A slip retained by the agent of a lottery which is the duplicate
of a slip retained by the purchaser, indicating the numbers
selected by him, is not a paper, certificate or interest purporting
to be or to represent chances, shares and interest in the prizes
thereafter to be awarded by lot in the drawings of a lottery
commonly known as the game of policy within the meaning of the Act
of Congress of March 2, 1895, c.191, 28 Stat. 963.
The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an indictment under Rev.Stat. § 5440 for
conspiring
Page 188 U. S. 376
to commit an offense against the United States. The offense
which the defendants are alleged to have conspired to commit and to
have committed is that of causing to be carried from one state to
another,
viz., from Kentucky to Ohio, five papers,
certificates, and instruments purporting to be and to represent
chances, shares, and interests in the prizes thereafter to be
awarded by lot in the drawings of a lottery, commonly know as the
game of policy. Act of March 2, 1895, c. 191, 28 Stat. 963. It
appears that the lottery in question had its headquarters in Ohio
and agencies in different states. A purchaser, or person wishing to
take a chance, went to one of these agencies, in this case in
Kentucky, selected three or more numbers, wrote them on a slip, and
handed the slip to the agent, in this case to the defendant Hoff,
paying the price of the chance at the same time and keeping a
duplicate, which was the purchaser's voucher for his selection. The
slip in this case was taken by the defendant Edgar to be carried to
the principal office, where afterwards, in the regular course,
there would be a drawing by the defendant Francis. If the
purchaser's number should win, the prize would be sent to the
agency and paid over. The carriage from one state to another,
relied upon as the object of the conspiracy, and as the overt act
in pursuance of the conspiracy, was the carriage by Edgar of slips
delivered to Hoff, as above described. The case was sent to the
jury by the district court, the defendants were found guilty, and
the judgment against them was affirmed by the circuit court of
appeals.
Reilley v. United States, 106 F. 896. The case
then was brought here on certiorari.
An exception was taken at every step of the trial in the hope
that some shot might hit the mark. We entirely agree with the
circuit court of appeals in its unfavorable comments on the
practice. But, little attention as most of the objections made
deserve, they at least succeeded in raising the broad questions
whether the act of 1895 is constitutional, and whether the offense
proved is within it. The former is disposed of by the case of
Champion v. Ames, p.
188 U. S. 321. The
latter remains, and thus far seems to us not to have received quite
sufficient notice.
Page 188 U. S. 377
The game was played by mixing seventy-eight consecutive numbers
and drawing out twelve after all the purchases for the game had
been reported. If the three on any slip corresponded in number and
order with three drawn out, the purchaser won. The purpose of
bringing in the slips to headquarters was that all purchases should
be known there before the drawing, and thus swindling by agents of
the lottery made impossible. It is said by the circuit court of
appeals that the successful slips were returned with the prizes. If
this is correct, we do not perceive that it materially affects the
case. The arrangement, whatever it was, was for the convenience and
safety of those who managed this lottery, and was in no way
essential to the interests of the person making the purchase or
bet. The daily report of the result of the drawings to Hoff, with
whom he dealt, and the forwarding of the prize, if drawn, filled
all his needs. It would seem from the evidence, as the government
contended -- certainly the contrary does not appear and was not
argued -- that Hoff and Edgar, the carrier, were agents of the
lottery company. Thus, the slips were at home, as between the
purchaser and the lottery, when put into Hoff's hands. They had
reached their final destination in point of law, and their later
movements were internal circulation within the sphere of the
lottery company's possession. Therefore the question is suggested
whether the carriage of a paper of any sort by its owner or the
owner's servant, properly so called, with no view of a later change
of possession, can be commerce, even when the carriage is in aid of
some business or traffic. The case is different from one where, the
carriage being done by an independent carrier, it is commerce
merely by reason of the business of carriage.
The question just put need not be answered in this case. For, on
another ground, we are of opinion that there was no evidence of an
offense within the meaning of the act of 1895. The assumption has
been that the slips carried from Kentucky to Ohio were papers
purporting to be or represent a ticket or interest in a lottery.
But, in our opinion, these papers did not purport to be or do
either. A ticket, of course, is a thing which is the holder's means
of making good his rights. The essence of
Page 188 U. S. 378
it is that it is in the hands of the other party to the contract
with the lottery as a document of title. It seems to us quite plain
that the alternative instrument mentioned by the statute --
viz., a paper representing an interest in a lottery,
equally is a document of title to the purchaser and holder -- the
thing by holding which he makes good his right to a chance in the
game. But the slips transported, as we have pointed out, were not
the purchasers' documents. It is true that they corresponded in
contents, and so in one sense represented or depicted the
purchasers' interests. But "represent" in the statute means, as we
already have said in other words, represent to the purchaser. It
means stand as the representative of title to the indicated thing,
and that these slips did not do. The function of the slips might
have been performed by descriptions in a book, or by memory if the
whole lottery business had been done by one man. They as little
represented the purchaser's chances as the stubs in a check book
represent the sums coming to the payees of the checks.
We assume, for purposes of decision, that the papers kept by the
purchasers were tickets, or did represent an interest in a lottery.
But those papers did not leave Kentucky. There was no conspiracy
that they should. We need not consider whether, if it had been
necessary to take them to Ohio in order to secure the purchaser's
rights, the lottery keepers could be said to conspire to cause them
to be carried there, when the carriage would be in an interest
adverse to theirs and they would be better off and presumably glad
if the papers never were presented.
See Commonwealth v.
Peasles, 177 Mass. 267, 271;
Graves v. Johnson, 179
Mass. 53, 58.
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals is reversed;
the judgment of the district court is also reversed, and the cause
remanded to that court, with directions to set aside the verdict
and grant a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissenting:
This is a criminal prosecution based upon the first section of
the Act of Congress of March 2, 1895, c. 191, entitled
"An Act
Page 188 U. S. 379
for the Suppression of Lottery Traffic through National and
Interstate Commerce and the Postal Service, Subject to the
Jurisdiction and Laws of the United States."
That section reads:
"§ 1. That any person who shall cause to be brought within
the United States from abroad, for the purpose of disposing of the
same
or deposited in
or carried by the mails of
the United States, or carried from one state to another in the
United States, any paper, certificate, or instrument purporting to
be or represent a ticket, chance, share, or interest in or
dependent upon the event of a lottery, so-called gift concert, or
similar enterprise offering prizes dependent upon lot or chance, or
shall cause any advertisement of such lottery, so-called gift
concert, or similar enterprises offering prizes dependent upon lot
or chance, to be brought into the United States,
or
deposited in or carried by the mails of the United States,
or transferred from one state to another in the same,
shall be punishable in the first offense by imprisonment for not
more than two years or by a fine of not more than one thousand
dollars, or both, and in the second and after offenses by such
imprisonment only."
28 Stat. 963.
The indictment charges a conspiracy to commit the offense
denounced by that section.
Judge Severens, delivering the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals, thus stated, and I think accurately, the result of certain
evidence on the part of the government:
"Upon the trial, the government offered evidence tending to
prove that the respondents adopted a scheme of lottery business
called by them 'policy,' which they subsequently carried into
operation, of the character following: the principal office for the
transaction of the business was located in a building in
Cincinnati, Ohio. The place where the drawings of numbers from a
wheel were made was located in another building or room adjoining
the principal office and connected with it by a private way. In
various places in that city and elsewhere in Ohio and other states,
one at least, being in Newport, Kentucky, they had offices or
stations at which the patrons purchased tickets or chances in the
drawings to be thereafter made in Cincinnati at the place
mentioned. Successive numbers from one to seventy-eight, inclusive,
were each day
Page 188 U. S. 380
put into the wheel, and at each drawing twelve numbers were
taken out. A list of these twelve numbers was taken into the
principal office and there recorded. Several hours in the day
before these drawings respectively took place, the patrons
purchased chances at the sub-offices or stations from an agent of
the respondents, or from one of the latter, in charge at that
place. In this instance, the purchase was made of the respondent
Hoff at the Newport office. The purchaser (Harrison, in this
instance) chose three of the numbers from one to seventy-eight,
inclusive, and wrote them upon a slip of paper, of which, according
to the method of doing business, he kept a duplicate. He handed his
list of numbers, with figures to denote the sum paid, upon a slip
of paper, and the money to pay for his chance, to the person in
charge, to be transmitted to the principal office in Cincinnati by
the 'carrier,' who would call to take them up. When these slips and
the moneys were all brought into the principal office, the drawing
above mentioned took place. If the three numbers on the slip were
of the twelve drawn from the wheel, the purchaser would win the
prize, $200, when the game (of which there were several forms) was
played on the basis above stated. If not, he lost. A report of the
drawings was sent back to the station from which the slip came, and
if any purchaser had made a 'hit,' his slip would be returned with
the prize, to be there delivered to him. Of the respondents,
Reilley was in charge of the principal office, Francis of the
drawings, Hoff of the station in Newport, as already stated, and
Edgar was the carrier. The slip of paper taken by the carrier
represented the interest of the purchaser of the chance, and,
although containing figures only, it had a definite meaning, and
was understood by all the parties concerned. It was the
transportation of some of such lists, one being that of Harrison,
from Newport, Kentucky, to Cincinnati, Ohio, with knowledge of
their character that constituted the overt act done in pursuance of
the conspiracy."
That the counsel for the accused held the same view of the
evidence is shown in an extract from their brief printed in the
margin.
*
Page 188 U. S. 381
I. The Act of March 2, 1895, c. 191, was under examination by
this Court in
France v. United States, 164 U.
S. 676. That was an indictment for a conspiracy to
violate its first section. The judgment of conviction in that case
was reversed upon the ground that the evidence showed that the
papers and instruments which the defendants caused to be carried
from Kentucky to Ohio did not relate to a lottery to be thereafter
drawn, but to one that had previously been drawn. The Court
said:
"There is no contradiction in the testimony, and the government
admits and assumes that the drawing in regard to which these papers
contained any information had already taken place in Kentucky, and
it was the result of that drawing only that was on its way in the
hands of messengers to the agents of the lottery in Cincinnati. The
statute does not cover the transaction, and, however reprehensible
the acts of the plaintiffs in error may be thought to be, we cannot
sustain a conviction on that ground. Although the objection is a
narrow one, yet, the statute being highly penal, rendering its
violator liable to fine
Page 188 U. S. 382
and imprisonment, we are compelled to construe it strictly. Full
effect is given to the statute by holding that the language applies
only to that kind of a paper which depends upon a lottery the
drawing of which has not yet taken place, and which paper purports
to be a certificate, etc., as described in the act. If it be urged
that the act of these plaintiffs in error is within the reason of
the statute, the answer must be that it is so far outside of its
language that to include it within the statute would be to
legislate, and not to construe legislation."
No such point can be made in this case, because the indictment
presents a case within the provisions of the statute as interpreted
in
France v. United States, for it refers to papers and
instruments relating to a lottery thereafter to be drawn. Besides,
there was evidence tending to show that the papers and instruments
which the defendants were charged to have caused to be carried from
Kentucky to Ohio had reference to a future drawing, and not to one
that had already occurred. And the trial judge, after stating the
facts, said to the jury:
"Did these papers, or so-called lottery tickets, which it is
alleged defendants conspired to carry from Kentucky to Ohio,
purport to represent interests of players in a drawing afterwards
to take place? It is not necessary, gentlemen, that they should
purport or show upon their face that they were tickets in a lottery
giving an interest to the holder in a drawing afterwards to take
place, but their purport may be shown outside of the papers. Now,
as to the evidence offered by the government upon that point, you
will recall the evidence of France, who was introduced as an
expert, to tell what they were, and the evidence of Harrison, that
he wrote out his ticket and delivered one-half of it to the agent,
paid his money and held the duplicate -- one of the duplicates, his
evidence of the interest he had in the drawing that was to come off
that day -- and the evidence to which I have before referred as to
the fact that the duplicate left with Hoff was afterwards found in
possession of Edgar at the end of the bridge, shortly after the
play was made. If from these facts you are satisfied that it
represented an interest in the drawings afterwards to take place,
then, within the meaning of the law, it purported to represent the
interest of the
Page 188 U. S. 383
player in the drawing, although it did not so state upon its
face."
II. In
Champion v. Ames, p.
188 U. S. 321,
ante, it has been held that lottery tickets were subjects
of traffic among those who choose to sell or buy them; that the
carriage of such tickets by independent carriers from one state to
another was therefore interstate commerce; that, under its power to
regulate commerce among the several states, Congress -- subject to
the limitations imposed by the Constitution upon the powers granted
by it -- has plenary authority over such commerce, and may prohibit
the carriage of such tickets from state to state, and that
legislation to that end and of that character is not inconsistent
with any limitation or restriction imposed by the Constitution upon
the exercise of the powers granted to Congress.
Here, there was no carrying of lottery tickets from Kentucky to
Ohio by an independent carrier engaged in the transportation, for
hire, of freight and packages from one state to another. But the
carrying was by an individual acting in pursuance of a conspiracy
between himself and others that had for its object the carrying
from Kentucky to Ohio of certain papers or instruments representing
a chance, share, or interest in or dependent upon the event of a
lottery, thereafter to be drawn, which offered prizes dependent
upon lot or chance. Those who were parties to the conspiracy were
in effect partners in committing the crime denounced by the above
act of Congress, and the act of one of the parties in execution of
the objects of such conspiracy was the act of all the
conspirators.
The judgment therefore should be affirmed unless it be that the
carrying of lottery tickets from one state to another by an
individual, acting in cooperation with his coconspirators, is not
interstate "commerce." But is it true that the "commerce among the
several states," which Congress has the power to regulate, cannot
be carried on by an individual, or by a combination of individuals?
We think not. In
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S. 183,
the Court, referring to the grant to Congress of power to regulate
commerce among the several states, said:
"The language of the grant makes no reference to the
instrumentalities
Page 188 U. S. 384
by which commerce may be carried on; it is general, and includes
alike commerce by individuals, partnerships, associations, and
corporations."
In
Welton v. Missouri, 91 U. S.
275,
91 U. S. 280,
it was said that the power to regulate commerce embraces "all the
instruments by which such commerce may be conducted." That the
commerce clause of the Constitution embraces alike commerce by
individuals, partnerships, associations, and corporations was
recognized in
Pensacola Tel. Co. v. Western Union Tel.
Co., 96 U. S. 1,
96 U. S. 21. And
in
Gloucester Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania, 114 U.
S. 196,
114 U. S. 205,
the Court said that commerce among the states "includes commerce by
whomsoever conducted, whether by individuals or by
corporations."
In
Champion v. Ames, the carrying of lottery tickets
happened to be by an incorporated express company. But if it had
been by an express company organized as a partnership or
joint-stock company, the result of the decision could not have been
different. In this case, if the carrying had been by an ordinary
express wagon, owned by a private person but employed by the
accused and other conspirators to carry the lottery papers in
question from Kentucky to Ohio, surely the carrying in that mode
would be commerce within the meaning of the Constitution. It cannot
be any less commerce because the carrying was by an individual who,
in conspiracy or cooperation with others, caused the carrying to be
done in violation of the act of Congress. The learned counsel for
the accused, referring to the legislation enacted prior to 1895,
which had for its object to exclude lottery matter from the mails,
and to prohibit the importation of lottery matter from abroad,
says:
"In 1895, the act now in question was passed, supplementing the
provisions of the prior acts so as to prohibit the act of causing
lottery tickets to be carried and lottery advertisements to be
transferred from one state to another by any means or methods."
It seems to me that the evidence made a case within the act of
Congress, and that no error of law was committed by the trial
court. The papers carried from Kentucky to Ohio were of the class
described in the act,
"any paper, certificate, or instrument
Page 188 U. S. 385
purporting to be or represent a ticket, chance, share, or
interest in or dependent upon the event of a lottery, so-called
gift concert, or similar enterprise, offering prizes dependent upon
lot or chance."
The paper or instrument carried from Kentucky to Ohio, of which
the purchaser had a duplicate, certainly represented to all the
parties concerned a chance or interest dependent upon an event of a
lottery or "similar enterprise," offering prizes dependent upon a
lot or chance. To hold otherwise is to stick in the bark. It
informed the policy gambler, if a prize was drawn, that the person
who held the duplicate was entitled to the prize, and it was
therefore a paper the carrying of which from one state to another
made the conspirators causing it to be so carried guilty of an
offense under the act of Congress. The reasoning by which the case
is held not to be embraced by the act of Congress is too astute and
technical to commend itself to my judgment. It excludes from the
operation of the act a case which, as I think, is clearly within
its provisions.
*
"In the
Francis case, now before the Court, it was
shown that the principal office of the 'policy' concern was located
in Cincinnati, Ohio, that the drawings took place in an adjoining
building or room, and that sub-offices or agencies were maintained
in various places in that city and in other cities in Ohio and
other states at which patrons or players would select numbers in
the drawings to be made in Cincinnati. One desiring to play such a
game would choose three of the numbers from 1 to 78 inclusive, and
write them upon a slip of paper, of which he kept a duplicate. He
would hand his list of numbers, with figures to denote the sum
paid, together with the money to pay for his chance, to the person
in charge of the sub-office or agency, to be transmitted to the
principal office in Cincinnati. When these slips and the moneys
were brought to the principal office, the drawing took place.
Successive numbers, from 1 to 78 inclusive, were put into a wheel
and at each drawing twelve numbers were taken out. If the three
numbers on the slip were of the twelve drawn from the wheel, the
purchaser would win a prize. If not, he lost. A report of the
drawings was sent back to the agency from which the slip came, and,
if any purchaser had won a prize, or, as it is termed, made a
'hit,' his slip was returned with the prize, to be there delivered
to him. In the instance shown by the testimony, the selection was
made by the witness Harrison at the Newport office. The defendant
Reilley was claimed to be in charge of the principal office in
Cincinnati, Francis in charge of the drawings, and Hoff in charge
of the station in Newport. Edgar carried the slips from Newport to
Cincinnati, and this carriage of the slips constituted the alleged
overt act done in pursuance of a conspiracy in violation of the act
of Congress."