204 F. 1 | 6th Cir. | 1913
Plaintiffs in error and one Duell were jointly indicted under section 5440, of the Revised Statutes (U. S.
January 1, 1906 (or 1905), Worden purchased a sawmill plant in Trout Lake township, Chippewa county, Mich., 38 miles from Sault Ste. Marie, the postoffice being called “Dick.” He remained owner until some time in August, 1906, when the Lumber Company was incorporated tinder the laws of Wisconsin. Worden was thereafter president and manager of the company. Person was superintendent for Worden after January 1, 1906, and until the Lumber Company was organized. Thereafter he held the same relation toward the company until December, 1906, or January 1, 1907, when he retired. Duell entered.the employ of Worden, or of the Lumber Company, in the summer of 1906, being in the company’s employ after its organization. He looked after the office and store and kept the books, and was assistant postmaster. January 1, 1907, on Person’s retirement, Duell became superintendent. Simonds was a land looker and timber estimator for Worden up to the Lumber -Company’s organization, and thereafter acted for that company. Simouds died before the indictment was returned. Upon the trial Duell was acquitted; Worden and Person were convicted. The denial of request to direct verdict for defendants, and the admission of certain evidence complained of, require reference to some features of the testimony.
Mrs. Craig’s application was signed July 31, 1906. She executed final proofs October 24th of the same year, and on December 17, 1905, conveyed to the Lumber Company the lands covered by her entry. Alexander’s application was dated August 24, 1906, his final proofs were executed November 28th, and on December 9th of the same year he conveyed to the Lumber Company the lands so purchased. Duell was a witness under Mrs. Craig’s application, and Simonds was a-witness under the application of Alexander. Entries on the books of Worden or of the company, or both, in connection with expert testimony, tended to show the advancement of money to pay the expenses of both applicants and their witnesses to Sault Ste. Marie, when the entries were made, as well as for paying the government fees upon application and the moneys required to be paid on final proofs. The book entries also tended to show that not only the moneys advanced to pay the government for the land, hut also (in the case of at least one of the applicants) the moneys advanced
In our opinion the testimony was sufficient to sustain a conviction of both plaintiffs in error, provided the books of account and the record of the 27 other applications for land purchases are to be! given the force which the government claims for them. The Budd Case, before cited, is not opposed to this conclusion. That case (which was a suit to cancel a patent) differs from the instant case, in that-there was in the Budd Case nothing directly connecting the entry-man’s vendee with the original entry, or showing that the entryman or his vendee even “knew of the existence of the other until after the entryman had fully paid for the land.”
The record, we think, fairly presents the objection that sufficient connection was not shown between defendants and the books of the Lumber Company to make the book entries competent evidence. The learned judge, early in the trial, recognized the necessity of connecting the defendants with knowledge of the books. In overruling a motion to strike out certain testimony of erasures, the court said:
•‘I should say in that connection, if there is any erasure that it is not proof of anything of itself; it is oí no importance unless respondents or some of them are responsible for the erasure.”
Did the court hold the! book entries competent evidence against plaintiffs in error? In overruling an objection on the ground of incompetency and immateriality and otherwise, the court said of the entries:
‘‘Their exact force, as evidence, will be ruled upon hereafter in the course of the charge to the jury if not before.”
Later when it appeared that the Lumber Company’s books were not presented by the defendants, their counsel said:
“If they were not produced by these respondents and the books were of some concern, which is not under indictment, then I object to them as incompetent and the erasures — ”
The court thereupon ruled:
“The whole question of what these books show against these respondents, if anything, must he finally considered by the jury in, connection with the relation of the respondents to the 'Worilen Lumber Company, and if it appears that the respondents acted in the management of the Lumber Company, and that one or more of them acted in the keeping of these books, then the jury may give them such force as the facts justify.”
Exception was taken to this ruling. The charge contained no instruction whatever as to the competency or evidential force of the books, except the statement that:
“Such evidence as there has been about erasures on books and records * * * you may give such force as you think proper in bearing on the general conclusion which you reach.”
“Kow, assuming that you believe wliat is shown by the books of the Worden Company, it appears that on or about the day when these two people [AJex-ander and Mrs. Craig] made their respective entries the Worden Company furnished or provided or loaned the amount of money necessary to pay the expenses of making the entries”
■ — this remark being followed by reference to the subsequent bookkeeping entries showing the ultimate disposition of the advances to Alexander and Mrs. Craig, according to the court’s “inference from the bookkeeping that was done.” The fact that no exception was taken to the paragraphs of the charge which we have quoted is not controlling. If there was error in the rulings made on thel trial with reference to the competency of the bookkeeping entries, what was said in the charge (in connection with the omission to give further instruction as to the competency of the book entries) emphasized and gave prejudicial effect to those rulings. •
While (unless by the above paragraph which we have italicized in full) the- court made no express ruling that the proofs were such as to make the book entries competent evidence against the defendants, we are constrained to think that the language referred to (and in view of the fact that defendants were shown to have participated in the management of the company, and that one of them, although not one of the plaintiffs in error, took part in the bookkeeping) may well have been understood by the jury (although perhaps not so intended) as a ruling that the bookkeeping entries would be, in the contingency stated, competent evidence against plaintiffs in error. See F. C. Austin Mfg. Co. v. Johnson (C. C. A. 8th Cir.) 89 Fed. 677, 683, 32 C. C. A. 309.
The facts referred to did make the bookkeeping entries competent as against Duell; they were not alone sufficient to make them competent as against plaintiffs in error. The ruling, we think, constituted prejudicial error unless the evidence, taken together, justified a ruling that the bookkéeping entries were competent evidence against plaintiffs in error. This brings us to the question whether the proofs were such as to justify treating the book entries, including not only the original but transfer entries, competent evidence against defendants here complaining on the basis of admissions or assertions by them.
It clearly appears that Person had nothing to do with keeping the books. He was simply superintendent, and there is nothing to indicate that he knew anything about bookkeeping or that he paid any attention to it, or that he directed any of the entries in question. Moreover, he severed his connection with the company as early as January 1, 1907 (if not earlier), and a large number of the bookkeeping entries put in evidence (including those claimed to show that payments, at or before the execution of final proofs, were made to at least five entrymen) are- later than that date, although the applications of the entrymen for' land purchases were all made before Person retired. The showing was not such as, in our opinion, to justify a
When we consider that the pivotal question of defendants’ guilt or innocence was the making of bargains with the entrymen previous to their entries, and that the giving of checks or furnishing of money to pay the Government price of the lands on final proof (which is the first connection Worden personally is shown to have had with the transactions) was not unlawful, it is obvious that the language of the various entries, the bookkeeping treatment of the same by posting and otherwise, the ultimate alleged deduction of the original advances from the amounts paid for the lands, are quite,as important: as the mere fact of the actual furnishing by the Lumber Company of the money used in making the land entries. It is manifest that Worden would be prejudiced by an improper treatment of the entries on the company’s books as competent: evidence against him. Unless the mere fact of Worden’s presidency and management of the company raised a legal presumption of his acquaintance with the book entries, thus putting upon him, in defense of a charge of crime, the burden of rebutting such legal presumption, we think the books cannot, in the peculiar state of this record, be held as matter of law competent evidence against him. We have found no persuasive decision sustaining such legal presumption (in the absence of statutory requirement of correct bookkeeping) except on proof that the books were kept under the instruction, direction, or supervision of the person against whom the entries are offered, or that such person presumably had examined the books or in some way obtained actual knowledge of the entries.
We therefore think the evidence did not justify a ruling that the entries on the company’s books were competent evidence as against Worden. As we construe the record, their competency was not made to depend upon a finding by the jury of his actual acquaintance with the contents of the books, and with the entries involved. Whether the submission of such question of fact would have been justified we need not decide as the evidence on another trial may or may not be the same.
It is suggested in brief of counsel that the indictment was barred because certain of the entries (aside from those of Alexander and Mrs. Craig) antedated the three-year period of limitation; but we see no merit in this suggestion.
Thé questions raised by -the remaining errors assigned seem scarcely likely to arise on another trial, and we therefore refrain from discussing them.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment of the district court must be reversed and a new trial ordered.