OPINION
Defendants Goodrich and LeFevre appeal from a conviction by a jury of conspiring to transport in foreign commerce an aircraft knowing the same to be stolen. 18 U.S.C. § 2312.
Defendants were initially charged with flying a stolen piper Axtec from Tucson, Arizona to Sonora, Mexico on June 2, 1972. Subsequent to this indictment their counsel discussed a disposition of the charge with the prosecuting Assistant United States Attorney. Although the briefs differ on this point (appellants assert that the AUSA prom *392 ised "if you get Mr. LeFevre out of Mexico, I will dismiss the case,” and the appellee asserts only that the AUSA promised “ . . . if I become convinced the defendant is innocent of the charge I will seek to have the indictment dismissed.”) an agreement was reached that if LeFevre could prove he was not in Mexico the prosecutor would dismiss the case. LeFevre evidently proved through the testimony of six witnesses, that he could not have been in Mexico June 2. Thus on February 26, 1973, the government dismissed the indictment, indicating it had new information that the overt act had been committed June 3. Thereafter the grand jury returned a new indictment identical to the first except charging that the overt act occurred June 3. Prior to the trial, defendants filed motions objecting to the dismissal of the first indictment on the basis it was dismissed without their knowledge and requesting dismissal of the second indictment on the grounds that the United States had promised to dismiss the case upon the establishment of an alibi. Although the trial court’s orders are not included in the record presumably these motions were denied.
During the trial several references were made to June 2 as being the date of the overt act. LeFevre presented alibi witnesses as to both dates. He testified that he placed his family on a commercial flight to Utah on the morning of June 2, making impossible his presence in Mexico on that date. He also testified and introduced telephone records to show that on the evening of June 2 he placed a call from his home in Tucson to his wife at his brother-in-law’s home in Draper, Utah. This alibi testimony as to June 2 was never controverted.
In reliance however on the government charge that the overt act occurred on June 3, he elected to not call the additional six witnesses who would have further substantiated his presence in Tucson on June 2.
LeFevre’s alibi evidence as to June 3 consisted of the testimony of one eyewitness, a Mrs. Bryson, and an entry in a church log which indicated he worked at the church on that date. It was argued in contravention of this alibi that the eye-witness could have been in error and that the entry in the log could have been entered at a later date. In fact, one rebuttal witness testified that LeFevre had informed her of his plan to do so.
The judge instructed the jury in pertinent part that “The proof need not establish with certainty the exact date of the alleged offense. It is sufficient if the evidence in the case establishes beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense was committed on a date reasonably near the date alleged.” Appellants raise two points on appeal: (1) the second indictment should have been dismissed since it breached the promise of the government to dismiss the case; (2) the trial court’s instruction on the time of the offense was in error in light of a possible alibi.
The government contends that the appeal of the first issue should be dismissed without consideration of the merits, in accordance with the holding in United States v. Martinez,
Turning to the merits, appellants concede there is no law directly on point but analogizes their situation to a series of cases enforcing breached government “deals” where defendants were promised dismissals, immunity or leniency. In State v. Davis,
These cases along with several others similarly cited by the appellants (concerning breached promises of immunity, or fraudulently induced guilty pleas) all generally stand for the proposition that when the prosecution makes a “deal” within its authority and the defendant relies on it in good faith, the court will not let the defendant be prejudiced as a result of that reliance.
In this case there seems to be some question as to what, exactly, the bargain was.
Even if the Assistant United States Attorney promised, as the appellants assert “ . . .if you get Mr. LeFevre out of Mexico, I will dismiss the case,” it is not at all clear that the defendants did “get Mr. LeFevre out of Mexico.” The appellants merely convinced the government that Mr. LeFevre was not in Mexico on June 2, and since further investigation put him in Mexico June 3, prosecution of an overt act on that date would not abrogate either interpretation of the agreement.
This case is also distinguishable from those cited by the appellants in that here they did nothing to jeopardize themselves or waive any rights in reliance on the prosecution’s promise. They merely came forth with positive, beneficial evidence which established LeFevre’s alibi for June 2 and did not waive their Fifth Amendment rights such as by submitting themselves to polygraph tests or entering guilty pleas.
The question of whether the trial court committed error in giving the challenged instruction requires a careful review of the full record.
The government contends that an alibi defense was not alleged and an alibi instruction was not requested. There was a timely objection to the instruction given, however, and regardless of whether an alibi defense was ever alleged, there can be no question that an alibi defense was raised and that the defense was based on that premise. Appellant cites ample state authority both old and new for the proposition that when an alibi defense is asserted the time of the crime is extremely material, since any variance in time proved and the time the jury is allowed to find deprives the defendant of his alibi defense. And it is appellant’s position that under the court’s instruction the jury could have found that the overt act was committed June 2, rather than June 3.
In People v. Brown,
In Commonwealth v. Boyer,
The government contends and the appellant concedes, that absent the alibi defense problem, there is no reversible error should there be some variance between the date of the crime as charged and the date as proved. Brulay v. United States,
In the instant case the government prosecuted and the appellants defended on the proposition that the overt act was committed on June 3. LeFevre’s claimed prejudice is that the jury might have found that he committed the crime on June 2, and that he could have closed that door by using the six witnesses he had been misled into not calling.
We are not persuaded that the jury could have concluded the overt act might have occurred on June 2. Not only was the alibi never challenged, but in her argument to the jury, the prosecutor flatly conceded its validity. 1 Furthermore, the great weight of the evidence and argument was directed at June 3 2 and the issue was simply whether the jury accepted the government’s evidence or defendant’s LeFevre’s alibi.
If the giving of the challenged instruction was error, it was harmless error for it is obvious that as the sole judge of the facts and the credibility of the witnesses, the jury rejected the June 3d alibi. Since such a result cannot be here disturbed unless it is shown to be clearly contrary to any substantial evidence (United States v. DePalma,
Notes
. In her opening argument the prosecutor stated:
“Now it is in evidence that Mr. Le-Fevre’s family flew to Salt Lake City in the morning of June 2d. And Mr. Kenas-ton was told that LeFevre’s family was gone. He was in the house. He knows they were gone . . . ”
. In her closing argument the prosecutor stated:
“Now, defense counsel made much of the fact that there was another date on a prior indictment. And I ask you, Ladies and Gentlemen, when defense counsel convinces me on a prior occasion that I am wrong on the date that I believe the aircraft was taken and I have determined June 3d to be the date by virtue of the investigation, what kind of an attorney would I be if I did not change the date to the one that I believe was the proper date it
Appellant’s attorney also accepted the June 2d alibi as proved and the June 3d alibi as critical. He said:
“Now it’s been established that they (the family) went to Salt Lake City on Friday, the 2d day of June. This conversation, Mi’S. Bryson said, took place (at the Church) on Saturday, the 3d day of June. Mr. LeFevre’s name appears in that book on Saturday, the 3d of June. Mrs. Bry-son’s name appears in that book on Saturday, the 3d of June . . ..”
