On April 5, 1966, a federal grand jury for the District of Kansas indicted ten corporations 1 charging each with having violated 15 U.S.C. § 1. Specifically the indictment charged “the defendants and co-conspirators entered into and engaged in a combination and conspiracy in unreasonable restraint of the hereinbefore described interstate trade and commerce in liquid asphalt in violation of Section 1 of the * * * Sherman Act.” All defendants except Wilshire plead nolo contendere and were subsequently fined from $25,000 to $40,-000 each. Wilshire’s case was tried to a jury and resulted in a guilty verdict and a fine of $25,000. Motions for judgment n.o.v., for judgment of acquittal, new trial and a motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds were all overruled, with the latter meriting a special hearing. 2 Wilshire has appealed.
On this statement of fact the appellant first argues that the indictment and evidence are insufficient since it is neither charged nor proved that Wilshire knowingly joined the conspiracy. We treat the indictment attack first. The fatal defect urged consists of a failure to allege that the conspiracy was formed and in existence; that Wilshire knew of its presence and knowingly agreed to join and commit acts in furtherance of its purposes. The single case cited as authority for this allegation
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is inappropriate and discussion of it will be deferred until a timely moment. To determine the sufficiency of an indictment the court views the entire document
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to ascertain whether the offense is charged with sufficient clarity so as to safeguard two constitutional guarantees: the Sixth Amendment right to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation in order to prepare a defense; and the Fifth Amendment protection against twice being placed in jeopardy for the identical offense.
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The indictment adequately apprised Wilshire of its participation in the conspiracy and was not faulty for the reasons urged. The defendants and co-conspirators were charged with entering into
The brunt of the sufficiency of evidence argument focuses on the propriety of attributing the previously obtained guilty knowledge of a Riffe Division agent, to Wilshire after the merger. At this juncture Jones v. United States,
There is no question about the continuing nature of the plot nor is there reasonable doubt that Wilshire was a part thereof. And we believe the ticklish problem of pre-merger knowledge must be decided against Wilshire on the facts. Although appellant claims to have unwittingly bought into an ongoing conspiracy and for that reason it ought to be excused, the totality of the evidence supports the conclusion that Wilshire had ample opportunity to detect and reject the illegal practices. This is not a case where a company was purchased without chance for scrutinizing observation prior to assumption of control. The agreement of merger is dated September 23, 1960. This ought to have given appellánt adequate time to become intimately familiar with the modus operandi of Riffe. And undisputed evidence was tendered by the Kansas salesman of Riffe Division from which it may be concluded that during the three year affiliation of Riffe with Wilshire, the vice-president in charge of the Riffe Division knew of and acquiesced in the continued conspiratorial participation. Wilshire is unable to rid itself of liability because of its inability to personally supervise the acquired company and its subordinates particularly when they failed to object a single time during the three year association. Viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, the evidence tendered by the prosecution provided ample basis for a jury, properly instructed, to find the requisite knowledge and participation by Wilshire.
Appellant next contends that the indictment and evidence are insufficient by their failure to set out factual allegations and proof of a conspiracy in restraint of interstate trade. It has long been settled that “ [a] greements for price maintenance of articles moving in interstate commerce are, without more, unreasonable restraints within the meaning of the Sherman Act because they eliminate competition.” Ethyl Gasoline Corporation v. United States,
The evidence is not insufficient merely because Wilshire itself was not shown to have shipped into Kansas. The apposite inquiry is whether appellant was engaged in a plot which maintained prices on products, a part of which, moved in interstate trade.
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The evidence is undisputed that Standard Oil shipped asphalt into Kansas. It is not contested that Standard won numerous “points” in northeast Kansas as a result of the conspiracy nor is it denied that
The next point urged by Wilshire is that the court erred in overruling their motion for a new trial based on the jurors’ reading of a newspaper headline. Near the close of the trial several prejudicial newspaper articles were called to the court’s attention. Following the practice commenced in Mares v. United States,
On the proposition that Wilshire and others were convicted in a federal court for participation in an asphalt conspiracy in Missouri, it is contended that the prosecution here twice places Wilshire in jeopardy. Appellant’s basic plea is that the government is attempting to splinter a single conspiracy into two parts, i.e., a Missouri conspiracy and a Kansas conspiracy, when in fact and law the two are but fragments of a single scheme. The indictments in Kansas and Missouri are in some respects identical, with the following relevant exceptions. (1) Different parties are named in each: there are eight corporations common to both; two were named in Kansas and not in Missouri; ten corporate and seventeen individual defendants were named in Missouri and not in Kansas. (2) There are overlapping but different dates of existence: in Missouri it was from 1960-63 and in Kansas from 1959-65. (3) The offenses charged vary: the Missouri indictment charged that the defendants and co-conspirators acted to “suppress and eliminate competition in the sale of liquid asphalt to the State of Missouri * * *”; the Kansas indictment charged the co-conspirators and defendants with conspiring “to fix, maintain, and establish non-competitive prices for the sale of liquid asphalt to the State of Kansas * * Although a single plot may not be severed into several in order to proliferate penalties, prosecution for one offense will not confer immunity from subsequent prosecutions of distinct, though related, offenses.
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Because the resolution of the question depends on the facts of each case, we are hesitant to follow other decisions unless they are on all fours with this suit. Appellant urges that the Honda cases
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and United States v. H. E. Koontz Creamery, Inc.,
In Koontz, the defendants were milk distributors who had been earlier convicted for fixing prices on school milk in the Baltimore area. They were then indicted for fixing other wholesale and retail milk prices during the same period of time in the same area. The trial court granted their motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds on the following facts. The defendants in both cases were substantially identical; they met or were represented at meetings at the same principal place under the auspices of the Milk Distributors Association; the meetings were called and conducted the same whether the purpose was school bids, labor costs, the price of raw milk, jugs, jug pricing and deposits, or other matters of interest; at the meetings the subject matter usually covered numerous topics relating to the overall price control scheme. The court concluded: “The purpose of the defendants, conspiratorial or not, was to maintain market price stability in the Baltimore milk market. * * * and that actions with respect to school milk, street milk, and jug milk were actions designed to control certain aspects of distribution, all of which were facets of, or factors in, the overall price structure.” United States v. Koontz Creamery, Inc.,
In the Honda cases, American Honda was first tried and convicted for fixing prices on Honda motorcycles in the Los Angeles area. Thereafter indictments were returned against them in northern California, northern Illinois and southern Ohio for identical offenses. In each of the latter cases Honda moved for dismissal on double jeopardy grounds, which were granted. The persuasive evidence in those cases was as follows: Honda dealers in each area are concerned with the retail price structure in all other areas; price-cutting affects the ability of dealers to maintain proper servicing and advertising and in turn the
Wilshire was given opportunity in an independent evidentiary hearing to develop facts to support its double jeopardy claim. But the testimony proffered then simply does not compare favorably to the above cases. Because the Missouri defendants plead nolo contend-ere, we have no testimony to examine and compare to that offered in the Kansas trial. We are thus compelled to rely exclusively upon the evidence tendered in the post-trial hearing on the double jeopardy claim. Wilshire’s Kansas agent testified first. In highly synthesized form, he repeatedly affirmed that although he knew of the Missouri conspiracy and participated in the one in Kansas, he knew of no connecting link between the two. To his knowledge there was never any discussion relative to the Missouri bidding, during the course of the Kansas meetings; Wilshire never discussed with the competitors the restriction of Kansas bidding in anticipation of more Missouri contracts; and he knew of no attempt by any of the companies to take less in one state to gain in the other. Next the Missouri salesman of the Riffe Division of Wilshire volunteered that there was never any connection between their bids in Missouri and Kansas. Finally a Skelly salesman reaffirmed that he knew of no Kansas meetings where the Missouri lettings were discussed nor any Missouri meetings where Kansas bids were talked about. He added that neither his company nor any of the others restricted their bids in one state to secure additional “points” in another state. He concluded by answering that there was never any statement made to him that there was any connection between the bids in the two states. And on cross-examination he further elaborated that there was never a meeting where they talked about one state and then switched to the other. At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, the trial judge entered findings which, coupled with the testimony, refute any favorable comparison of this case to the Koontz or Honda cases. 14 In short, there is a general absence of testimonial evidence which supports appellant’s double jeopardy claim. Our conclusion is but an echo of the trial judge’s that the parties here were tried for a plot involving a distinctively separate conspiratorial purpose.
It is also urged that counsel for the Government was guilty of making inflammatory remarks sufficient to
The trial court imposed a fine of $25,000 on Wilshire. The maximum fine allowed by 15 U.S.C.A. § 1 is $50,-000. Appellant says the fine was excessive. We have often held that when the punishment is within the statutory limit, this court will not interfere with the trial court’s exercise of discretion in fixing the punishment absent unusual circumstances, 17 none of which aré present here.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The ten corporations indicted were: Wilshire Oil Company, Soeony Mobil Oil Company, Skelly Oil Company, the Consumers Cooperative Association, American Petrofina Company of Texas, Union Asphalt and Roadoils, Colorado Oil and Gas Corporation, The American Oil Company (Standard of Indiana), Phillips Petroleum Company, and Apeo Oil Corporation.
. The defense of double jeopardy was first raised by Wilshire in a pre-trial motion at which time both parties agreed, with the court’s permission, to submit the matter in a post-trial evidentiary hearing if Wilshire were ultimately found guilty. After conviction Wilshire renewed its attack upon the prosecution by reason of claimed double jeopardy and a special hearing on the issue was held. The burden was, by agreement of the parties, upon Wilshire. At the conclusion of the hearing, Wilshire requested that the trial court enter its findings of fact and conclusions of law under Rule 23, F.R.Crim.P., 18 U.S.C.A., which the trial court correctly deemed inapplicable. Nonetheless, upon Wilshire’s request the court recited its findings, framing them
. Jones v. United States,
. Imperial Meat Co. v. United States,
. United States v. Tijerina,
. Paragraph 12 reads: “Beginning some time prior to 1959 and continuing thereafter through at least 1965, the exact dates being to the grand jurors unknown, the defendants and co-conspirators entered into and engaged in a combination and conspiracy in unreasonable restraint of the hereinbefore described interstate trade and commerce in liquid asphalt in violation of Section 1 of * * * the Sherman Act.”
. Paragraph 3 reads : “Wilshire Oil Company of Texas * * * a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, with its principal place of business in Denver, Colorado, is hereby indicted and made a defendant herein. Riffe Petroleum Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Oklahoma, was purchased by and merged with Wilshire Oil on or about December 31, 1960. From about December 31, 1960 until August 9, 1963, Riffe Petroleum Company was operated by Wilshire Oil as an unincorporated division of Wilshire Oil. From about December 31, 1960 until August 9, 1963, Wilshire Oil, through its Riffe Petroleum Division, engaged in the business of distributing and selling liquid asphalt in the State of Kansas and in oth- . er States.”
. Wilshire’s pre-trial motion to dismiss is further evidence that it was well informed by the indictment of the charge lodged against the company. That motion implicitly acknowledges that they were charged with joining and participating in an on-going conspiracy, and read in part: “The indictment is fatally defective * * * in that: a. It does not allege that this defendant knew of the existence of the conspiracy, agreed to become part of it, and with that knowledge committed some act in furtherance thereof, required in this case because of other allegations in the indictment.”
.
See
United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
. United States v. Painters’ Dist. Council No. 14, etc.,
. Hattaway v. United States,
. The burden of proving former jeopardy for the same offense by a preponderance of the evidence rests upon the movants: Sanchez v. United States,
. United States v. American Honda Motor Co.,
. The trial judge found: “ * * * that the government has established beyond a reasonable doubt that there was not one large conspiracy split into small ones * * *. The sole subject of the Kansas conspiracy was to allocate points or by allocating points, fix the prices of liquid asphalt sold to the State of Kansas, and the purpose of the Missouri conspiracy was identical except that it had to do with the sale of liquid asphalt to the State of Missouri.
I find that the conspiracies charged * * * were completely different and unconnected although necessarily, as the evidence progressed, there was some reference back and forth to the dealings between the defendant here and the other defendants in the case, and the State of Missouri.
I find that the proof of the matters charged in the Kansas indictment would not have been admissible had there been a trial on the Missouri indictment and that if admitted, it would not have sustained a conviction on the Missouri indictment.”
. The lawyer said: “Mr. Woolsey [defendant’s attorney] has attempted * * * to confuse the issue, throw sand in your eyes * *
. Bailey v. United States,
.
See
Weissman v. United States,
