UNITED STATES v. HOLTE
No. 628
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Argued January 8, 1915.—Decided February 1, 1915
236 U. S. 140
ERROR TO THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN.
As our opinion is that the mortgage bound only the crops it follows without more that the decree must be reversed.
Decree reversed.
A woman who is transported in violation of the White Slave Traffic Act of 1910 may be guilty of conspiracy with the person transporting her to commit a crime against the United States under § 37 of the Penal Code of March 4, 1899.
THE facts, which involve the construction of the White Slave Traffic Act of 1910 and of § 37 of the Penal Code, are stated in the opinion.
The woman subjected to an unlawful interstate transportation may, if a guilty participator, be indicted as a conspirator with the person causing her to be transported.
The court below misapplied the doctrine that, where a concert of action or a plurality of agents is essential to complete an offence, such agents cannot be indicted for a conspiracy to commit that offence. See Wharton‘s Criminal Law, 11th ed., § 1502.
Chadwick v. United States, 141 Fed. Rep. 236; Dietrich v. United States, 126 Fed. Rep. 664, and United States v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R., 146 Fed. Rep. 303, are decisive against the application of that doctrine to this case. See also Ex parte Lyman, 202 Fed. Rep. 303, construing
Concursus necessarius is not an essential to the offence defined by
The offence of conspiracy to commit the main offence is not legally identical with that offence as defined by
As the law stood before the White Slave Act, any person, man or woman, who wilfully planned to commit any offеnce against the United States was subject to punishment under
The indictment here contains the essential averment of a plan and agreement by both defendants that one should commit the offence of unlawfully transporting defendant—an averment that would have no place in an indictment against the former for unlawfully transporting her. And had the indictment omitted the first, third, and fourth overt acts (showing actual after transportation), the second (the ticket purchase) alone would have completed the conspiracy offence. On trial none other than thе second overt act need be proven. If the others were proven, the later consummation of the main offence by Laudenschleger could not swallow up, or give immunity to, the earlier completed crime of conspiracy. Heike v. United States, 227 U. S. 131, 144; Curley v. United States, 130 Fed. Rep. 1; United States v. Stamatopolous, 164
Though the penalty provisions of the crime punished by
It is not the policy of the law to suffer people to, with impunity, jointly plan the commission of crime. Drew v. Thaw, 235 U. S. 432. It is often but a step from plan to performance, and if people could, without risk, jointly plan, such plans would be more frequent, and when developed, might appear so inviting as to themselves induce performance. Where, as here, the large purpose of the law was to reach those systematically conducting the traffic—and system always demands plan—there could have been no thought of making this particular crime an exception to the general prohibition of the conspiracy statute.
This view is strengthened by the thought that because practiсally the same language is found in
No appearance or brief filed for defendant in error.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an indictment for a conspiracy between the present dеfendant and one Laudenschleger that Laudenschleger should cause the defendant to be transported from Illinois to Wisconsin for the purpose of prostitution,
The words of the penal code of
So we think that it would be going too far to say that the defendant could not be guilty in this сase. Suppose, for instance, that a professional prostitute, as well able to look out for herself as was the man, should suggest and carry out a journey within the
Judgment reversed.
VOL. CCXXXVI—10
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, with whom MR. JUSTICE DAY concurs, dissenting.
I dissent from the conclusion that a woman can be guilty of conspiring to have herself unlawfully transported in interstate commerce for purposes of prostitution.
Congress had no power to punish immorality and certainly did not intend by this
The Act either applies to women who are willingly transported or it does not. If it does not apply to those who willingly go (47 H. R. 61st Cong. 2d Session, p. 10) then there was no offence by the man who transported her or in the woman who voluntarily went,—and, in that event there was, of course, no conspiracy against the laws of the United States in her agreeing to go. The indictment here, however, assumes that the Act applies not only to those who are induced to go, but also to those who aid the panderer in securing their оwn transportation. On that assumption, every woman transported for the purposes of the business stands on the same footing and cannot by her consent change her legal status. And if she cannot be directly punished for being transported, she cannot be indirectly punished by calling her assistance in the transportation a conspiracy to violate the laws of the United States. For if she is within the circle of the statute‘s protection she cannot be taken out of that circle by the law of conspiracy and thus be subjected to punishment because she agreed to go.
The statute does not deal with the offence of fornication and adultery, but treats the woman who is transported for use in the business of prostitution аs a victim—often a willing victim but nevertheless a victim. It treats her as enslaved and seeks to guard her against herself as well as against her slaver; against the wiles and threats, the compulsion and inducements, of those who treat her as though she was merchandise and a subject of interstate transportation. The woman, whether coerced or induced, whether willingly or unwillingly trаnsported for purposes of prostitution, debauchery and immorality, is regarded as the victim of the trafficker and she cannot therefore be punished for being enslaved nor for consenting and agree-
The fact that prostitutes and others have used this statute as a means by which to levy blackmail may furnish a reason why that should be made a Federal offence, so that she and they can be punished for blackmail or malicious prosecution. But those evils are not to be remedied by extending the law of conspiracy so as tо treat the enslaved subject of transportation as a guilty actor in her own transportation; and then punish her because she agreed with her slaver to be shipped in interstate commerce for purposes of prostitution. Such a construction would make every willing victim indictable for conspiracy. Even that elastic offence cannot be extended to cover such a case.
There are no decisions dealing directly with the question as to whether a woman assisting in her own illegal transportation can be prosecuted for conspiracy. There are, however, a number of authorities dealing with somewhat analogous subjects. For example, in prosecutions for abortion “the woman does not stand legally in the situation of an accomplice, for although she no doubt participated in the immoral offence imputed to the defendant, she could not have been indicted for the offence. The law regards her as the victim rather than the perpetrator.” Dunn v. People, 29 N. Y. 523; Commonwealth v. Wood; 11 Gray, 85; State v. Hyer, 39 N. J. Law, 598; State v. Murphy, 27 N. J. Law, 112, 114; Commonwealth v. Follansbee, 155 Massachusetts, 274; State v. Owens; 22 Minnesota, 238, 244; Watson v. State, 9 Tex. App. 237; Keller v. State, 102 Georgia, 506, 510 (seduction). Contra apparently in England and Colorado. Queen v. Whitchurch, 24 Q. B. D. 420; Solander v. People, 2 Colorado, 48. So, too, a person who knowingly purchases liquor from one
Where the purchaser of liquor sold in violation of law was prosecuted for inducing the seller to commit a crime, the court said:
“Every sale implies a purchaser; there must be a purchaser as well as a seller, and this must have been known and understood by the legislature. Now, if it were intended that the purchaser should be subject to any penalty, it is to be presumed, that it would have been declared in the statute, either by imposing a penalty on the buyer in terms, or by extending the penal consequences of the prohibited act, to all persons aiding, counselling or encouraging the principal offender. There being no such provision in the statute, there is a strong implication, that none such was intended by the legislature.” Commonwealth v. Willard, 22 Pick. 479.
United States v. Dietrich, 126 Fed. Rep. 667, though not directly in point sheds light on the subject. There two persons were indicted under
And in Queen v. Tyrrell, 1 Q. B. 711 (1894), where a girl under 15 years of age was prosecuted for inciting a man to commit adultery with her, one of the judges considered that she could not be found guilty because she was under the age of consent, and the other said that the statute did not apply because “there is no trace in the
Applying these cases, it appears that under the White Slave Traffic Act there must be a woman who is transported and a person who compels or induces her to be transported or who aids her in such transportation. “There is no trace in the statute of any intention to treat the women or girls as criminals” for being transported, nor for agreeing that they will be transported, nor for aiding in the transportation. And if, as said in Commonwealth v. Willard, 22 Pick. 479, Congress had intended that they should be subject to indictment for conspiracy “it would have so declared by extending the penal consequences of the prohibited act to all persons aiding, counselling or encouraging the principal offender. There being no such provision in the statute, there is a strong implication that none such was intended by the legislature.”
To this may be added the practical consideration, that any construction making the woman liable for participation in the transportation will not only tend to prevent her from coming forward with her evidence, but in many instances she will be in position to claim her privilege and can refuse to testify on the ground that she might thereby subject herself to prosecution for conspiracy in that she aided in the violation of the law, even though it was intended for the protection of her unfortunate class.
The woman, whether treated as the willing or an unwilling victim of such transportation for such business purpose, cannot be found guilty of the main offence nor punished for the incidental act of conspiring to be enslaved and transported. Indeed, if she could be so punished for conspiring with her slaver, the fundamental idea that makes the act valid would be destroyed. She would cease to be an object of traffic; and instead of being the subject of illegal transportation would not be transported by a slaver as an object of interstate commerce,
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE DAY concurs in this dissent.
