A man may sometimes be punished in person where he has brought
consequences to pass, although he was not there in person.
In
re Palliser, 136 U. S. 257.
A solicitation of funds for campaign purposes made by letter in
violation of § 12 of the Civil Service Act of January 16,
1883, c. 27, 22 Stat. 403, is not complete until the letter is
delivered to the person from whom the contribution is solicited,
and if the letter is received by one within a building or room
described in § 12 of the act, the solicitation is in that
place and the sender of the letter commits the prohibited offense
in the prohibited place.
154 F. 508, reversed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an indictment for soliciting a contribution of money for
political purposes from an employee of the United States in a post
office building of the United States occupied by the
Page 209 U. S. 42
employee in the discharge of his duties. By the Civil Service
Act of January 16, 1883, c. 27, § 12, 22 Stat. 403, 407,
"No person shall, in any room or building occupied in the
discharge of official duties by any officer or employee of the
United States mentioned in this act, or in any navy yard, fort, or
arsenal, solicit in any manner whatever, or receive, any
contribution of money or any other thing of value for any political
purpose whatever."
By § 15, a penalty is imposed of fine, imprisonment, or
both. The indictment is in eleven counts, and charges the sending
of letters to employees, which were intended to be received and
read by them in the building, and were so received and read by them
in fact. It is admitted that the defendant was not in the building.
There was a demurrer, which was sustained by the district court on
the ground that the case was not within the act. 154 F. 508. The
only question argued or intended to be raised is whether the
defendant's physical presence in the building was necessary to
create the offense.
Of course, it is possible to solicit by letter as well as in
person. It is equally clear that the person who writes the letter
and intentionally puts it in the way of delivery solicits, whether
the delivery is accomplished by agents of the writer, by agents of
the person addressed, or by independent middlemen, if it takes
place in the intended way. It appears to us no more open to doubt
that the statute prohibits solicitation by writing as well as by
spoken words. It forbids all persons to solicit "in any manner
whatever." The purpose is wider than that of a notice prohibiting
book peddling in a building. It is not, even primarily, to save
employees from interruption or annoyance in their business. It is
to check a political abuse which is not different in kind whether
practiced by letter or by word of mouth. The limits of the act,
presumably, were due to what was considered the reasonable and
possibly the constitutional freedom of citizens, whether
officeholders or not, when in private life, and it may be
conjectured that it was upon this ground that an amendment of
broader scope was
Page 209 U. S. 43
rejected. If the writer of the letter in person had handed it to
the man addressed, in the building, without a word, and the latter
had read it then and there, we suppose that no one would deny that
the writer fell within the statute. We can see no distinction
between personally delivering the letter and sending it by a
servant of the writer. If the solicitation is in the building, the
statute does not require personal presence, so that the question is
narrowed to whether the solicitation alleged took place in the
building or outside.
The solicitation was made at some time, somewhere. The time
determines the place. It was not complete when the letter was
dropped into the post. If the letter had miscarried or had been
burned, the defendant would not have accomplished a solicitation.
The court below was misled by cases in which, upon an indictment
for obtaining money by false pretenses, the crime was held to have
been committed at the place where drafts were put into the post by
the defrauded person.
Commonwealth v. Wood, 142 Mass. 459,
462;
Regina v. Jones, 4 Cox, C.C.198. But these stand on
the analogy of the acceptance by mail of an offer, and throw no
light. A relation already existed between the parties, and it is
because of that relation that posting the letter made the
transaction complete.
See Brauer v. Shaw, 168 Mass. 198,
200. Here, a relation was to be established, just as there is at
the first stage of a contract when an offer is to be made. Whether
or not, as Mr. Langdell thinks, nothing less than bringing the
offer to the actual consciousness of the person addressed would do,
Contr. § 151, certainly putting a letter into a post office is
neither an offer nor a solicitation. "An offer is nothing until it
is communicated to the party to whom it is made."
Thomson v.
James, 18 Ct. of Sess.Cas. (2d Series) 1, 10, 15. Therefore,
we repeat, until after the letter had entered the building, the
offense was not complete; but, when it had been read, the case was
not affected by the nature of the intended means by which it was
put into the hands of the person addressed. Neither can the case be
affected by speculations
Page 209 U. S. 44
as to what the position would have been if the receiver had put
the letter in his pocket and had read it later at home. Offenses
usually depend for their completion upon events that are not wholly
within the offender's control and that may turn out in different
ways.
No difficulty is raised by the coupling of solicitation and
receipt in the statute. If receipt required personal presence, it
still would be obvious that "solicit in any manner whatever" was a
broader term. But the cases that have been relied upon to establish
that the solicitation did not happen in the building, although
inadequate for that, do sufficiently show that the money might be
received there without the personal presence of the defendant. If,
in answer to the defendant's letter, the parties addressed had
posted money to him in the building where they were employed, the
money undoubtedly would have been received there. To sum up, the
defendant solicited money for campaign purposes; he did not solicit
until his letter actually was received in the building; he did
solicit when it was received and read there, and the solicitation
was in the place where the letter was received. We observe that
this is the opinion expressed by the civil service commission in a
note upon this section, and the principle of our decision is
similar to that recognized in several cases in this Court.
In
re Palliser, 136 U. S. 257,
136 U. S. 266;
Horner v. United States, 143 U. S. 207,
143 U. S. 214;
Burton v. United States, 202 U. S. 344,
202 U. S. 387
et seq. We do not cite them more at length, as the only
dispute possible is on the meaning of the particular words that
Congress has used.
We may add that this case does not raise the questions presented
by an act done in one jurisdiction and producing effects in another
which threatens the actor with punishment if it can catch him.
Decisions in that class of cases, however, illustrate the
indisputable general proposition that a man sometimes may be
punished where he has brought consequences to pass, although he was
not there in person. They are cited in
In re Palliser,
supra. Here, the defendant was
Page 209 U. S. 45
within and subject to the jurisdiction of the United States to
the extent of its constitutional power, and the power is not in
dispute.
Ex Parte Curtis, 106 U.
S. 371;
United States v. Newton, 9 Mackey
226.
Judgment reversed.