To the indictment in this cause the defendant, Direct Sales Company, has filed a plea in abatement and a demurrer.
Stated briefly, the basis of the plea in abatement is that there was not sufficient evidence before the grand jury upon which to predicate the finding of a true bill. Various evidentiary facts are alleged affirmatively by this defendant, and it is stated upon information and belief that these facts were not called to the attention of the grand jury. These evidentiary facts may or may not be relevant upon a trial of the case. The questions for consideration, therefore, are (1) Does the Court have the right to inquire into the proceedings of the grand jury in order to determine the sufficiency or insufficiency of the testimony upon which a true bill was found; and, (2) Assuming such right exists, are the allegations and proof submitted with the plea sufficient to justify the Court in its discretion to inquire into the proceedings? There are no allegations of irregularity or fraud. The prayer of the plea is that this defendant may be dismissed from the indictment “ * * * and that the Court may be fully satisfied of the truth of the matters, facts and allegations above set forth, in case of the denial of same and in furtherance of justice an investigation of the minutes of the Grand Jurors which returned the said indictment be had by the Court and by the attorney for this defendant and that the United States District Attorney or his assistant in charge of the presentation of said cause to the said Grand Jury of May, 1941, term of this Court and the Grand Jurors themselves be summoned before this Court and be interrogated by the attorneys and counsel for this defendant as to the testimony adduced before them in this case.”
The decisions on the questions presented are not at all uniform, but by far the greater weight of the authorities is to the effect that the Courts have no right to grant such relief as the defendant prays for.
There is no federal statute regulating proceedings before a grand jury or specifying the kind and degree of evidence necessary to the finding of a true bill. Nor is there a statute of the State of South Carolina on the subject. A number of the states do have such statutes, and the variations of their requirements have given rise to a divergence of opinion on the questions now before the Court. In the jurisdictions which are opposed to an inquiry into the sufficiency of the evidence on which an indictment is based, the reasons are mainly that the secrecy of the grand jury proceedings will not be invaded, and that statutes prescribing the grounds on which motions to quash may be made not mentioning insufficiency of the evidence is conclusive that such ground is not a valid one. In the absence of a statute on the subject the Common Law Rule will prevail, and that is the rule followed by the Supreme Court of the State of South Carolina in State v. Boyd, 2 Hill, Law 288, 27 Am.Dec. 376. Defendant in that case moved to quash the indictment on the ground, among others, that written statements of witnesses were received in evidence, when they should have been examined in person. The Presiding Judge refused the motion and an appeal was taken. Justice Harper, speaking for the Court, said: “With respect to the second ground, I am of opinion that the Court will, in no instance, inquire into the character of the testimony which has influenced the grand jury in finding an indictment, with a view to quashing of the indictment.” And again the Court said: “The nature of the grand juror’s oath sufficiently indicates that they are not to communicate to others that which passes among the jurymen in their consultation, and I think the juror who made the affidavit in the present instance was guilty of a violation of duty.”
In State v. Rector,
A grand jury is an informing and accusing body rather than a trial body. Its duty is to inquire and investigate. It is not the function of a grand jury to determine the guilt or the innocence of a person accused of crime. That is the duty imposed upon the petit jury. In order to find a true bill it is necessary only that the grand jury determine from the evidence that the person charged is probably guilty. Its duty is to decide from the evidence offered whether there is prima facie ground for criminal prosecution. State v. Bramlett,
There is an extensive note on the question under consideration in 31 A.L.R. beginning at page 1479. There many decisions from various jurisdictions have been collected, and it appears that the overwhelming majority rule is to the effect that the courts may not inquire into the legality or sufficiency of the evidence on which an indictment is based, the rule going so far in a great many jurisdictions as to hold that such inquiry may not be made even though it is averred that the indictment was found without any legal evidence being produced before the grand jury. It would also seem that the minority rule permits an inquiry into the proceedings of the grand jury only when it appears that the indictment was found without the production of any legal evidence, and in the jurisdictions so holding, the decisions turn largely upon the state statutes prescribing the kind and degree of evidence upon which a grand jury may act. There is another rule, known as “Rule in New York”. It appears that the courts of the State of New York, while in the main following the minority rule, go further than those of any other jurisdiction in weighing the evidence produced before the grand jury, but even that rule does not sanction the relief prayed for in the instant motion. In People v. Steinhardt,
The reasons for the majority rule are very well stated in the case of State of New Mexico v. Chance,
In United States v. Swift, D.C.Ill.,
The rule in the State of New York being far more favorable to the position of
The following quotation from United States v. Cobban, C.C.,
“In United States v. Reed, 27 Fed.Cas. 727 [No. 16,134],
The weight of authority is opposed to inquiry into proceedings before a grand jury when such proceedings on their face are regular, and the question of the sufficiency or insufficiency, competency or incompetency of the testimony adduced before the grand jury is a matter which the Court has no right to inquire into. The reasons for the rule are sound, and to hold otherwise would lead to endless confusion.
However, assuming that I could grant the prayer of the plea, there would be no justification for it in this case. No allegation of fraud or irregularity is made; no proof of the allegations of the plea is tendered in any form by affidavit or otherwise, except the sworn verification of the president of the defendant company, and this is not sufficient. He states the things alleged upon information and belief. The source of his information is not stated, nor the reason for his belief. Testimony before the grand jury was not reported, and there is no way by which the defendant can possibly know what evidence was or was not produced at the inquiry. The plea in abatement cannot be sustained.
The defendant Direct Sales Company demurs to the indictment on the following grounds: First, that the said indictment does not state facts sufficient to constitute a crime against the United States by the defendant, Direct Sales Com
This indictment is in the language of the conspiracy statute. It alleges an agreement to do certain things prohibited by the Harrison Narcotic Act, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, §§ 2550 et seq., 3220 et seq., and it further sets forth the manner in which the Act was intended to be violated. It meets the requirements of the rule as given in Hill v. United States, 4 Cir.,
And in Martin v. United States, 4 Cir.,
Under the terms of the Harrison Narcotic Act it is unlawful, among other things, (1) to sell, dispense or distribute the prohibited drugs except in or from the original stamped package; (2) for a physician to sell, distribute or dispense not in the course of his professional practice or for legitimate medical purposes; (3) to sell, barter, exchange or give away any of said drugs except in pursuance of a written order to the person to whom sold, etc., on a form issued in blank for that purpose by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; (4) to the sale, dispensing or distribution of said drugs by a dealer to a consumer, not in pursuance of a written prescription issued by a physician registered under the Act; (5) for any person to obtain by means of order forms any of said drugs for any purpose other than the use, sale and distribution by him in the conduct of a lawful business in said drugs or the legitimate practice of medicine. All of these provisions are alleged to have been violated, or intended to be violated, by some one or more of the defendants, pursuant to agreement between all of them.
The indictment specifically alleges that the defendant, Dr. John Victor Tate, obtained said drugs from the defendant, Direct Sales Company, by use of his official order forms, for a purpose other
In Doremus v. United States, 5 Cir.,
Whether or not the testimony at a trial will support the allegations that there was an agreement between the parties and active cooperation between them, remains to be seen, hut such allegations are sufficient to sustain the indictment.
The first ground of the demurrer therefore cannot be sustained.
Defendant contends that as to it the indictment is in conflict with the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, and in its brief states its reasons as follows: “ * * * defendant states that its claim as to a violation of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments is based on the proposition that Congress did not deem it necessary to place a limitation or ceiling upon the amount of opium, or its derivatives that may be dispensed by a duly licensed wholesaler or dealer to a duly licensed physician pursuant to an order form issued by the Collector of Internal Revenue. That under this indictment, the defendant is not adequately informed of the nature and cause of accusation against it because it is left to the discretion of the Court and jury to determine what amount may be dispensed by the licensees. That such a construction would result in a delegation by Congress to Courts and juries of its powers to define crime and it is therefore repugnant to the Constitution and its Fifth and Sixth Amendments.”
There is no doubt but that the power to define crime rests solely with the Congress, and that such power cannot be delegated. The Harrison Narcotic Act, however, specifically makes the doing of many acts, some of which have already been enumerated herein, unlawful and the Supreme Court of the United States has held the Act to be constitutional as a revenue measure. Jin Fuey Moy v. United States,
No attempt is made to have the Court determine how much of the drugs may be sold to a licensee. It is simply alleged that this defendant, along with other defendants, agreed to do certain unlawful things and that certain of them committed overt acts in pursuance thereof. The indictment need not set forth all of the evidence by which the government proposes to prove the agreement, but I have no right to assume that such evidence does not exist. The defendant is held to answer on the presentment of a grand jury as provided by the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution and is sufficiently informed of the nature and cause of the accusation as provided by the Sixth Amendment. The second ground of the demurrer cannot be sustained.
For the foregoing reasons the plea in abatement and the demurrer should be overruled.
