5 F. 276 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1881
Tho defendant, being arraigned upon an information charging her with counterfeiting coins, pleaded not guilty, and was put upon her trial. She is described in the information simply as “Annie De Quilfeldt, otherwise known as Annie Egbert; ” all addition, such as “wife of A. B.,” “widow, ” or “spinster,” being omitted. On the trial, a witness, the detective who arrested her, was asked whether she was not living with Charles G. De Quilfeldt, who had just been convicted of counterfeiting, as his wife; whether they, at the time of arrest, called and recognized each other as such, and whether they were not reported to be man and wife among their neighbors. This testimony was, on objection of the district attorney, excluded. There was proof tending to show that, when the defendant was caught in the act of moulding the coins, this man, De Quilfeldt, was either present, or so
Before entering upon the consideration of the question whether the testimony was properly rejected, it may be proper to say that this defence of marital coercion as a protection to women engaged in the commission of crime is not a favored one, and, at least in modern times, has almost lost all solid foundation for its existence. It has been abrogated by statute in some states, and might well be in all. 1 Benn. & Heard, Lead. Crim. Cas. (2d. Ed.) 81, and notes; Steph. Dig. Cr. L. (St. Louis Ed. 1878,) art. 30, p. 20, and note 2, p. 362. It is almost an absurdity in this day to pretend that husbands can or do coerce their wives into the commission of crimes, and, where coercion appears as a fact, the court or jury would always allow it to mitigate punishment, or it might well be a recommendation to executive clemency; but to hold it to be presumed as a fact, in all cases where the husband is present, is the relic of a belief in the ignorance and pusillanimity of women which is not, and perhaps never was, well founded, and does them no credit. I have had serious doubts whether this common-law fiction has a place in the criminal juris
This statute against counterfeiting says "every person who falsely makes, forges, or counterfeits any coin,” etc., shall be punished. It makes no exception in favor of married women, and it may well be doubted if the court's can engraft an exception on the statute. Commonwealth v. Lewis, 1 Met. 151, 153. I am inclined to believe it is the logical result of the doctrine that our crimes are statutory, and that we have no common law of crimes, except so far as the statutes have adopted it, in matters of evidence and practice, that no exemption exists unless congress defines and declares it. The presumption of coercion may he a rule of evidence, hut the exemption of the wife on account of it is a rule of law that congress has not declared. I have not found the point discussed, nor any case recognizing this doctrine of marital coercion, in the federal courts. There are cases recognizing insanity and perhaps infancy as a defence, hut, generally, the cases are those of common-law crimes on the high seas or elsewhere, of which these courts have jurisdiction, and which are defined not by statute, but by the adoption by congress of the common law in its fullest scope. Insanity was recognized as a defence to statutory offences in U. S. v. Schultz, 6 McLean, 121, and U. S. v. Lancaster, 7 Biss. 410, and there may be other cases. I am not willing, however, without consultation with my brother judges on this bench, to exclude this defence on that theory, and shall, therefore, for the purposes of this motion, assume that we are to be governed by the common-law principle that a wife committing an offence in the presence of her husband is prima facie presumed to act by his command, and is, therefore, not guilty unless it can he shown that she was in fact not governed by him.
The testimony was excluded on the authority of the statement that “if a feme covert be indicted as a feme sole, her
I think the £"-thor—and I say this with the utmost diffidence of one so eminent and learned in this department of the law—has confused somewhat two analogous but distinct things, namely, pleading a misnomer and pleading a wrong addition of estate, mystery, or place. Advantage is to be taken of either in the same way, but the failure to plead in abatement does not, perhaps, have the same effect; at least, not as to this matter of the addition describing a woman as married or single. The failure to plead a misnomer in abatement cures the defect if the defendant pleads not guilty, and for the purposes of that case the prisoner has the name given in the indictment. 3 Whart. Cr. L. supra; 1 Whart. Cr. L. § 233; 1 Bish. Cr. Proc. (2d Ed.) § 791; State v. Thompson, Cheves’ R. 31; People v. Smith, 1 Park. Cr. Cas. 329; State v. Hughes, 1 Swan, 261; Lewis v. State, 1 Head. 329.
The addition of estate, or degree, or mystery required by statute 1 Henry V. c. 5, if omitted or wrongfully stated, should also be corrected by motion to quash, or plea in abatement. 1 Whart, Cr. L §§ 243, 248; Whart. Pree. (Ed. 1849,) 7, note e; 1 Bish. Cr. Proc. §§ 671, 675, 772. By statute 7 Geo. IV. a. 64, and 14 and 15 Vict. c, 100, no indictment shall be now abated by reason of any plea of misnomer, or for want of or imperfection in the addition of the defendant. Id.; 1 Arch. Cr. Pl. (by Waterman, 6th Ed.) 78, 110, 111. I do not find that we have any such statutes in Tennessee, but I am informed by
I have examined the cases cited in the text-books, so far as they are accessible to me,—and I regret that some of the most important of them are not to be found in the library, and also that I have not the newer editions of the text-books themselves,—and must say that I am not able to determine with satisfaction just how a woman must or may “set up her coverture as a defence” when she is indicted separate and apart from her husband, and as a single woman. Here the defendant is not described as either married or single, and but for the feminine name of “Annie” attached to her surname, and the alias dictum, we would never know from the face of the information that she was a woman at all. 1 am of opinion that she could have moved to quash the information for want of a proper addition, or pleaded in abatement the omission, disclosing, of course, how the fact was, and upon proof of her marriage to Be Quilfeldt the government would
' The case of Rex v. Jones, Kel. 37, I have not been able to see, but is abstracted in 1 Russ. Cr. (8th Ed.) 24, and it there appears that it was a joint indictment against Thomas Wharton and Jane Jones. The woman pleaded {how it does not appear) that she was married to Wharton, and would not plead to the name of Jones. The grand jury were called in, and the court, in their presence, amended the indictment by inserting the name of Jane Wharton, otherwise called Jones, not calling her the wife of Thomas Wharton, but giving her the addition of “spinster,” upon which she pleaded. The court told her, however, that if she could prove that she was married to Wharton before the burglary she should have the. advantage of it, but she could not, and was convicted. In Quin’s Case, 1 Lewin, C. C. 1, (which, also, I have not seen,) cited also by Bussell, it was ruled that if a woman be indicted as a single woman, and pleads to the felony, that is prima facie evidence that she is not a feme covert, but is not conclusive of the fact. 1 Russ. 24. Judge Sharswood, in this edition of Bussell, makes in his notes a qucere “whether the proper course for a woman so indicted is not to plead the wrong addition on arraignment, as by pleading to the felony she answers by the name (sic) by which she is indicted.”
The authorities do not satisfactorily answer this qucere, as any one may see who examines them. Mr. Bussell states that if the woman pretends to be the man’s wife the onus is on her to prove it; but where the indictment states the woman to be
It sufficiently appears, however, from these authorities, that, although it may be proper that a woman indicted as a single woman should, if she relies on her coverture, plead in abatement the wrong addition, the failure to so plead it does not preclude her from taking advantage of the defence under the general issue, and she may therefore give evidence of the fact of marriage, and the other facts necessary to make out marital coercion. It was, therefore, error to exclude the evidence offered in this case.
I am quite satisfied, however, from the occurrences at the trial, that this is a simulated defence; yet I cannot say that, upon full investigation of the facts, the jury would have so found, and it was certainly a question for the jury to try, and not for the court to now determine upon a motion for a new trial. The defendant, on the proof, was clearly guilty. I am convinced, from her refusal to make affidavit of her marriage,, that she was not the wife in fact of her partner in crime; and this conviction has inclined mo to accede to the suggestion of the district attorney, and overrule this motion, notwithstanding any error committed in refusing proof intended only to sustain a false pretence of marriage, upon the ground that she has not been injured by the ruling. And it has occurred to me to say to the defendant now that if she will make affidavit of her marriage in fact to De Quilfeldt,or by proof show the court that there would be sufficient testimony to raise a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury of her guilt, taking into consideration the defence of coverture, that I would grant a new trial, exercising my discretion in
In Peek v. State, 2 Humph. 78, it was held that if incompetent evidence be admitted in criminal cases, that might have influenced the jury, a new trial will be awarded, although the court may think there was enough, independently of such evidence, to convict the prisoner. 1 Bish. Crim. Proc. (2d Ed.) § 1103; 3 Whart. Cr. L. (7th Ed.) § 3258, note u. It was also held in Com. v. McGowan, 2 Pars. Sel. Cases, 347, cited 3 Wharton, supra, that after a court has rejected competent and material testimony offered by a defendant charged with crime, the court will not refuse relief on the assumption that the rejected evidence would not have availed the accused if it had been received. Both the above-cited authors seem to doubt if this be the general rule, though they put Tennessee down as holding to it, on the authority of Peek’s Case, supra. That was a case where incompetent evidence was admitted, and not where that which was competent and material was rejected; but I think, on principle, the rule should be the same in either case. Besides, I am of opinion that the adjudications in Tennessee establish the principle that a new trial must be granted for the improper rejection of testimony, as well as its improper admission, without reference to the opinion of the court as to its probable effect on the verdict.
In Workman v. State, 4 Sneed, 425, the wife of one jointly indicted with another was rejected as a witness, and the supremo court granted a new trial, saying: “Whether a reversal on ibis point will ultimately result in any advantage to the defendant, is not for us to judge; for, no matter how clear his guilt may be, or how deeply he may be stained with blood, it is our duty to see that he has the benefit of the law under which his punishment is demanded.” Page 428. Other cases support the rule. Stokes v. State, 4 Bax. 47; Hagan v. State, 5 Bax. 615; State v. Turner, 6 Bax. 201. Hagan’s case is also applicable on another point: that, after this testimony was rejected, it would have been improper to offer any
Notwithstanding, then, the unfavorable character of the defence, and an almost certain conviction that the alleged marriage is a false pretence, I feel constrained, by the considerations I have mentioned, to grant a ne-w trial, and it is so ordered.
Note. Tlie defendant, on a second trial, was convicted, failing to prove marriage; but because on this trial it appeared that she was weak-minded, having been at one time, many years ago, confined in an asylum, and under the evil influence of Dr. Quilfeldt, she was, by the jury and the court, recommended to the president for his pardon.