This is an appeal from convictions of the defendants/appellants of mail fraud (§§ 1341 and 2, 18 U.S.C.) and conspiracy (§ 371, 18 U.S.C.). The grounds of appeal are insufficiency of evidence, prejudicial supplementary instructions to the jury after the jury had been deliberating for seven hours and inconsistency of verdict. The charge against the defendants involved the use of the mails in the marketing of timeshares in a proposed time-share condominium development in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. It was the Government’s position that the defendants had successfully solicited payments from various purchasers of such time-shares without establishing the
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required reserve accounts to assure the completion of the project, knowing at the time that the project could not be completed. The evidence in support of the charges, though tenuous was substantial enough, under the very liberal standard for determining the sufficiency of the evidence in this connection, to authorize the submission of the prosecution to the jury.
Jackson v. Virginia,
The defendants argue that the supplemental instructions, given by the District Judge to the jury, following seven hours of deliberation, went beyond permissible limits and represented “an unwarranted intrusion by the court upon the province of the jury.” While the Supreme Court in
Allen v. United States,
It is obvious that the instructions given in this case expanded impermissibly upon
Allen.
The language in the instructions that the jurors should “open up [their mind] and reevaluate [their] opinions ... reconsider the opinions and statements of your fellow jurors, and do it open-mindedly, not
stubbornly,
but open-mindedly
in the spirit of cooperation
... ”, (Italics added) is a wording that goes beyond
Allen
and is a wording, particularly in its use of the term “stubbornly” very similar to that which was found in
Powell v. United States,
Accordingly, the convictions herein are reversed and the cause is remanded to the District Court for retrial, if the Government determines to retry the defendants.
“On the face of the statement, it appears that the Trial Court is attempting to suggest that one or more of the Defendants might change their plea of guilty.”
Notes
. A comprehensive statement of the reasons for rejecting the instruction is found in Note, Due Process, Judicial Economy and the Hung Jury: A Re-examination of the Allen Charge, 53 Va.L.Rev. 123 (1967), which is extensively quoted approvingly in the ABA Standards.
. The relevant federal cases found on this subject are collected in the Annotation,
. See American Bar Association: Standards for Criminal Justice, 15-4.4(b) at p. 143.
.
United States v. Smith,
. In its brief, the Government, after quoting the challenged language said:
