The Selective Draft Law of May 18, 1917,
upheld as
constitutional on the authority of the
Selective Draft Law
Cases, ante, 245 U. S. 366, in
a case of conspiracy to violate the act by dissuading persons from
registering.
In reviewing directly a judgment of the district court in a
criminal case, when the constitutional questions upon which the
jurisdiction of this Court depends are not frivolous, but are
resolved against the plaintiff in error, other questions raised are
to be considered and passed upon.
It is well settled that, under § 37 of the Criminal Code, a
conspiracy to commit an offense, when followed by overt acts, is
punishable as a substantive crime, whether the illegal end has been
accomplished or not.
Upon a review of the whole record, the Court finds that the
objection that there was no evidence of guilt for the jury is
absolutely devoid of merit, and based upon the false assumption
that the power to review includes the right to invade the province
of the jury by determining questions of credibility and weight of
evidence.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 245 U. S. 475
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Because of the constitutional questions involved, the plaintiffs
in error prosecute this direct writ of error to reverse a criminal
conviction and resulting sentence imposed upon them. The indictment
upon which the conviction was had charged them with having, in
violation of §§ 37 and 332 of the Criminal Code,
unlawfully conspired together and with others unknown to induce
persons who, by the Selective Draft Law of May 18, 1917, c. 15, 40
Stat. 76, were under the duty to register, to disobey the law by
failing to register. Five specified overt acts were in the
indictment charged to have been committed in furtherance of the
alleged illegal conspiracy.
Seven grounds of error were assigned at the time of the
allowance of the writ: (1) the refusal of the court at the request
of the defendants to dismiss the indictment on the ground that the
formation of a conspiracy to induce persons not to register as they
were required under the law to do and the performance of overt acts
to carry out the conspiracy constituted no offense; (2) the action
of the court in refusing to grant a motion in arrest of judgment on
the same ground; (3) the refusal to set aside the verdict because
the facts proved did not constitute an offense against the United
States (4) the denial of a motion to dismiss the prosecution at the
request of the defendants on the ground that the Selective Draft
Law, upon which the alleged duty to register depended, was
repugnant to the Constitution and void, there being numerous
specifications on this subject involving a challenge of all power
in Congress to have enacted the law, and moreover upon the
assumption of some power an assertion of the repugnancy of the
statute to the Constitution resulting from various provisions which
the act contained; (5) the denial
Page 245 U. S. 476
by the court of a motion made at the close of the case to
dismiss the indictment on the ground that it stated no offense, as
previously insisted, and upon the further ground that, in any
event, there was no proof of the alleged conspiracy or the averred
overt acts or of any act adequate to show guilt; (6 and 7) the
refusal of a motion to set aside the verdict and in arrest of
judgment because the verdict was contrary to law and unsupported by
evidence upon grounds which had been previously urged and
overruled.
Putting aside the multiplication which results from urging the
same ground several times because, when once made, it was adhered
to and reiterated at different stages of the trial, it is clear
that the assignments embrace only three propositions: (1) the
failure to dismiss the prosecution because of the repugnancy of the
Selective Draft Law to the Constitution for the reasons relied
upon; (2) the refusal to dismiss because the indictment stated no
offense; (3) the refusal to dismiss because there was no proof of
conspiracy or of any overt acts adequate to have justified the
submission of the case to the jury. Indeed, in the elaborate
argument at bar, all the assignments of error are treated as
embraced under the propositions thus stated, and we therefore come
to dispose of the case from such point of view.
1. The grounds here made the basis of the charge that the
Selective Draft Law is repugnant to the Constitution are, so far as
they concern the question of registration provided for by that law,
identical with those which were urged in
Arver v. United
States, [Selective Draft Law Cases], ante, 245 U. S. 366, and
were there adversely disposed of. The ruling in that case therefore
also adversely disposes of all the relevant constitutional
questions in this. The duty nevertheless remains to consider the
other questions.
Brolan v. United States, 236 U.
S. 216-218.
2. The contention that the indictment stated no offense
proceeds
Page 245 U. S. 477
upon the assumption, reiterated in various forms of statement,
that no crime results from an unlawful conspiracy to bring about an
illegal act joined with the doing of overt acts in furtherance of
the conspiracy unless the conspiracy has accomplished its unlawful
purpose by causing the illegal act to be committed. This, however,
but disregards the settled doctrine that an unlawful conspiracy
under § 37 of the Criminal Code to bring about an illegal act
and the doing of overt acts in furtherance of such conspiracy is,
in and of itself, inherently and substantively a crime, punishable
as such irrespective of whether the result of the conspiracy has
been to accomplish its illegal end.
United States v.
Rabinowich, 238 U. S. 78,
238 U. S. 85-86,
and authorities there cited.
3. Sifting out of the arguments advanced to support the
proposition that there was no evidence whatever tending to show
guilt, contentions based upon the misconception as to the law of
conspiracy which we have just adversely disposed of, and, moreover,
contentions concerning an asserted misuse of discretion by the
court below in ruling on an application to postpone the trial,
which, as we have seen, were not even remotely referred to in the
assignments of error, we think all the arguments rest upon the
assumption that the power to review embraces the right to invade
the province of the jury by determining questions of credibility
and weight of evidence and from the residuum of evidence resulting
from indulging in and applying the results of such erroneous
assumption drawing the conclusion as to no evidence relied upon.
While this statement suffices to dispose of the case without going
further, we nevertheless say without recapitulating evidence that,
after a review of the whole record, we think the proposition that
there was no evidence whatever of guilt to go to the jury is
absolutely devoid of merit.
It follows that the judgment below must be and it is
Affirmed.