The appellant, Denton J. Quick, was convicted on the first count of an indictment which charged him and other 'defendants with a conspiracy to commit offenses against the United States throúgh the possession of certain unregistered stills and carrying on the manufacture and removal of distilled spirits upon which no federal tax was paid. He was acquitted on the remaining six counts of the indictment, each of which respectively charged a separate substantive offense in fulfill-'ment of the object of the alleged conspiracy.
Quick’s participation in the conspiracy, as alleged by the government, lay in his agreeing to furnish “protection” to the owners and operators of certain illicit stills located on three farms in Sussex County, New Jersey (whereof he was the sheriff), for which service he was to receive $150 a.week from the operators of the stills. Except for the testimony of one witness, the evidence offered against Quick was circumstantial and, in part, hearsay, which was competent as to him only on the basis of its'being the utterances of alleged co-conspirators in furtherance of the conspiracy.
The witness who gave direct testimony for the government was one Simmons, a co-defendant, who had plead guilty. Simmons testified that he had arranged to have Quick provide "protection” to the still locations in consideration of the $150 weekly payments, and that he had made six or eight such payments to Quick. He further testified that Quick on his own initiative had warned him that a certain still location was “hot” and that operations there should cease; that on another occasion Quick, at the request of Simmons, had called the New Jersey state police for information as to the identity of an automobile seen cruising in the vicinity of a still location, whereby it was determined that it was the automobile of government agents; and further that Quick and Simmons had arranged for Quick to raid one of the stills and seize the equipment found, thus facilitating the repurchase of it by the still operators through one Greenstone, a junk man, at normal market prices.
Quick, as a witness in his own behalf, denied any part in the alleged conspiracy and further denied in toto Simmons’ testimony except for the raid, which he (Quick) asserted was a bona fide act of law enforcement on his part, performed in .conjunction with, several New Jersey policemen and without any connivance with Simmons. Quick further offered independent proof that the disposition made-of the seized still and equipment was in accordance with the practice approved by the Commissioner of the Alcoholic Beverage Commission of New Jersey, with whom he had personally discussed the mat-' ter of disposing of the particular material. The purchasing junk man, who was called as a witness for the government, testified that the purchase was a legitimate transaction and that the price he paid was about the market price for such goods. Quick having also denied his telephone call to the New Jersey state police, as testified to by Simmons, the government in rebuttal called as witnesses state police officers who identified the call from Quick at the time alleged. This served to refute Quick, who, upon being recalled to the stand, persisted in his lack of any recollection of the call but conceded that it had undoubtedly been made as confirmed by the police officers.
We have indicated in general the sources and extent of the direct testimony in the case, not for the purpose of appraising either its probity or weight, which, of course, was within the exclusive province of the jury, but in order to consider appropriately the import and materiality of the character evidence offered by Quick, the learned trial judge having refused to charge as requested by the defendant with respect to such evidence. The appellant assigns for error the trial court’s refusal of a number of requests for charge, but we think it is unnecessary to consider any more than the ones which have to do with the court’s refusal to charge as requested with respect to the scope and degree of importance of the character evidence.
In final analysis, the question of the appellant’s guilt or innocence depended, as is .apparent, upon the word of Simmons, a> self-confessed accomplice, as against that of Quick, the indicted defendant. What corroboration of Simmons there was grew out of incidental circumstances related by other confessed accomplices. In behalf of the defendant, a number of responsible residents of the community in which he had lived all of his life testified that the defendant bore a good reputation as an honest and law-abiding citizen and for truth* and veracity. It was in that: situation that defendant’s counsel requested the learned- trial judge to charge, inter alia, *835 that — “It is the right of a person charged with crime to have all relevant testimony, including that relating to his good character or reputation, considered by the jury in every case, and if, on such consideration, there exists reasonable doubt of his guilt, even though that doubt be engendered merely by his previous good repute, he is entitled to an acquittal.” There was another request for charge to like effect, couched in slightly different language. The trial court refused both of these requests but did instruct the jury in its general charge that “You may consider the character witnesses, what the weight and effect of their testimony is to be, what you want to give it.” That was the extent of the charge in such regard.
The question presented, therefore, is whether the charge of the learned trial judge with respect to the character evidence met substantially the legal requirements of the situation. If it did, then the refusal of the cognate requests for charge was not error. A court is under no duty to charge in the exact language of a request or in any particularly approved form. Young v. United States, 9 Cir.,
What the court below told the jury with respect to the weight and effect of the character evidence being for their appraisal was correct so far as it went. But what the court neglected to tell the jury was that they should consider the character evidence along with all of the other evidence in the case and that, when all of the evidence had been considered, if a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt then existed, it was their duty to acquit. All the court told the jury, however, in that connection was that “You may consider the character witnesses,”1 obviously leaving it to the option of the jury whether they would consider the character evidence at all. The instruction that the weight and effect to be given to the character evidence was for the jury’s determination was thus only conditionally pertinent, depending upon whether the jury elected to consider the character witnesses as the court told them they might do. This tended to discount the status of the character evidence as matter to be considered by the jury along with all of the other facts and circumstances in the case. The situation is somewhat analogous to that shown in Edgington v. United States,
In Sunderland v. United States, 8 Cir.,
Of course mere proof of good character does not entitle a defendant to a verdict of acquittal. Singer v. United States, 3 Cir.,
The rule m this circuit is in keeping with the decisions already considered. In Cohen v. United States, supra,
It will be found upon reference to the cases cited in support of the charge in the instant case that they represent instances of proper refusal of requests because the requests sought to over-emphasize an independent capacity in character evidence to create the reasonable doubt which requires acquittal. For example, in Baugh v. United States, 9 Cir.,
It is especially appropriate that the jury be adequately instructed with respect to character evidence where, as here, the evidence against the defendant consists entirely of testimony of self-confessed accomplices. See Egan v. United States,
*837
In Perara v. United States, 8 Cir.,
In justification of the charge in this case with respect to the character evidence (see United States v. Dewinsky et al., D.C.,
As the case must go back for retrial, we think it advisable to treat with the admission of certain evidence at the former trial, whereof the appellant complains. The government offered in evidence a book (Exhibit G-19) which contained memoranda of disbursements made during and in connection with the operation of the stills. The entries in the book had been made by one Dewinsky, a co-owner of the stills and a co-defendant who had plead guilty. The learned trial judge admitted the book in evidence in reliance upon the Act of 1936, c. 640, § 1, 49 Stat. 1561, 28 U.S.C.A, § 695, which renders admissible as evidence in any court of the United States “* * * any writing or record * * * in a book or otherwise * * * of any act, transaction, occurrence, or event, * * * if * * * made in the regular course of any business * * * ‘business’ [including] business, profession, occupation, and calling of every kind.” We agree that, so far as competency is concerned, the statute rendered the book admissible as evidence. The Act does not discriminate between lawful and unlawful businesses. The prerequisites to admissibility are that the entries shall have been made in the usual course of business as the record of acts or transactions then occurring.
Once admitted, the book became the witness of anything which it contained that was relevant or material to the issues. The particular items, however, which the government proffered were so cryptic as to be wholly unintelligible of themselves. For the purpose of giving meaning to these otherwise meaningless book entries, the government called two witnesses, Kanter and Novick, self-admitted promoters and co-owners of the stills, and, as such, alleged co-conspirators, although they had not been indicted. Kanter and Novick, who had never, met or. talked to Quick and had nothing to do with making the book entries, testified that certain of the entries indicated payments by Dewinsky to Quick or to Simmons for Quick for “protection”. Their testimony in such regard was not by way of interpretation from any first-hand knowledge of their own but represented their conclusions drawn from what they said Dewinsky, who kept the book, had told them. Dewinsky, who at the time of the trial was serving a term in a federal penitentiary, was called as a witness by the court, neither side being willing apparently *838 to vouch for him. He denied that the book entries meant what Novick’s and, particularly, Kanter’s testimony had imputed and that he had ever told Kanter or No-vick that the entries represented payments made to or for Quick. In that situation, it is readily apparent that the most accomplished by Kanter’s and Novick’s testimony concerning the book was to lay the basis for an issue of credibility between them and Dewinsky. Not possibly could their testimony concerning the book constitute substantive proof of what the items in the book meant. The statute was intended to render admissible in evidence books and records, made in the usual course of business, without further authentication, but it was not intended to' make book entries the touchstone by which incompetent oral testimony would become competent. Kan-ter’s and Novick’s hearsay testimony with respect to the book entries should, therefore, have been excluded.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and a new trial ordered.
