parish, as alleged in the indictment. The plea to the jurisdiction was overruled, and
The last occasion this court had to consider the question whether a plea to the jurisdiction of the district court in a criminal case should be decided by the judge before the trial of the party accused, or should be referred to the merits of the case to be decided by the jury — or by the judge in a misdemeanor case — was in the case of State v. Malone, 133 La. 56, 62 South. 350. The defendant was indicted by the grand jury of the parish of Tangipahoa for the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed, in that parish. He excepted to the jurisdiction of the district court in that parish, on the ground that the homicide referred to was committed in the adjoining parish, St. Helena. The district judge heard arguments on the plea to the jurisdiction, and overruled it as an exception, referring the question of jurisdiction or venue to the merits to be decided by the jury, as district judges so often do with pleas that they ought to decide. The defendant was convicted of murder. He filed a motion for a new trial, on the ground that the evidence adduced on the trial showed that the homicide was committed in the parish of St. Helena. The district judge granted the new trial, admitting that it had been proven on the trial of the case that the homicide was committed in St. Helena parish, and that the verdict was therefore contrary to the law and the evidence. Thereafter the defendant filed a motion in the district court, and, on showing that the grand jury of the parish of St. Helena had met and adjourned without indicting him, prayed to be discharged from custody. The judge ordered the defendant released from custody; and the state appealed from the order of release. This court approved the ruling of the district judge that the question, where was the parish line established by the statute creating it, was a question of law, and that the question whether the homicide was committed on one side or the other of the boundary line so established was a question of fact; but it was held that, when the judge had set aside the verdict of the jury, he should have had the exception to the jurisdiction regularly set down for trial, should have tried it contradictorily with the district attorney and decided it, before ordering the defendant released from custody. The order of release was therefore annulled, and the case was remanded, to be proceeded with accordingly.
We find, from the foregoing review of the jurisprudence of this court on the interesting question presented by the return of the respondent judge, that whatever differences of individual opinion may have prevailed in this court, with regard to whether the question of venue or jurisdiction of the trial court in a criminal case is one for the judge to decide as a preliminary question or one for him or the jury, as the case may be, to decide on the trial of the defendant for the crime charged, and, whatever may have been the differences of opinion as to when the defendant should or could raise the question of jurisdiction, there can be no doubt that, when the question is properly presented to the trial judge, it must be considered and decided by him before he can compel the defendant to go to trial for the alleged offense. And it may now be considered settled that, when the
The case In re Dana, in the United States District Court, for the Southern District of New York, reported in 6 Fed. Cas. 1140, was an application to the District Judge for a warrant to the marshal of the New York district to remove Charles A. Dana to the District of Columbia for trial for the crime of libel, alleged to have been committed in Washington, in the District of Columbia. The defendant was the editor and publisher of the New York Sun, a daily newspaper edited and printed and published in that city. The person aggrieved by the publication of the alleged libelous article chose to have his complaint tried by a police justice in the city of Washington, where the complainant resided, and where the newspaper, containing the alleged libel, had been circulated. Judge Blatchford, of the United States District Court, held that the act of Congress, creating the police court of the District of Columbia and attempting to give the judge of that court jurisdiction to try misdemeanors without a jury, was unconstitutional, because it violated the third subdivision of the second section of the third article of the Constitution of the United States, providing that all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be tried by a jury. The Act of Congress creating the police court of the District of Columbia gave the defendant the right to appeal from a judgment of conviction rendered by that court to a criminal court held by a justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and to have the ease on appeal tried by a jury. Referring to that section of the statute, Judge Blatchford used language that is very appropriate to the present discussion, viz.:
*301 “It is true, that it gives to the defendant, after judgment, if he deems himself aggrieved thereby, the right to appeal to another court, where the information must be tried by a jury. But this does not remove the objection. If Congress has the power to deprive the defendant of his right to a trial by jury, for one trial, and to put him, if convicted, to an appeal to another court, to secure a trial by jury, it is difficult to see why it may not also have the power to provide for several trials by a court, without a jury, on several successive convictions, before allowing a trial by jury. In my judgment, the accused is entitled, not to be first convicted by a court, and then to be acquitted by a jury, but to be convicted or acquitted in the first instance by a jury. As, therefore, the defendant, if removed to the District of Columbia, will be tried in a manner forbidden by the Constitution, I must decline to grant the warrant.”
Paraphrasing the language quoted, it is difficult to see why a district judge in this state should be permitted to deprive a defendant charged with the commission of a criminal offense of his constitutional right to be tried only in the parish in which the offense was committed, by first trying him in the parish where the crime is alleged to have been committed, but where, perhaps, it was not committed, and put him, after conviction, to an appeal to this; court, to secure a trial in the parish where the crime was committed.
Our conclusion is that the relator was entitled to have the question of jurisdiction of the Twenty-Fourth judicial district court, in and for the parish of East Feliciana, decided before being put on trial for the offense alleged to have been committed in that parish.
The respondent judge and the attorneys for the prosecution rely upon a number of expressions of opinion by judges and text-writers on the subject of libel, in support of the contention that the facts admitted to be true for the purpose of determining the question of jurisdiction show that the offense alleged to have been committed by the defendant was committed in the parish of East Feliciana.
“E'very sale or delivery of a written or printed copy of a libel is a fresh publication.”
There was no question of venue or jurisdiction in the ease cited. It was an action for damages for an alleged malicious prosecution of the plaintiff by the defendant, who, in a reconventional demand, claimed damages for the alleged defamation or libel. Mr. Justice Manning, the organ of the court, citing Odgers on Libel and Slander, pages 155-159, said:
“Every sale or delivery of a written or printed copy of a libel is a fresh publication, and every person who sells a written or printed copy of it may be sued therefor, and the onus of proving that he was ignorant of its contents is on the defendant. * * * The same rules apply to a criminal prosecution for libel as to a civil suit for damages by reason thereof. In giving currency to slanderous and libelous reports and publications, a party is as much responsible criminally and civilly as if he had originated the defamation.”
The “publication,” in the case cited, was the selling of the newspaper by Staub, the plaintiff in the main suit and defendant in reconvention; and it was properly held that each sale or delivery of the newspaper containing the libelous article was a distinct offense. It is not contended in the case before us that the defendant Daniel D. Moore published the alleged libelous article in the sense in which the word is used in the case cited; i. e., by delivering, exhibiting, or exposing a copy of the paper in the parish of East Feliciana. On the contrary, it is admitted that the only publishing done by the defendant Moore was the publishing of the Times-Picayune containing the alleged libelous articles, in the sense in which the word “publish” is used. in newspaper parlance. The case cited, therefore, has little or no application to the facts of the case before us.
“ ‘Publication,’ as the word is used in reference to the publication of a libel, is nothing more than doing the last act of the accomplishment intended by it. The moment a man delivers a libel from his hands, his control over it is gone. He has shot his arrow, and it does not depend upon him whether it hits the mark or not. There is an end of the locus poenitentioe; his offense is complete; all that depends upon him is consummated; and, from that moment, upon every principle of common sense, he is liable to be called upon to answer for his act.”
The quotation is appropriate only to the question whether the defendant in this case was guilty of the crime of libel by publishing the newspaper containing the article supposed to be libelous, in the city of New Orleans. If he committed the offense by publishing the newspaper in New Orleans, and if, as the author quoted says, there was an end of the locus poenitentise then, and his offense was completed, and all that depended upon him was consummated, it cannot be said that what was done by Daniel D. Moore, constituting a complete offense in the city of New Orleans, was committed in the parish of East Feliciana.
The prosecuting attorneys also quote from the case of State v. Bass, decided by the Supreme Court of Maine, reported in 97 Me. 484, 54 Atl. 1113, the distinction between the meanings of the word “publication,” when used in the technical sense of publishing a libel or slander or a will, and when used in the ordinary sense of publishing a newspaper, magazine, or book. The publishing that is alleged to have been done by the defendant Moore, according to the facts on which this case is submitted, was the publishing of the Times-Picayune in the city of New Orleans. It is admitted that the publishing in that sense was not done by the defendant in the parish of East Feliciana. The legal question presented is whether the publishing of the newspaper containing the alleged libelous article in the city of New Orleans, taken in connection with the fact that the newspaper had a circulation in the parish of East Feliciana, constituted a publication, in the technical sense in which publication might amount to the commission of a libel in the parish of East Feliciana. In the case cited, the defendant, Bass, the owner of a newspaper called the Bangor Daily Commercial, was accused of violating a statute prohibiting the publication of notices of sale, or of the keeping for sale, of intoxicating liquors. The Supreme Court of Maine held that the publishing of the newspaper containing the forbidden advertisement in the city of Bangor, in the county of Penobscot, was not a publishing of the advertisement in the county of York, where the paper had a circulation. The following is quoted from the opinion:
“This newspaper is entirely composed, edited, and printed in Bangor, in the county of Penobscot, where are all of the offices [and the] printing and publishing of the paper is done. The newspaper is first issued from its publishing rooms in that city, entered as second class mail matter at the Bangor post office, and mailed from there to its subscribers in other cities and towns. The complainant was a regular subscriber to this newspaper, living in Sanford, in the county of York, where, as such subscriber, he received by mail the copy of the newspaper which contained the notices of the sale or keeping for sale of intoxicating liquors. Held, that the language of the statute must be given its natural and ordinary signification in the connection with which it is used. That the common and universal meaning of the word ‘publish,’ as well as the technical meaning of the word, when used with reference to a book, magazine, or newspaper, is to issue, to send forth to the public for * * * general distribution; that the newspaper* in which these notices were given was published in Bangor, in the county of Penobscot, and was not also published in York county because of the fact that a copy was sent to a subscriber in that county.
“It follows that the offense charged was not committed within the limits of York county, and that the municipal court before which the proceedings were instituted had no jurisdiction.”
Our examination of the other authorities quoted by the learned counsel for the prosecution discloses that they have no application whatever to the question presented for deci
“The act of publication with malicious intent being the gravamen of criminal libel, our conclusion is that the editor .of a newspaper who thereby starts in motion unlawful means to injure the good name of another may be prosecuted, in the absence of legislative restriction, in any county where his libelous publication is circulated.”
We cannot ignore the fact that there is a constitutional restriction in this state, prohibiting the trial of a criminal case in any other parish than that in which the offense was committed. Hence we come back to the question of law, presented by the facts of the case before us, whether what was done by the defendant Moore, in the city of New Orleans was 'the commission of the crime of libel in the parish of East Feliciana.
Mr. Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations appears to have construed the decision by Judge Blatchford, in Dana’s Case, supra, to have been based upon the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, which provides:
“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state or district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law. * * * ”
After reciting the facts of the case, which we need not repeat here, Mr. Cooley gives his interpretation and approval of the ruling in Dana’s Case, thus:
“A federal commissioner issued a warrant for Mr. Dana’s arrest in New York for transportation to Washington for trial, but Judge Blatchford treated the proceedings with little respect, and ordered Mr. Dana’s discharge. Matter of Dana, 7 Ben. 1 (Fed. Cas. No. 3554). It would have been a singular result of a revolution, where one of the grievances complained of was the assertion of a right to send parties abroad for trial, if it should have been found that an editor might be seized anywhere in the Union and transported by a federal officer to every territory into which his paper might find its way, to be tried in each in succession for offenses which consisted in a single act, not actually done in any of them.”
The Supreme Court of the United. States, through Chief Justice White, in the recent case of the United States v. Press Publishing Co., 219 U. S. 1, 31 Sup. Ct. 212, 55 L. Ed. 65, 21 Ann. Cas. 942, held that the circulation of a newspaper in a jurisdiction other than that in which the newspaper was printed and published did not constitute on the part of the publisher a distinct and separate crime of libel within the jurisdiction in which the newspaper was circulated, separate and distinct from the offense committed by the pub
“To sustain a charge of publishing a libel, it is not necessary that the matter complained of should have been seen by another. It is enough that the defendant knowingly displayed it, or parted with its immediate custody under circumstances which exposed it to be seen or understood by another person than himself.”
Another section of the Code (section 1346) provides that, if the person libeled is a resident of the state ofl New York, the prosecution shall be either in the county of his residence or the county where the paper is published, and that, if the person libeled is a nonresident of the state, the prosecution shall be in the county in which the paper, on its face, purports to he published, or, if it does not so indicate, in any county in which it was circulated. Another section (section 1348) provides that a person cannot be indicted or tried for the publication of the same libel against the same person in more than one county. A provision of the Code (Code Or. Proc. § 139) is that when an act charged as a crime is within the jurisdiction of another state, territory, or county, as well as within the jurisdiction of the state of New York, a conviction or acquittal of the crime in the former is a bar to a prosecution or indictment therefor in the state of New York. And there is another provision (Code Cr. Proc. § 140) to the effect that when a crime is committed within the jurisdiction of two or more counties in the state of New York, a conviction or acquittal in one county is a bar to a prosecution or indictment in another. Under those conditions, Chief Justice White, for the court, said:
“In view of the unity between the act of composing and the primary publication of a newspaper containing a libelous article within the state of New York and of subsequent publications or repetitions thereof by the publisher of the newspaper which are clearly the resultant of the provisions of the laws of New York above quoted and referred to, two propositions are, we think, plainly established: Eirst, that adequate means were afforded for punishing the circulation of the libel on a United States reservation by the state law and in the state courts, without the necessity of resorting to the courts of the United States for redress; second, that resort could not be had to the courts of the United States to punish the act of publishing a newspaper libel by circulating a copy of the newspaper on the reservation, upon the theory that such publication was an independent offense, separate and distinct from the primary printing and publishing of the libelous article within the state of New York, without disregarding the laws of that state and frustrating the plain purpose of such law, which was that there should be hut a single prosecution and conviction.”
Another recent decision by one of the federal courts on the question presented here was rendered in the recent case of the United States v. Smith et al., in the United States District Court for the District of Indiana, reported in 173 Eed. R. 227. The defendants, Delavan Smith and Charles R. Williams, were accused of having committed libel in Washington, in the District of Columbia, where their newspaper, the Indianapolis News, containing the alleged libelous article, referring also to the purchase of the Panama Canal route by the United States, was circulated. The newspaper owned and published by the defendants was printed and published in Indianapolis, Ind., where the defendants resided. About 50 copies of the paper, containing the alleged libelous article, were
“It seems to me that I am compelled to take one of two views upon this question, and there is no middle ground between them. I cannot compromise it. When a newspaper owner or proprietor does what the evidence in this case shows these defendants did — composed, printed and deposited in the mails for circulation these papers containing, for the purpose of this statement, libelous articles — either they are guilty here, and in every county and district and jurisdiction into which these papers go, or they are only guilty here. When these defendants put newspapers containing the alleged libelous articles into the post office here in Indianapolis, which went through the mails throughout the country, to various states, counties, and districts of the United States, either they committed a separate crime every time one of those papers wont into another country, another state, or another district, or there was but one crime, and that crime was committed here.
“In the case put during the argument, where a paper is' deposited here in Indianapolis and circulates throughout the 92 counties of Indiana, when I asked counsel for the government whether it would be an offense in each county, he thought it would. And in the absence of the Indiana statute cited by the government’s counsel, according to their theory, it would be. Then the question is: Suppose there was a conviction, say in Posey county; would that be a bar to a prosecution in Marion county ? Counsel for the government think it would. I do not think it would at all. Let us see if it would. The theory is that it becomes a crime in each jurisdiction where it is circulated. If so, it must be a separate crime. If there is something in the circulation of it in the other county or district or jurisdiction which makes it a crime there, it must be a separate crime. There is no way of escape from that. If it is a separate crime, a conviction or acquittal of it, of course, could not be pleaded in bar of a prosecution for another crime. I think that, as between those two views, the view that the offense, if any, was committed here is the more reasonable one, and the correct one. I am not saying now that there may not be circumstances where the publisher of a newspaper circulated throughout the country might be guilty of and prosecuted for more than one offense. I am speaking of the facts as shown by the evidence here — where people print a newspaper here, and deposit it in the post office here, for circulation throughout other states, territories, counties, and districts, there is one publication, and that is here. If that is true, then there was no publication, under the evidence, in Washington.
“The discussion as to the hardship of taking a man away from his home to a distant place to be tried, and the discussion pro and con as to the desirability of the District of Columbia and the city of Washington as a place for trial, was interesting. But those considerations, as suggested in one of the decisions of the Supreme Court, are not controlling, and I am not compelled to resort to anything of that kind to satisfy myself about what ought to be done here. To my mind that man has read the history of our institutions to little purpose who does not look with grave apprehension upon the possibility of the success of a proceeding such as this. If the history of liberty means anything, if constitutional guaranties are worth anything, this proceeding must fail.
“If the prosecuting officers have the authority to select the tribunal, if there he more than one tribunal to select from, if the government has that power, and can drag citizens from distant states to the capital of the nation, there to be tried, then, as Judge Cooley says, this .is a strange result of a revolution where one of the grievances complained of was the assertion of the right to send parties abroad for trial. The defendants will be discharged.”
The learned district attorney says in his brief that a verdict of the Twenty-Fourth judicial district court in and for the parish of East Feliciana, on the bills of indictment or information in this case, would free the defendants from prosecution on the same libelous matter in any other jurisdiction or in any other court of this state. That admission is an acknowledgment of the correctness of the proposition that only one offense was committed, if the article complained of was libelous, by the publication of the article in the Times-Picayune, no matter how many parishes or jurisdictions the paper circulated in. If what Daniel D. Moore did was a complete offense, and constituted only one offense, it was certainly committed in the city of New Orleans. If the fact that a bundle of copies of the Times-Picayune, containing the alleged libelous article, was sent to the parish of East Feliciana conferred jurisdiction upon the district court of that parish to try the alleged offender for what he did
It is ordered that the rule issued herein be made absolute, that a peremptory writ of prohibition issue herein, directed to the judge of the Twenty-Fourth judicial district court in and for the parish of East Feliciana, prohibiting further proceedings in the prosecutions complained of, and that the defendant Daniel D. Moore be discharged.
See concurring opinion of PROYOSTY, J., 72 South. 976.
See dissenting opinion of MONROE, O. J., 72 South. 976.