In this appeal from a narcotics conviction under 21 U.S.C. §§ 173-74, reversal is urged not on the usual grounds of insufficiency, entrapment or error in the charge, but solely on the basis of inconsistency in the verdict — and this despite the seemingly insurmountable hurdle of Mr. Justice Holmes’ well-known opinion in Dunn v. United States,
The indictment, in the District Court, for the Southern District of New York, had two counts. The first charged that on or about July 6, 1964, Carbone and Macchiarelli along with one William Lowe 1 wilfully and knowingly received, concealed, sold and facilitated the transportation, concealment and sale of 3.600 grams of heroin imported and brought *421 Into the United States contrary to law, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 173-74. The second count charged a conspiracy to violate the same sections, the overt acts being Lowe’s meeting a man in the Bronx on July 6 and Carbone’s and Maechiarelli’s driving an automobile in the Bronx on July 7 and being seated in one there on July 8.
The Government’s evidence was presented through “Cadillac Willie” Lowe, Narcotics Agent Peterson, and two surveying agents. In summary their story was this: On July 6, 1964, as a result of Peterson’s soliciting Lowe to sell heroin and asking for a sample, Lowe agreed to get. iq, touch with his “people” and meet Peterson later that evening at a bar on East 139th Street in the Bronx. After a phone conversation with Macchiarelli, Lowe drove to the bar, parked his Cadillac in front of it, entered Peterson’s already parked car for a short conversation, went into the bar and phoned Macchiarelli, and then returned to Peterson’s car and told him the sample would shortly arrive. Soon afterward appellants drove up to the bar in an Oldsmobile, with Carbone at the wheel; Macchiarelli got out and placed a sample of heroin in Lowe’s Cadillac. During Macchiarelli’s absence Lowe entered the Oldsmobile and discussed the technique of sample-giving with Carbone; later he went into matters of price and delivery with both. Upon his return to Peterson’s car Lowe pointed to appellants and told Peterson “these were his people.” Peterson and Lowe then circled the block in Peterson’s car, Lowe went to his Cadillac, retrieved the sample and asked Peterson to call him at the bar after testing it. 2 Peterson did this, expressing satisfaction with the quality but complaining abo the price — $3600 for a quarter kilo. After a talk between Lowe and Macchiarelli, Peterson met Lowe the next evening at the bar and said he was $1500 short on the price but expected the money by midnight. Soon afterwards Carbone drove up and was informed of the slight hitch; he reported this to Macchiarelli at a “club” some blocks away. Around midnight the four met at the bar. Lowe informed appellants that Peterson now had the money and there was a protracted discussion about delivery methods, appellants insisting that this take place in Peterson’s car. When Peterson refused, the transaction aborted. 3 After deliberating for nearly a full day the jury acquitted appellants on the substantive count relating to the sample but convicted them on the charge of conspiracy.
The sole claim on appeal concerns the alleged inconsistency of the verdict; we are told at one point in the brief that reversal on that score “is not only harmonious with, but required by the holding of Dunn v. United States,
The other branch of the argument picks up the immediately succeeding sentences in the Dunn opinion:
“Each count in an indictment is regarded as if it was a separate indictmént. Latham v. The Queen, 5 Best & Smith, 635, 642, 643, Selvester v. United States,170 U.S. 262 [18 S.Ct. 580 ,42 L.Ed. 1029 ]. If separate indictments had been presented against the defendant for possession and for maintenance of a nuisance, and had been separately tried, the same evidence being offered in support of each, an acquittal on one could not be pleaded as res judicata of the other. Where the offenses are separately charged in the counts of a single indictment the same rule must hold.”
But, says counsel, where separate indictments are separately tried, an acquittal on one
can
be pleaded as
res judicata
of issues necessarily determined, as was later held in Sealfon in accord with Mr. Justice Holmes’ earlier decision in United States v. Oppenheimer,
The contention has the difficulty that, as was intimated in United States v. Maybury,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Prior to trial the ease against Lowe was severed; after the trial he pleaded guilty to a violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 4704(a) and 7237(a).
. It was stipulated that a chemist employed by the Government would testify that the sample contained 3.600 grams, partly heroin.
. Appellants admitted their meetings with Lowe but insisted that all their conversations, including a highly suspicious one overheard by a surveilling agent, related to the purchase of transistor radios.
. The Government also advances lack of inconsistency as an alternative contention here. It says that the jury, conceivably although improbably, could have found the possession necessary to convict appellants on the substantive count but because of an ambiguity in the charge may have failed to find that they either “received, or concealed, or sold, or in any manner fa- ■ cilitated the transportation, concealment, or sale of any narcotic.” Such failure, it continues, is not inconsistent with a finding that the defendants conspired to sell a much larger quantity of heroin.
. Note also Mr. Justice Holmes’ reference to his own opinion in Horning v. District of Columbia,
.
Dunn
was decided on January 11, 1932; Holmes’ letter of resignation was sent the ' following day,
“I have not been very well and I find it difficult to write; difficult physically and mentally. I hope to get back to normal but at present life is hard. We begin our sittings again on Monday. I have but one opinion to deliver, another being held up for tinkering to meet a long dissent from Butler — agreed to by no one else I believe.” The Holmes-Einstein Letters 335 (1964).
The latter opinion was quite obviously Dunn; one wonders whether the sentences we have just examined constituted the “tinkering.”
