Section 189, Criminal Code, makes an offender of anyone cutting,
tearing, or otherwise injuring any mail bag with felonious intent,
and, as the wording plainly indicates that it was the intent of
Congress to protect every bag from felonious injury each time any
one mail bag is torn or injured, the offense is complete
irrespective of any attack upon, or mutilation of, any other
bag.
Under § 189, Criminal Code, successive cuttings of
different mail bags, with criminal intent, constitute separate
offenses.
The same course of conduct, and upon the same occasion, may
amount to separate offenses and be separately punished.
Gavieres v. United States, 220 U.
S. 338.
Where, as in this case, proof of cutting and opening one sack
completed the offense, and although the defendant continued the
operation of cutting into other sacks, proof of cutting one would
not have supported the counts as to the other sacks, there was not
one continuous offense punishable by a single penalty, but the
cutting into each of the several sacks constituted a separate crime
for which the defendant could be separately punished.
The facts, which involve the construction of § 189, Penal
Code, and the validity of separate convictions thereunder for
separate offenses of cutting open more than one mail bag are stated
in the opinion.
Page 237 U. S. 627
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, Ebeling, was convicted in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri of violations
of § 189 of the Criminal Code. The indictment contains seven
counts. The second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh charge
that, on the 21st day of January, 1910, said Ebeling did willfully,
knowingly, and feloniously tear, cut, and injure a certain bag then
and there used for the conveyance of mails of the United States,
each count describing the mail pouch so torn, cut, and injured by
its lock and rotary number, and in each count it was alleged that
the pouch in such count
Page 237 U. S. 628
named was in a certain railway postal car, then and there in
transit on a certain railroad, and that the act was done with
intent to forcibly, knowingly, and feloniously rob, steal, and
carry away the contents of the pouch. Ebeling entered a plea of
guilty, and was sentenced to pay a fine of $500 and be imprisoned
in the United States penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, for a
period of three years on the second count, and a like fine and
imprisonment were imposed because of each the third, fourth, fifth,
sixth, and seventh counts, to run consecutively with the sentence
under the second count; but it was provided that the imprisonment
as to the seventh count should begin, run, and terminate
concurrently with the sentences imposed under the other counts,
making in all a period of fifteen years' imprisonment. Ebeling,
having served the sentence of three years imposed under the second
count, applied to the District Court of the United States for the
District of Kansas for a writ of habeas corpus to procure his
release from further imprisonment, upon the ground that he had
endured all the punishment that could be legally imposed upon him
by imprisonment under said indictment. The district court denied
the application and refused to issue the writ, and appeal was then
prosecuted to this Court.
This case raises the question whether one who, in the same
transaction, tears or cuts successively mail bags of the United
States used in conveyance of the mails, with intent to rob or steal
any such mail, is guilty of a single offense, or of additional
offenses because of each successive cutting with the criminal
intent charged. If the successive cuttings into the different bags
constitute different offenses, then the court below was right in
refusing the writ of habeas corpus. If but a single offense was
committed, notwithstanding separate mail bags were successively cut
with the felonious intent named in the statute, then the appellant
was entitled to the writ, and should have been discharged by order
of the court upon the proceedings below.
Page 237 U. S. 629
Section 189, under which this indictment was prosecuted,
provides:
"Whoever shall tear, cut, or otherwise injure any mail bag,
pouch, or other thing used or designed for use in the conveyance of
the mail, or shall draw or break any staple or loosen any part of
any lock, chain, or strap attached thereto, with intent to rob or
steal any such mail, or to render the same insecure, shall be fined
not more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not more than
three years, or both."
Reading the statute with a view to ascertaining its meaning, it
is apparent that it undertakes to make an offender of anyone who
shall cut, tear, or otherwise injure any mail bag, or who shall
draw or break any staple or loosen any part of any lock, chain, or
strap attached thereto, with the felonious intent denounced by the
statute. These words plainly indicate that it was the intention of
the lawmakers to protect each and every mail bag from felonious
injury and mutilation. Whenever any one mail bag is thus torn, cut,
or injured, the offense is complete. Although the transaction of
cutting the mail bags was in a sense continuous, the complete
statutory offense was committed every time a mail bag was cut in
the manner described with the intent charged. The offense as to
each separate bag was complete when that bag was cut, irrespective
of any attack upon or mutilation of any other bag. The words are so
plain as to require little discussion or further amplification to
ascertain their meaning. The separate counts each charged by its
distinctive number the separate bag, and each time one of them was
cut, there was, as we have said, a separate offense committed
against the statute. Congress evidently intended to protect the
mail in each sack, and to make an attack thereon in the manner
described a distinct and separate offense.
The case is not like those charges of continuous offenses,
Page 237 U. S. 630
where the crime is necessarily, and because of its nature, a
single one, though committed over a period of time. Such is the
English case of
Crepps v. Durden, 2 Cowper 640, wherein
Lord Mansfield held that one who was charged with exercising his
ordinary trade on the Lord's Day could not be convicted of separate
offenses because of a number of acts performed on that day which
made up the offense of exercising his trade. It was there said that
every stitch that a tailor takes and everything that a shoemaker or
carpenter may do for different customers at different times on the
same Sunday did not constitute separate offenses, for the offense
was one and entire of exercising the trade and calling upon the
Lord's Day, and the object of the legislation was to punish a man
for exercising his trade on Sunday, and not to make a separate
offense of each thing he did in the exercise of that trade. So, in
In re Snow, 120 U. S. 274,
where an attempt was made to divide into separate periods of time
the offense of continuous cohabitation with more than one woman,
when the facts showed that there was but one offense committed
between the earliest day charged and the end of the continuing time
attempted to be charged in separate indictments. These and similar
cases are but attempts to cut up a continuous offense into separate
crimes in a manner unwarranted by the statute making the offense
punishable.
As we interpret the statute, the principle applied in
Gavieres v. United States, 220 U.
S. 338, is applicable, where this Court held that, when,
in the same course of conduct and upon the same occasion, certain
rude and boisterous language was used, and an officer insulted, two
offenses were committed, separate in their character, and this
notwithstanding the transaction was one and the same. The principle
stated by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in
Morey
v. Commonwealth, 108 Mass. 433, was applied, where it was held
that a conviction upon one indictment would not bar a conviction
and sentence
Page 237 U. S. 631
upon another indictment if the evidence required to support the
one would not have been sufficient to warrant the conviction upon
the other without proof of an additional fact, and it was there
declared that a single act might be an offense against each statute
if each required proof of an additional fact which the other did
not, and that conviction and punishment under one does not exempt
the defendant from conviction and punishment under the other
statute.
So, here, proof of cutting and opening one sack completed the
offense, and although defendant continued the operation by cutting
into other sacks, proof of cutting one sack would not have
supported the counts of the indictment as to cutting the others;
nor was there that continuity of offense which made the several
acts charged against the defendant only one crime.
We find no error in the judgment of the district court, and the
same is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.