Yip Wah v. United States

8 F.2d 478 | 9th Cir. | 1925

GILBERT, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiffs in error were convicted under two eounts of an indictment. The first count charged them with conspiracy to receive, conceal, buy, sell, and facilitate the transportation of smoking opium. The second charged them with feloniously receiving, concealing, buying, selling, and facilitating in the transportation of certain described smoking opium, knowing the same to have been imported contrary to law.

It was shown in evidence that the plaintiffs in error, together with one Herbert M. Samuels, wont from San Francisco to Grays Harbor, and there received from a vessel lying in the harbor a large quantity of smoking opium, consisting of approximately 1,000 tins, which they thereupon packed in six trunks for transportation to San Francisco, Cor which point they purchased tickets and cheeked the trunks. While being placed on the train, one of the trunks was accidentally broken open, and two cans of opium fell out. The baggage master, on discovering that fact, notified a deputy collector of customs, and later the plaintiffs in error were arrested and removed from the train, and the six trunks containing the opium were seized, and were opened with keys taken from the person of Harry Tom. The plaintiffs in error were searched, and from their persons were taken certain documents which, on the trial, were admitted in evidence.

It is contended that the demurrer to the first count of the indictment should have been sustained, on the ground that it is duplicitous in charging a conspiracy to receive, conceal, buy, sell, and facilitate the transportation, concealment, and sale of smoking opium. The demurrer was properly overruled. In Frohwerk v. United States, 249 U. S. 209, 39 S. Ct. 252, 63 L. Ed. 561, it was said: “Countenance, wo believe, has been given by some courts to the notion that a single count in an indictment for conspiring to commit two offenses is bad for duplicity. This court has given it none. * * * The conspiracy is the crime, and that is one, however diverse its objects.” Similar indictments have been sustained by this court in Shepard v. United States, 236 F. 73, 149 C. C. A. 283; Proffitt v. United States (C. C. A.) 264 F. 299; Ukichi v. United States (C. C. A.) 281 F. 525.

The demurrer to the second count was also properly overruled. That count but sets forth a series of acts consecutively performed in committing a crime relating to certain specified and described smoking opium, and it follows the language of the statute. It is not duplicitous, in that it charges different offenses in a single count. Ruthenberg v. United States, 245 U. S. 480, 38 S. Ct. 168, 62 L. Ed. 414; Barker v. United States (C. C. A.) 6 F.(2d) 149; Stubbs v. United States (C. C. A.) 1 F.(2d) 837; Sam Wong v. United States (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 969.

We find no merit in the contention, presented by several assignments, that there was violation of the constitutional rights of the plaintiffs in error in searching their persons or seizing the opium without a search warrant. The offense was openly committed. The officers had the visible evidence of the commission ox a crime in the tins of opium which had fallen from the broken trunk, and the shipment of the six trunks by rail, accompanied by the owners thereof, on their way to a point in another state. The knowledge they thus had by their senses was sufficient to justify the arrest and the search of the accused, who were taken in the con-mission of a crime. King v. United States (C. C. A.) 1 F.(2d) 931; Sayers v. United States (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 146. There was-no error, therefore, in the admission in evidence of the papers taken from the possession of Harry Tom. They related to the importation of opium, and were pertinent to the issues.

Error is assigned to the court’s in*480struetion to the jury that, in so far as the defendant Harry Tom testified, his testimony might be considered for any purpose in the ease. The record shows that at the close of the government’s case Harry Tom rested his own case, and thereafter he voluntarily testified for Yip Wah. The contention is that he was entitled to have his own ease judged solely by the evidence as it stood when he rested. To this a conclusive answer is that Harry Tom’s evidence is not presented in the bill of exceptions, and is not shown to, have prejudiced his ease, and therefore there can be no presumption of error in the instruction so given by tbe court.

The judgment is affirmed. '