35 F. 826 | S.D. Cal. | 1887
(charging jury.) The statute under which the indictment against the defendant was found provides that “ any person employed in any department of the postal service, who shall secrete, embezzle, or destroy any letter, packet, bag, or mail of letters intrusted to him, or which shall come into his possession, and which was intended to be conveyed by mail, or carried or delivered by any mail carrier, mail messenger, route agent, letter carrier, or other person employed in any department of the postal service, or forwarded through or delivered from any post-office or branch post-office established by authority of the postmaster general, and.which shall contain any note, * * * any bank-note; * * * any such person who shall steal or take any of the things aforesaid out of any1- letter, packet, bag, or mail of letters which shall have come into his possession, either in the regular course of his official duties or in any other manner whatever, and provided the same shall not liave been delivered to the party’ to whom it is directed,-—shall bo punishable by imprisonment at hard labor for not less than o'ne year nor more than five years.” The indictment contains three counts. The first, in effect, charges that defendant, on the 27th of May, 1887, embezzled a certain registered letter containing $40 in bank-notes, addressed to the postmaster at Santa Monica, and which was intrusted to defendant, as clerk in the Los Angeles post-office,, to be sent by mail to Santa Monica; the second, count, in effect, charges defendant with stealing, at the time stated, from the Los Angeles post-office, a certain loiter addressed to the postmaster at Santa Monica, and intended to be conveyed by mail to him; and the third count, in effect, charges defendant with stealing $40 in bank-notes out of a certain registered letter with which he was intrusted, addressed to the postmaster at Santa Monica, and intended for transmission through the mail to the postmaster at that place. There is no evidence as to the contents of the letter spoken of in the evidence, nor does it otherwise answer the description contained in the first and third counts of the indictment; so that your verdict upon the first and third counts must be “not guilty.”
But there remains for you to consider the second count,—that charging defendant with stealing the letter in question,—and you should give to that charge very careful consideration. There is no direct evidence that defendant stole the letter; that is to say, no one, so far as appears, saw him steal it. The government relies for a conviction upon circumstantial evidence. A conviction may he had upon such evidence, provided the circumstances so distinctly point to the guilt of the accused as to leave no reasonable explanation consistent with the theory that he is innocent. In other words, the existence of the inculpatory facts must
In the light of these general instructions it is your duty, gentlemen of the jury, to carefully weigh and consider all of the evidence in the case without sympathy for or prejudice against the defendant. That the letter in question was in the Los Angeles post-office on the 27th of May last for transmission in the usual course of mail, to the postmaster at Santa Monica, does not admit of doubt. Whether the letter was stolen from the post-office at Los Angeles, and whether the defendant stole it, are the questions for you to determine. If you believe the testimony of the witnesses Morgan and Mrs. Finn, the letter could not have been stolen from the Santa Monica post-office. Both of these witnesses testified that, when the mail-pouch was received by them on the day in question, it was locked as usual, and in good order; and that, upon opening and examining it, the yellow card of notification was found, but there was no registered letter in it. If you believe that Mrs. Finn and Morgan, or either of them, stole the letter, that would end the case against the defendant, and your verdict should be “not guilty.” But if you believe their testimony to be true, you must pursue your inquiries further. The mail-pouch was required to be locked before it left the Los Angeles post-office, and there was no one authorized to .unlock it until it reached its destination, the post-office at Santa Monica. Giroux testified that he received the pouch on the 27th of Majq as was his custom, at the railroad car. in Santa Monica, and carried it to the postmaster there; that when