A conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States is
not a felony at common law, and if made a felony by statute, an
indictment for so conspiring is not defective by reason of failing
to aver that it was feloniously entered into.
In an indictment for a conspiracy under Rev.Stat. § 5440,
the fact of conspiring must be charged against all the
conspirators, but the doing of overt acts in furtherance of the
conspiracy may be charged only against those who committed
them.
It is unnecessary to consider in detail errors which do not
appear in the bill of exceptions, or which do not appear to have
been excepted to on the trial, or which seem to have been quite
immaterial so far as excepted to.
This was a writ of error to review a conviction of the
plaintiffs in error, who were jointly indicted with twenty-five
others for a conspiracy "to commit an offense against the United
States" in aiding and abetting the landing in the United States of
Chinese laborers in violation of the exclusion act by furnishing
such laborers false, fraudulent, and pretended evidences of
identification and by counseling, advising, and directing said
laborers, and furnishing them information and advice touching the
questions liable to be asked them upon their application for
permission to land, and by various other means to the grand jury
unknown. The times, places, manner, and means of such conspiracy
are set forth in the indictment.
Most of the defendants were arrested on the day the indictment
was filed, and demurred to the same for failing to set forth facts
sufficient to constitute an offense against the laws of the United
States. The demurrer being overruled, the trial proceeded against
twenty of the defendants, and was concluded by a verdict finding
the plaintiffs in error, together with one Dunbar, guilty as
charged in the indictment. The others were acquitted, except two,
as to whom the jury were
Page 156 U. S. 465
unable to agree. The usual motions for a new trial having been
made and overruled, plaintiff in error Mulkey was sentenced to pay
a fine of $5,000 and to be imprisoned for one year, and Bannon was
also sentenced to imprisonment for six months. Whereupon they sued
out this writ of error.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is before us upon certain assignments of error, the
principal ones of which relate to the sufficiency of the
indictment.
1. The indictment is claimed to be fatally defective in that it
fails to allege that the defendants "feloniously" conspired to
commit the offense in question. The language of the indictment in
this particular is as follows: that the defendant did,
"with divers other evil-disposed persons to the grand jury
unknown, unlawfully, willfully, knowingly, and maliciously
conspire, combine, and confederate together and with each other to
willfully, knowingly, unlawfully, and maliciously commit an offense
against the United States, to-wit, the offense and misdemeanor of
knowingly and unlawfully aiding and abetting the landing in the
United States, and in the State of Oregon, and in the District of
Oregon, and within the jurisdiction of this court, from a vessel,
to-wit, the steamship
Wilmington and the steamship
Haytian Republic, both steamships plying between the port
of Portland, Oregon, and Vancouver, in the Province of British
Columbia, Dominion of Canada, Chinese persons, to-wit, Chinese
laborers not lawfully entitled to enter the United States, by
furnishing such Chinese laborers false, fraudulent, and
pretended
Page 156 U. S. 466
evidences of identification and by counseling, advising, and
directing said Chinese laborers and furnishing them information and
advice touching the questions liable to be asked them upon their
application for permission to land from said vessels, and by
various other means to the grand jury unknown."
Following this is a specification of certain acts done by
several of the conspirators, including Bannon, but not including
Mulkey.
The statute alleged to have been violated is Rev.Stat. §
5440, as amended by the Act of May 17, 1879, c. 8, 21 Stat. 4:
"If two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense
against the United States or to defraud the United States in any
manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such parties do any
act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all the parties to such
conspiracy shall be liable to a penalty of not more than $10,000,
or to imprisonment for not more than two years, or to both fine and
imprisonment in the discretion of the court."
Defendants' argument in this connection is that inasmuch as this
Court held in
Mackin v. United States, 117 U.
S. 348, that a crime punishable by imprisonment in the
state prison or penitentiary, with or without hard labor, is an
infamous crime as known to the federal Constitution, it necessarily
follows that such an offense is a felony, and hence that the
indictment is defective in failing to aver that the conspiracy was
feloniously entered into.
That a conspiracy "to commit
any offense against the
United States" is not a felony at common law is too clear for
argument, and even if it were made a felony by statute, the
indictment would not necessarily be defective for failing to aver
that the act was feloniously done. This was the distinct ruling of
this Court in
United States v.
Staats, 8 How. 41, wherein, under an act of
Congress declaring that if any person should transmit to any
officer of the government any writing in support of any claim, with
intent to defraud the United States, knowing the same to be forged,
such person should be adjudged guilty of felony, it was held to be
sufficient that the indictment charged the act to have been
Page 156 U. S. 467
done "with intent to defraud the United States," without also
charging that it was done feloniously, or with a felonious intent.
In the opinion, it was admitted that in cases of felonies at common
law and some also by statute, the felonious intent was deemed an
essential ingredient, and the indictment would be defective, even
after verdict, unless such intent was averred; but it was held that
under the statute in question the felonious intent was no part of
the description, as the offense was complete without it, and that
the felony was only a conclusion of law, from the acts done with
the intent described, and hence was not necessary to be charged in
the indictment. Where the offense is created by statute and the
statute does not use the word "feloniously," there is a difference
of opinion among, state courts whether the word must be put into
the indictment. 1 Bish.Crim.Proc. § 535. But under the
decision in the
Staats case, we are clearly of the opinion
that it need not be done.
Neither does it necessarily follow that because the punishment
affixed to an offense is infamous, the offense itself is thereby
raised to the grade of felony. The word "felony" was used at common
law to denote offenses which occasioned a forfeiture of the lands
or goods of the offender, to which capital or other punishment
night be superadded according to the degree of guilt. 4 Bl.Com. 94,
95; 1 Russell on Crimes 42. Certainly there is no intimation to the
contrary in
Mackin's case, which was put wholly upon the
ground that at the present day, imprisonment in a state prison or
penitentiary, with or without hard labor, is considered an infamous
punishment. If such imprisonment were made the sole test of
felonies, it would necessarily follow that a great many offenses of
minor importance, such as selling distilled liquors without payment
of the special tax and other analogous offenses under the internal
and customs revenue laws, would be treated as felonies, and the
persons guilty of such offenses stigmatized as felons. The cases of
Wilson (114
U.S. 417) and
Mackin (117
U.S. 348) prescribed no new definition for the word "felony," but
secured persons accused of offenses punishable by imprisonment in
the penitentiary against prosecution by information,
Page 156 U. S. 468
and without a preliminary investigation of their cases by a
grand jury. By statute in some of the states, the word "felony" is
defined to mean offenses for which the offender, on conviction, may
be punished by death or imprisonment in the state prison or
penitentiary; but in the absence of such statute, the word is used
to designate such serious offenses as were formerly punishable by
death or by forfeiture of the lands or goods of the offender.
Ex Parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 417,
114 U. S.
423.
2. The indictment is also claimed to be defective as to Mulkey
in failing to aver that he committed any act which connected him
with the alleged conspiracy. The indictment, after alleging the
conspiracy, sets forth various acts performed by several of the
defendants in furtherance thereof, such as executing false
certificates of identification, procuring signatures of witnesses
thereto, and delivering the same with intent that they be taken to
China and used there, but there is no averment of any act done by
Mulkey, either connected with or in pursuance of the general
design. The objection is clearly untenable. By the express terms of
section 5440:
"If two or more persons conspire . . . and one or more of such
parties do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all the
parties to such conspiracy shall be liable."
Nothing can be plainer than this language.
At common law, it was neither necessary to aver nor prove an
overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy, and indictments
therefor were of such general description that it was customary to
require the prosecutor to furnish the defendant with a particular
of his charges.
Rex v. Gill, 2 B. & Ald. 204;
Rex
v. Hamilton, 7 Carr. & P. 448;
United States v.
Walsh, 5 Dillon 58. But this general form of indictment has
not met with the approval of the courts in this country, and in
most of the states an overt act must be alleged. The statute in
question changes the common law only in requiring an overt act to
be alleged and proved. The gist of the offense is still the
unlawful combination, which must be proven against all the members
of the conspiracy, each one of whom is then held responsible for
the acts of all.
American Fur Co. v. United
States, 2 Pet.
Page 156 U. S. 469
358;
Nudd v. Burrows, 91 U. S. 426,
91 U. S. 438.
It was said by Mr. Justice Woods in
United States v.
Britton, 108 U. S. 199,
108 U. S. 204,
that
"the provision of the statute that there must be an act done to
effect the object of the conspiracy merely affords a
locus
poenitentiae, so that, before the act done, either one or all
the parties may abandon their design, and thus avoid the penalty
prescribed by the statute."
If such were not the law, indictments for conspiracy would stand
upon a different footing from any others, as it is a general
principle that a party cannot be punished for an evil design unless
he has taken some steps towards carrying it out. It has always
been, however, and is still the law that after
prima facie
evidence of an unlawful combination has been introduced, the act of
any one of the coconspirators in furtherance of such combination
may be properly given in evidence against all. To require an overt
act to be proven against every member of the conspiracy, or a
distinct act connecting him with the combination to be alleged,
would not only be an innovation upon established principles, but
would render most prosecutions for the offense nugatory. It is
never necessary to set forth matters of evidence in an indictment.
Evans v. United States, 153 U. S. 584,
153 U. S.
594.
Our attention is called in the brief of Bannon's counsel to
certain alleged errors in the admission of testimony, as well as in
the charge of the court; but as these errors either do not appear
in the bill of exceptions at all, or do not appear to have been
excepted to upon the trial, or seem to have been quite immaterial
so far as they were excepted to, it is unnecessary to consider them
in detail.
The judgment of the court below is therefore
Affirmed.