2 F.2d 658 | 6th Cir. | 1924
Plaintiffs in error were convicted upon an indictment under the Volstead Act (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 10138¼ et seq.) containing two counts, charging, respectively, the possession and transportation of whisky. When arrested, about 1 or 2 o’clock a. m., the three defendants were in an automobile which also contained 15 gallons of whisky—the containers being inclosed in sacks—together with a gun. On the trial Yarbrough testified that while he was walking to Rialto, about 1 o’clock, to see one Archer, he was overtaken by an automobile containing Mun-son and Stroud, and accepted the latter’s invitation to ride; that there was also another person in the car, whom he did not know; that when they reached Rialto this other person immediately left the ear, saying, “Wait a minute;” that thereupon plaintiffs in error were placed under arrest. Yarbrough asserted he had seen no whisky .in
In his charge the judge made the statement printed in the margin.
We think each of these propositions without merit as applied to the situation presented. A spontaneous statement by defendants, when arrested with the whisky in their possession, that it was not theirs, and of their innocent possession of it, would fall squarely within the elementary rule that impulsive and instinctive assertions of innocence, made by one when charged with a crime and as part of the res gesto, are admissible in his own behalf. We need only refer to excerpts from certain text-book quotations contained in the brief of plaintiffs in error.
The court’s charge did not base a presumption of guilt against defendants upon a construction of the law. No instruction was given concerning legal presumption, erroneous or otherwise. At the most, the judge’s comments related to what he thought were natural inferences of fact from defendants’ failure to assert their innocence. Presumably he should be understood as stating only what, in substance and effect, he thought innocent defendants would naturally have said. To quote again:
“The prevailing rule seems to be that whether or not conduct or silence is acquiescence is a question of fact for the jury, and the trial court cannot determine, as a question of law,
As to the court’s expression of opinion— the question is whether it falls within the Wallace Case, 291 F. 972, where this court held that a charge which four times referred
The judgment of the District Coürt is affirmed.
“Furthermore, it occurs to me, if these men had been innocent of the charge of having whisky and transporting whisky, and had had a man in this car who had put some things in there and they did not know what it was, that when the officers came upon them and when Yarbrough, who, it is said, knew they were officers, that it would have comported more with the conduct of an innocent man to have said to those officers and to his cousin, ‘I came down here to see Archer; I don’t know anything about what is in this car; I had nothing to do with it,’ and for those other men to have said, ‘It is none of our whisky, you take it; a stranger whom we accommodated by giving him a ride in our car, bringing him to Rialto, where he said he wanted to go, but got out and left the car; it is not ours, and we know nothing about it.’ That looks to me would have been reasonable. Ask yourselves whether it would or would not. It is for you to say, not me, and it is for you to determine it, irrespective of my conclusions about it. In other words, gentlemen, I think the defendants, all three, are guilty; but that is just my opinion about it. YoU gentlemen are not to be influenced by it, and must determine it for yourselves, upon your own opinion about the guilt or innocence of the defendants.”
“Res gesto are events speaking for themselves, through the instinctive words and acts of participants, but are not the words and acts of participants when, narrating the events. What is said or done by participants under the immediate spur of a transaction thus becomes part of the transaction, because it is then the transaction that thus speaks.” Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (10th Ed.) vol. 1, § 262. And see Id. § 266. And again: “A defendant’s explanation, immediately upon stolen goods being found in his possession, are admissible, and so are the defendant’s utterances, when his right was first called in question, as well as those made at the commission of the offense charged.” Id. vol. 2, § 961.
Italics ours.