2 F. 664 | E.D. Wis. | 1880
(orally.) This is an indictment under section 3894, Revised Statutes, which provides that “no letter or circular concerning illegal lotteries, so-called gift concerts, or other similar enterprises offering prizes, or concerning schemes devised and intended to deceive and defraud the public, for the purpose of obtaining money under false pretences, shall be carried in the mail. Any person who shall knowingly deposit or send anything to be conveyed by mail, in violation of this section, shall be punishable” as the statute prescribes.
The indictment contains three counts. The first count sets out at length the organization of a lottery scheme, by which the defendants undertook to dispose of a hotel at Pond du Lac, known as the Patty House, and charges that on the first day of November, 1879, and on each and every secular day in said month of November, and on each and every secular day between the thirtieth day of said month of November and the tenth day of February, in the year 1880, the defendants did knowingly, wrongfully and unlawfully deposit in the post-office of the United States, at the city of Pond du Lac, and did send to the said post-office, to he conveyed by mail,
The second count charges that on the twentieth day of January, 1880, the defendants deposited in the post-office at Pond du Lac 100 printed circulars concerning said lottery, addressed to persons unknown to the grand jurors, and that they were deposited to be sent and were sent by mail. The third count is similar to the second, except that it charges the deposit in the post-office at Pond du Lac, on the first day of December, 1879, for the purpose of conveyance through the mail, of 500 circulars concerning said lottery. A motion is made to quash this indictment for duplicity, it being claimed that the first count charges 45,000 distinct, independent offences; the second count 100; and the third count, 500. Upon the argument stress was laid by counsel for the defendants upon the language of this section, which is that “no letter or circular concerning illegal lotteries * * * shall be carried in the mail. * * * Any person who shall knowingly deposit or send anything to be conveyed by mail in violation of this section shall be punishable,” etc. And it was insisted that the deposit in the post-office of a single circular to be carried in the mail constituted an offence. This position was controverted by the attorney for the United States, who urged that, under a proper construction of this statute, an indictment could hardly be maintained that charged the deposit or sending by mail of a single letter or circular relating-to a lottery, and that in that view it was deemed necessary to set out in the indictment the scheme in which the defendants were engaged, and by means of which they were seeking to dispose of certain property, and that each count of the indictment ought to be regarded as stating a single act, and therefore a single offence.
It is true that the second and third counts do not specifically allege that on the tenth day of January, 1880, 100 of
An interesting question, as may be readily seen, might arise upon the trial, provided, for example, the proof should show that at different times during the day named these circulars, in different quantities, were deposited in the post-office, and it might be that the prosecutor would be required to elect upon which of the transactions he proposed to ask conviction; but without anticipating any such questions I think these counts ought now to be considered as charging single offences.
As to the view that should be taken of the first count I had little doubt at the argument. It is to be observed of this count that it does not charge that on a certain day, and on divers days between that day and the presentment of the bill, a quantity of letters and circulars concerning a lottery were deposited in the post-office to be conveyed by mail, but it charges that on a certain day specifically named, and on each secular day between that day and another day named, and on each secular day between that time and another sub
In reply, however, the attorney for the United States has urged that this count does properly charge the commission of at least one offence; that the other allegations may be treated as surplusage; and that if the count be open to the charge of duplicity the objection may be obviated by holding that the count aptly charges one offence, and that the other allegations may be disregarded. The difficulty with the position thus urged is that, if the objection to this count can be thus obviated, I do not see why in every ease where an indictment is bad for duplicity the defect may not be avoided by the selection of one of the offences charged, and then holding the other allegations charging distinct offences to be merely superfluous. I do not think the difficulty can be thus avoided. The true distinction between matter which makes an indictment bad for duplicity, and that which may be treated as mere surplusage, is stated by Mr. Bishop in his first volume on Criminal Procedure, section MO: “If an indictment describes one offence, and then adds such words only as are in part sufficient to describe another, it is not therefore double; to be so, it must set out each of the two offences in adequate terms. The principle is that the allegation which is mere surplusage, and therefore void, does no harm. The like case has already been mentioned where an offence not in its natwre continuing is charged to have been committed on more days than one; if only one of the days is adequately alleged the rest is surplusage and the indictment good.”
Again, at section 388 of same volume, the author says: “It is to be observed that we are not now speaking of continuing offences, properly laid under a continuando. * * * * Though the offence is in its nature committed on a single day,
Here we have a test upon this question. And, certainly, it cannot be said that the offence which is charged in the indictment under consideration is in its nature continuing. The offence is one which may be committed to-day and as distinctly committed to-morrow, and the act of to-morrow may have no connection with that of to-day; and as this count does not merely describe one offence, and by inadequate allegation state in part another, so that the latter allegation may be treated as surplusage, but does charge in adequate terms distinct offences committed on distinct days, I must, within the principles stated, hold this count bad for duplicity.
The motion to quash as to the second and third counts will be overruled, and as to the first will be sustained.