1. A district judge is not disqualified by Jud.Code, § 120,
from sitting in the circuit court of appeals upon review of a
conviction for conspiracy involving no question that had been
considered by him in the district court, merely because he had
overruled a motion to quash the indictment made by a co-defendant
of the plaintiff in error, who was not tried, and in another case,
of like character but not involving the plaintiff in error, had
overruled a like motion, presided at the trial and sentenced a
defendant. P.
263 U. S.
588.
2. Where district court and circuit court of appeals concurred
in sustaining a verdict of conviction as founded on sufficient
testimony,
held that this Court would not reexamine the
question. P.
263 U. S.
589.
3. On a prosecution for conspiracy, testimony of one conspirator
as to what a deceased coconspirator had told him during the
progress of the conspiracy is admissible against a third in the
sound discretion of the trial judge. P.
263 U. S.
590.
Affirmed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals
affirming a conviction and sentence in a prosecution for conspiracy
to violate the National Prohibition Act.
Page 263 U. S. 587
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Certiorari to the circuit court of appeals to review a judgment
of that court affirming a conviction and judgment of petitioner
upon two indictments in which he was charged, with others, with a
conspiracy to violate the National Prohibition Act. The overt acts
manifesting the conspiracy and accomplishing it were
enumerated.
The indictments were numbered 348H and 350H. The defendants in
No. 348 were Thomas A. Delaney, Joseph Ray, Joseph Dudenhoefer,
Sr., Joseph Dudenhoefer, Jr., Joseph Dudenhoefer Company, a
corporation, and Joseph Giudice. The defendants in No. 350 were the
same parties as above, with the addition of Walter M. Burke.
The Dudenhoefers pleaded guilty, Giudice died, and Burke was not
tried. Delaney, petitioner, and Ray, were alone proceeded against,
the indictments being consolidated for the purpose of trial, and
resulted in a verdict of guilty, upon which there was a judgment of
imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years and a fine of
$10,000 imposed.
Both defendants joined in a writ of error to the circuit court
of appeals, composed of Judges Baker, Evans, and Page. The court
affirmed the judgment without opinion.
A petition for rehearing was made by petitioner (Ray not
joining), based on the ground that he was convicted upon
inadmissible and uncorroborated hearsay testimony, the
insufficiency of the evidence otherwise to establish his guilt, and
that he was deprived of a fair trial by the attitude of the trial
judge. The petition was denied.
Thereupon a petition was filed to vacate the orders theretofore
entered and to set the case for reargument.
Page 263 U. S. 588
The petition recited the fact of the indictments and the
proceedings and conviction upon them, and that certain other
indictments were filed, charging one Arthur Birk and others with
violation of the Prohibition Act, and that Birk made a motion to
quash the indictment, which motion was heard, considered, and
denied by Evan A. Evans, one of the judges of the district court.
It was further represented that a motion was made by Walter M.
Burke, a codefendant with petitioner, to quash the indictment
against him (Burke), which was also heard by Judge Evans and denied
by him.
It was further represented that Birk was placed on trial before
Judge Evans, found guilty, and sentenced to confinement in a
penitentiary and to pay a fine, and that, after the proceedings
thus detailed, including those against petitioner, Judge Evans sat
with the other judges who had presided at the trial of petitioner,
and took part in their deliberations respecting the penalties to be
inflicted upon petitioner and his codefendants. That Judge Evans
was also one of the Judges in the imposition of penalties upon the
various defendants.
It was represented that, by reason of the participation of Judge
Evans as thus detailed, he became and was disqualified to sit in
the circuit court of appeals, and that the order of that court
purporting to affirm the judgment of the district court was entered
without jurisdiction and was void, and that a rehearing and
reconsideration of the case should have been ordered.
In support of the motion, § 120 of the Judicial Code was
cited. Its provision is as follows:
"That no judge before whom a cause or question may have been
tried or heard in a district court, or existing Circuit Court shall
sit on the trial or hearing of such cause or question in the
circuit court of appeals."
The section seems not to have attracted the attention or
appreciation of petitioner until he had experimented with
Page 263 U. S. 589
other means of review and relief from the conviction adjudged
against him. It may be that he did not thereby waive the section
which may express a policy and solicitude in the law to keep its
tribunals free from bias or prejudgment, rather than to afford a
remedy to a litigant, yet it would seem that he should not be
permitted to assume the competency of the tribunal to decide for
him and its incompetency to decide against him. His action
certainly suggests the idea that it was an afterthought with him
that he was at any time in the situation from which the section was
intended to relieve. And was he? It will be observed that the
section precludes a judge or justice before whom a "Cause or
question may have been tried or heard" to "sit on the trial or
hearing of such cause or question in the Circuit Court of Appeals."
These words have received exposition in
Rexford v.
Brunswick-Balke Co., 228 U. S. 339,
228 U. S.
343-344. It is there said:
"Its manifest purpose is to require that the circuit court of
appeals be composed in every hearing of judges none of whom will be
in the attitude of passing upon the propriety, scope or effect of
any ruling of his own made in the progress of the cause in the
court of first instance, . . . which it is the duty of the circuit
court of appeals to consider and pass upon."
In this case, there was no question before the circuit court of
appeals that had been considered by Judge Evans in the district
court.
The charge that Judge Evans sat with the other judges and
considered with them the penalties to be imposed on the
codefendants of petitioner we do not think has justification in the
record. Besides, counsel at the oral argument said he was not
disposed to press it.
Petitioner attacks the judgment as not being supported by the
testimony, a great deal of which is detailed. The immediate reply
is that the probative sufficiency of the testimony has the support
of the district court (in which is included the verdict of the
jury) and of the circuit
Page 263 U. S. 590
court of appeals. It would take something more than ingenious
criticism to bring even into question that concurrence or to
detract from its assuring strength -- something more than this
record presents.
It is contended that hearsay evidence was received against
petitioner, and this is erected into a charge of the deprivation of
his constitutional rights to be confronted with the witnesses
against him. Hearsay evidence can have that effect, and its
admission against objection constitutes error.
Diaz v. United
States, 223 U. S. 442,
223 U. S. 450;
Rowland v. Boyle, 244 U. S. 106,
244 U. S. 108;
Spiller v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
253 U. S. 117,
253 U. S. 130.
And error is asserted, and in support of the assertion there is
general declamation and fault-finding with the case in its
entirety. The only exception, however, was of testimony given by
one of the conspirators of what another one of the conspirators
(the latter being dead) had told him, during the progress of the
conspiracy. We think the testimony was competent, and within the
ruling of the cases.
American Fur Co. v. United
States, 2 Pet. 358;
Nudd v. Burrows,
91 U. S. 426,
91 U. S. 4386;
Wiborg v. United States, 163 U. S. 632. And
it has been said that the extent to which evidence of that kind is
admissible is much in the discretion of the trial judge.
Wiborg
v. United States, 163 U. S. 632,
163 U. S. 658.
We do not think that the discretion was abused in the present
case.
There is nothing in the record which justifies a reversal of the
case, and the judgment of the circuit court of appeals is
Affirmed.