If the indictment under § 5440, Rev.Stat., sufficiently
charges the commission of overt acts within the district, it is
sufficient even if it states that the place where the conspiracy
formed is unknown.
The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution does not preclude the
place of trial of conspirators indicted under § 5440,
Rev.Stat., being in any state where an overt act was performed.
Hyde v. United States, ante, p.
225 U. S. 347.
A conspiracy entered into in violation of § 5440,
Rev.Stat., may be a continuous crime, and, if it was designed to
be, and was, continuous, every overt act was the act of all the
conspirators by reason of the terms of their unlawful plot.
Where there are successive overt acts during the existence of
the conspiracy, the period of limitation must be computed from the
date of the last of them properly specified in the indictment,
although some of them may have occurred more than three years
before the indictment was found.
The Constitution of the United States is not intended as a
facility for crime, but to prevent oppression; its letter and its
spirit are satisfied if, where a criminal purpose is executed, that
criminal purpose be punished. The criminal himself makes the venue
of his trial.
The facts, which involve the validity of an indictment under
§ 5440 Rev.Stat., are stated in the opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 393
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
These appeals involve the action of the circuit court in
dismissing petitions for writs of habeas corpus to discharge
appellants from the custody of appellee, United States Marshal for
the Northern District of California. Both appellants were held
under a warrant of removal made by the district court of that
district upon an order of commitment made by a United States
commissioner in proceedings for the removal of appellants to the
district court of Nebraska.
There was an indictment found against appellants in the District
Court of the Omaha Division of the District of Nebraska for the
crime of conspiracy, in which it was charged that they and others
whose names, aliases, and the numbers by which they were designated
as part of the means of effecting the scheme, and who in the
indictment are called "conspirators," "on the fifth day of April,
in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and seven, did
then and there" conspire with Ernest Fenby and other persons to the
grand jurors unknown
"to commit the acts made offenses and crimes by § 5480 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States, as amended by an act of
Congress enacted March 2, 1889 (25 Stat. 873, c. 393), entitled,
'An Act to Punish Dealers and Pretended Dealers in Counterfeit
Money and Other Fraudulent Devices for Using the United States
Mails.'"
And it is charged that appellants and other persons conspired in
devising and intending to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud
various persons out of their money and property, to be effected by
means of the post office establishment of the United States, and
particularly to defraud certain persons who were named. To avoid
repetition, they are called in
Page 225 U. S. 394
the indictment "victims," and they were to be defrauded of their
money and property by the conspirators'
"agreeing to organize, institute, conduct, and manage certain
horse races and athletic contests . . . as wagering contests upon
which money should be bet"
at Council Bluffs, in Iowa, and in certain places in Missouri,
Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, and Washington, and other places to
the grand jurors unknown, and "at Omaha, district aforesaid." The
races and contests were to be conducted in a fraudulent, unfair,
and dishonest manner, and to be controlled solely by the
conspirators, so that the outcome was known in advance, with
intention thereby to defraud the victims. The charge is made with
much circumstance and detail which it is not necessary to repeat,
except to say that the conspirators were to be represented as
millionaires traveling through the United States making investments
in municipal, county, and city bonds, and in other projects, and
having with them horses and athletes for their private amusement,
which they would match with those of strangers. One of the
conspirators was to be represented to be the secretary to the
others, and as having charge of the contests, which he had
theretofore always managed with great financial profit and gain as
well as to the amusement of his employers, but that he had become
aggrieved at the treatment he had received, and would so manage the
contests that the horses and athletes of the millionaires would
lose, and that he was desirous of betting against them and thereby
win their money for himself and for such other persons as would bet
for him as his secret agents. Others of the conspirators were to
represent themselves to the victims to be friends and relatives of
the "secretary," and had been requested by him to produce men of
financial standing to act as his secret agents in betting money
against his employers, the millionaires, and it was to be
represented that it was necessary for him to procure such persons
of financial standing and responsibility
Page 225 U. S. 395
to represent him and bet his money in order to conceal his
disloyalty to his employers. Such persons were not to bet their own
money, but the secretary's money, and be paid a percentage of the
winnings. The victims were to be induced to bring letters of credit
or negotiable paper for large sums of money, and thereby
established credit in the bank of the town where the races and
contests were to be conducted. And when they, relying on the
fraudulent representations of the secretary, should bet and wager
money furnished by him, they were to be informed that the money was
not in fact his, but was his employers' money; that they, the
employers, had or might become suspicious that the money was not
that of the victims, and the secretary not the stakeholder, and, to
prevent criminal prosecutions, the races and contests would be
called off; that therefore it would be necessary for the victims to
come to his (the secretary's) rescue and bet their money for him
and allay such suspicions and to insure the races and contests
proceeding to a finish as arranged, the money to be returned after
the races and contests. And it was to be represented that the races
and contests terminated unfortunately through an unusual and
deplorable accident, to-wit, a serious injury to one of the jockeys
or one of the athletes, and in such way that it would be unfair to
declare themselves winners, and additional races and contests were
to be conducted in the same manner and an opportunity afforded to
win back the money lost. Finally it was to be represented to the
victims that they had been engaged in a criminal transaction, which
had resulted in a serious injury to a person, and to avoid arrest
and criminal prosecution, they (the victims) were to depart from
the scene, and leave the money bet with the secretary, who was to
convert it to the use and gain of the conspirators. And this was
alleged to be fraudulent, and done with intention to deceive,
etc.
The manner of carrying out the scheme was alleged
Page 225 U. S. 396
to be to rent a United States post office box for the delivery
of the mail in the United States post office at Omaha, Nebraska,
and in other cities throughout the United States where any of the
conspirators should establish headquarters in furtherance of the
scheme and artifice to defraud, and the conspirators were to assume
and request to be addressed by the number of such boxes
respectively, and carry on their correspondence with each other
through and by means of the post office establishment of the United
States by the use of such assumed title numbers without the use of
their own proper names, and to assume other names and request their
victims to address them by such assumed names through and by means
of the post office establishment of the United States. And it is
charged that the conspirators, in further execution of their
scheme, were to take and receive letters so addressed from and out
of the United States post office at Omaha and other places which
were mentioned, and that they were to write and send letters to one
another by means of the post office establishment, which were to
contain and set forth their fraudulent and deceitful schemes, and
were to be shown to the victims for the purposes of inducing the
latter to turn over to the conspirators large sums of money. The
conspirators, it is charged, also used the post office
establishment to open correspondence with the victims and to
procure them to open correspondence with two of the conspirators,
whose names are given, in pursuance of the conspiracy.
It is alleged
"that the said wicked and corrupt conspiracy, combination,
confederation, and agreement was originally formed and entered into
by the said conspirators during the year 1905, the exact date
whereof is to the grand jurors unknown, in the United States of
America, the exact place and district whereof is to the grand
jurors unknown, and until the twenty-third day of February, in the
year 1909, continuously and
Page 225 U. S. 397
at at all times during the four years next preceding the said
twenty-third day of February,"
it, the conspiracy,
"was continuously in existence and in the process of execution
and operation, and including all of said times, and the said
conspirators did knowingly, falsely, wickedly, and corruptly
conspire, combine, confederate, and agree together as aforesaid,
and with said Ernest Fenby and said divers other persons to the
grand jurors unknown, as aforesaid."
Overt acts are alleged, one of which is the renting by one of
the conspirators under an assumed name of a post office box at
Omaha, Nebraska, and the receiving and sending of letters to the
"victims," which set forth the scheme in detail by which the
"millionaires" were to be imposed on, and the ease of its
accomplishment and assurance of success displayed. The indictment
contains copies of the letters.
The second count of the indictment alleged the conspiracy to
have been formed on the first of April, 1907, and the scheme of
fraud and deception was set forth in a more general way. The use of
the post office establishment was alleged, as in the first
count.
The original formation of the conspiracy was alleged, as in the
first count, to have been in a place and district to the grand
jurors unknown, but was continuously in existence and in process of
execution for four years next preceding the twenty-third of
February, 1909. The overt act alleged was the depositing of a
letter by one of the conspirators in the post office at Omaha,
Nebraska, which letter concerned the scheme and artifice to defraud
and to effect the object of the conspiracy.
It will be observed that it is charged that appellants and those
named in the indictments as "conspirators," "on April 5," 1907
(first count), "did then and there," and "on April 1," 1907 (second
count), "did then and there" conspire with Ernest Fenby and others,
and that races and contests upon which money was to be bet were
Page 225 U. S. 398
to be organized "at Council Bluffs, in the State of Iowa," and
that the conspirators "further then and there, and at Omaha,
district aforesaid," were to execute their scheme. And it is
charged that the conspiracy was to be effected in the manner
described, and that the conspirators, further to effect the object
of the conspiracy, were "to rent a United States post office box
for the delivery of mail, in the United States post office at
Omaha, in the State of Nebraska, district aforesaid," and in other
places.
The first overt act charged in pursuance of the conspiracy on
the fifth of April, 1907, is the renting of such box. To effect the
object of the conspiracy formed on April 1, 1907, the first overt
act is alleged to have been done in July, 1907 at Omaha.
It is, however, also alleged that the conspiracy was originally
formed and entered into during the year 1905 in the United States,
the exact date and place being unknown, and was continuously in
existence and in the process of execution and operation during the
four years preceding the twenty-third of February, 1909.
The assignments of error present the contentions that the
indictment is essentially deficient in the following
particulars:
1. It does not allege that the conspiracy was formed in
Nebraska, but, on the contrary, alleges that it was formed at some
place unknown to the grand jury.
2. It does not allege in any of its counts that the first overt
acts were done in Nebraska, but that they were done in a place and
district unknown.
3. The indictment shows that the conspiracies were formed more
than three years prior to the finding of the indictment.
4. It does not allege that appellants consciously participated
in any overt act within three years next preceding the finding of
the indictment.
The first two contentions involve the jurisdiction of the
Page 225 U. S. 399
court under the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution of the
United States, requiring a crime to be tried in the state and
district where it was committed. The third and fourth contentions
raise the question of the statute of limitations.
First, as to what the indictment shows as to the formation of
the conspiracy and the commission of overt acts. The appellants
consider these propositions entirely upon the assumption that the
only allegation that can be regarded is that which charges the
formation of the conspiracy originally in 1905, and not the
allegation of the formation of a conspiracy in 1907.
But nothing is specifically alleged as having been done to
execute the conspiracy as originally formed. It is true, there is
an allegation that the conspiracy was in existence and in the
process of execution and operation, which is somewhat vague, but is
certainly not inconsistent with the fact that whatever was done, if
anything, was done at Omaha.
It is charged that, on April 5, 1907 (first count), and on April
1, 1907 (second count), the appellants and other persons "did then
and there" conspire (we omit the adverbs). This might well be
contended, so far as removal proceedings are concerned, as an
allegation of the formation of the conspiracy in the District of
Nebraska, or certainly a distinct and explicit renewal of it. And
it would seem like giving technically too much effect to consider
that the agreement made in 1905, rather than its specific and
formal renewal in 1907, should determine the jurisdiction of its
trial. Besides, its continued existence and operation are alleged,
and we have seen if overt acts were done prior to 1907 they may
have been done at Omaha, and constituted, with those done
afterwards, a part of an entire scheme, to be executed by a
succession of acts.
It is only by the assumption and insistence that the conspiracy
was formed in 1905 that appellants give their
Page 225 U. S. 400
contentions any foundation whatever. If the conspiracy was
formed at Omaha in 1907, upon the supposition that the conspiracy
constitutes the offense and the state and district of its origin
are the state and district of its trial, the district court of
Nebraska had jurisdiction. And again, upon the supposition that the
first overt act completes the offense commenced by the conspiracy,
and by completing it determines the place of its trial, the
district court of Nebraska had jurisdiction. This follows no matter
where the overt act was done. We have pointed out, however, that
the indictment does not show that the first overt act was done at a
place and district unknown. The first overt act may have been
performed at Omaha.
If either view, therefore, be accepted, the judgment of the
circuit court dismissing the petitions for habeas corpus must be
affirmed.
If, however, we assume with appellants that the indictment
charges that the conspiracy was formed in 1905 and at a place
unknown to the grand jurors, the same result must be pronounced,
upon the authority of
Hyde v. United States, just decided.
ante, p.
225 U. S. 347. We
there held that the place of trial could be any state and district
where an overt act was performed. And we further held, following
United States v. Kissel, 218 U. S. 601,
that conspiracy might be a continuous crime. We there said,
distinguishing a crime from its results:
"But when the plot contemplates bringing to pass a continuous
result that will not continue without the continuous cooperation of
the conspirators to keep it up, and there is such continuous
cooperation, it is a perversion of natural though and of natural
language to call such continuous cooperation a cinematographic
series of distinct conspiracies, rather than to call it a single
one."
These remarks are especially pertinent to the case at bar. It is
alleged in the indictment that the conspiracy set forth was
designed to be, and was, continuous, and, being so, every overt
act
Page 225 U. S. 401
was the act of all the conspirators, made so by the terms and
force of their unlawful plot.
In
Lonebaugh v. United States, 179 F. 476, the Circuit
Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit considered the relation of
the overt acts to the conspiracy and their effect in determining
the application of the statute of limitations. The court said, by
Mr. Justice Van Devanter, then circuit judge:
"While the gravamen of the offense is the conspiracy, the terms
of § 5440 are such that there also must be an overt act to
make the offense complete (
Hyde v. Shine, 199 U. S.
62,
199 U. S. 76), and so the
period of limitation must be computed from the date of the overt
act, rather than the formation of the conspiracy. And where, during
the existence of the conspiracy, there are successive overt acts,
the period of limitation must be computed from the date of the last
of them of which there is an appropriate allegation and proof, and
this although some of the earlier acts may have occurred more than
three years before the indictment was found.
Lorenz v. United
States, 24 App.D.C. 337, 387,
s.c., 196 U.S. 640;
Ware v. United States, 154 F. 577,
s.c. 207 U.S.
588;
Jones v. United States, 162 F. 417,
s.c.,
212 U.S. 576."
If, however, the conspiracies may be regarded as distinct, then
one is charged as having been formed at Omaha in April, 1907, and
that overt acts were performed there to effect its object within
three years of the finding of the indictment, to-wit, October 7,
1909. These allegations establish the jurisdiction of the District
Court of Nebraska, and exclude the application of the statute of
limitations.
As the place of the overt act may be the place of jurisdiction,
it follows that the exact place where the conspiracy was formed
need not be alleged. This case illustrates the evil which a
contrary ruling would cause. The place where the conspiracy was
formed was unknown
Page 225 U. S. 402
to the grand jurors (and might be so in many cases), but it was
intended to be executed in a number of states of the Union, and
yet, under the rigor of the contention of appellants, the
conspirators could not be tried in any of them. In other words, not
the place of the activities of the conspiracy and where it incurs
guilt, but the place of its formation, which no one may know or can
find out, is the place of the jurisdiction of its trial. And what
compels this? It is answered: the Sixth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States. We have determined otherwise in
Hyde v. United States.
The Constitution of the United States is not intended as a
facility for crime. It is intended to prevent oppression, and its
letter and its spirit are satisfied if, where a criminal purpose is
executed, the criminal purpose be punished. It is there that its
victims are sought and defrauded. It is there that its perpetrators
should be brought to the bar of justice for their acts not for the
mere conception of them, but for the actual execution of them. The
venue of his trial is thus made by the criminal himself, not
determined by reasons or interests which may be adverse to him and
used to his injury.
Order dismissing petitions affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, dissenting:
These are appeals from orders denying writs of habeas corpus on
the same state of facts, which can be set out in a few words. The
petitioners were taken into custody in California for removal to
Omaha, in the District of Nebraska, for trial before the district
court there, and severally petitioned for habeas corpus on the
ground that the indictment showed that the Omaha court had no
jurisdiction of the alleged offense. The indictment is under
Rev.Stat. § 5440, amended by act of May 17, 1879, c. 8, 21
Stat. 4, for conspiring to commit an offense
Page 225 U. S. 403
against the United States, namely, to send and receive letters
through the post office in pursuance of a complex scheme to defraud
various people, contrary to Rev.Stat. § 5480, amended by act
of March 2, 1889, c. 393, 25 Stat. 873. The scheme contemplated the
hiring of post office boxes at Omaha and other places in six
different states and the hiring of a box there and the posting and
receiving of letters in that place by conspirators other than the
petitioners are alleged as overt acts done in pursuance of the
scheme. But it is alleged that the place where the conspiracy was
formed is unknown, no place is laid for its continuance, and the
petitioners are not shown to have been engaged in it in Omaha or
ever to have been in the place. Therefore, no jurisdiction is shown
unless the averment of the above-mentioned overt acts makes up for
all that is left out.
To deny the jurisdiction, however, I must go farther than was
necessary in
Hyde v. United States, just decided. For in
this case the offense against the United States named as the
proximate object of the conspiracy,
viz., the sending of
letters through the post office in aid of the ultimately intended
fraud, is alleged to have been accomplished, and indeed is laid as
the overt act. But all the parties to the conspiracy could have
been indicted in Omaha for the use of the post office there in
pursuance of their plan by some of their number, and it naturally
may be asked how it can be possible that the petitioners should be
collectively guilty of unlawfully using the mails in Omaha, but not
guilty of being combined there for that purpose?
The answer has been suggested, at least, by what I have said in
the case of Hyde. The parties are liable to punishment where the
prohibited act is done, not on the ground of a fiction that they
were present, but in spite of the fact that they were not present.
And they well may be dealt with there, if they can be reached, for
bringing about what
Page 225 U. S. 404
is deemed a harm in that place. But when they are punished for
being and not for doing, when the offense consists in no act beyond
the osmose of mutual understanding, they should be punished only
where they are -- only where the wrongful relation exists. The
United States can reach them equally, it is true, in either case;
but as it can try them only where the crime has been committed, the
test to be applied is the same that would be applied if the crime
arose under the law of one of the states. It does not follow from
the defendants' liability in Omaha for certain results of their
conspiracy that they can be tried there for the conspiracy itself.
I assume for purposes of decision, whatever misgivings may be felt
as to the justice of indicting for a conspiracy to do what actually
has been done, that an indictment will lie.
Reg. v.
Button, 11 Q.B. 929;
United States v. McDonald, 3
Dillon 543;
United States v. Rindskopf, 6 Biss. 259;
United States v. De Grieff, 16 Blatchf. 20;
Rex v.
Spragg, 2 Burr. 993. But I am of opinion that Omaha is not the
proper jurisdiction in which to bring it.
If the case were decided on the narrow ground that, for the
purposes of removal, an allegation of conspiracy "then and there"
in the middle of the indictment was to be taken to refer to the
caption and the place where the indictment was found, I should say
nothing. But, as general principles are thought to be involved, I
think it proper to state my opinion about them.
MR. JUSTICE LURTON, MR. JUSTICE HUGHES, and MR. JUSTICE LAMAR
concur in these views.