197 F. 415 | E.D. Va. | 1912
This case grows out of the report of the trial of the celebrated Beattie Case, which took place in the county of Chesterfield, adjoining this city, during the late summer of last year. Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., was indicted, tried, and executed for the murder of his young wife. The crime was committed while on an automobile ride, at night, over a country road, near to their residence, some five weeks after the birth of their first child. The supposed motive for the crime was his infatuation for a young woman of dissolute character, with whom he had from time to time maintained improper relations. Both Beattie and his wife were prominent in the com
The indictment contains two counts. The first charges that the defendant on a certain day unlawfully and knowingly did deposit in the post office at Richmond, Va., for mailing and delivery, a certain •obscene, lewd, and lascivious publication, to wit, a publication known as the Richmond Evening Journal, Extra No. 5, dated August 28, 1911, the objectionable parts of said publication being headed “Beat-tie’s Nemesis,” and “Latter Part of Mother’s Recital,” said publication being alleged to be too obscene, lewd, and lascivious to be properly placed upon the records of the court. The only material difference between the first and second counts is that the latter charges the publication to be of an “indecent character.” The defendant company moved to quash the indictment, and also demurred thereto, and, in •obedience to a subsequent order of the court, entered upon the motion •of the defendant (Rosen v. United States, 161 U. S. 29, 40, 16 Sup. Ct. 434, 480, 40 L. Ed. 606), a bill of particulars was furnished by the government to the defendant. Upon the filing of the bill of particulars, the defendant renewed its motion to quash, insisting that no offense as charged had been committed, and that the insertion of the articles complained of was clearly within the rights of the defendant as the publisher of a daily newspaper, and that plainly neither in the publication, distribution, or mailing of the same had there been any violation of the statute covered by the indictment respecting the improper use of the mails of the United States.
Coming- to the consideration of the publication alleged to be improper to be deposited in and conveyed by mail, it will be found that the same is a verbatim copy of portions of testimony of two witnesses examined on behalf of the commonwealth in the criminal trial mentioned, one Dr. Franklin, and the other Mrs. Owens, the mother of Mrs. Beattie, who was murdered. A critical examination of the portions of the testimony published will show, that of the doctor, that he prescribed- at the instance of Beattie for the young woman before referred to, and recommended her to take a trip to the mountains, and that he had prescribed for her some two years before for the same disease, and that she was reputed to be a woman of the town, and that of Mrs. Owens that she, at the instance of Mrs. Beattie, examined portions of the underclothing of Beattie, and found the same in a stained and discolored condition; this alleged objectionable testimony being under separate headlines, and printed in different portions of the paper.
Assuming that the publication in question ought to or had best been not made, and it goes without saying that the same was neither beneficial nor elevating in character, still it does not follow that in so doing a crime was committed by depositing the paper containing the article in the mails under the statute alleged to have been violated, in the light of the interpretation that has been placed upon that act by the Supreme Court and subordinate federal tribunals, and the language of the act,
In ex parte Jackson, 96 U. S. 732, 24 L. Ed. 877, supra, Mr. Justice Field aptly remarked the difficulty attending the subject arises, not from the want of power in Congress to prescribe regulations as to what shall constitute mail matter, but from the necessity of enforcing them consistently with rights reserved to the'people, of far greater importance than the transportation of the mail.
The contents of the publication in question being clearly not within the prohibitions of the statute, as hereinbefore shown, the motion to quash the indictment will be sustained.