Convicted in a federal court on six counts for violating three
different sections of federal law by a single sale of narcotics on
each of two different days, petitioner was sentenced to three
consecutive terms for each day's sale, the terms for each day's
sale to run concurrently with those for the other day's sale. He
moved under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to vacate the sentences as
unlawful.
Held: The sentences were not unlawful. Pp.
357 U. S.
387-393.
(a) The Court adheres to the decision in
Blockburger v.
United States, 284 U. S. 299. Pp.
357 U. S.
388-393.
(b) Though the three sections here involved grew out of a single
purpose to outlaw nonmedicinal sales of narcotics, they grew out of
three different laws enacted at different times, for each of which
Congress has provided a separate punishment, and Congress did not
intend that violations of all three should be treated as a single
offense when committed through a single sale. Pp.
357 U. S.
390-391.
(c)
Bell v. United States, 349 U. S.
81, distinguished. Pp.
357 U. S.
391-392.
(d) The result here reached does not offend the constitutional
prohibition of double jeopardy. Pp.
357 U. S.
392-393.
(e) The question of policy involved is for Congress to decide,
and this Court has no power to increase or reduce sentences for
such offenses. P.
357 U. S.
393.
100 U.S.App.D.C. 315, 244 F.2d 763, affirmed.
Page 357 U. S. 387
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a prosecution under an indictment containing six counts
for narcotics offenses. Four counts were based on provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and two counts on the Narcotic Drugs
Import and Export Act, as amended. The first three counts derive
from a sale on February 26, 1955, of twenty capsules of heroin and
three capsules of cocaine; the last three counts derive from a sale
of thirty-five capsules of heroin on February 28, 1955. Counts One
and Four charged the sale of the drugs, on the respective dates,
not "in pursuance of a written order" of the person to whom the
drugs were sold on the requisite Treasury form, in violation of
§ 4705(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. Counts Two and
Five charged the sale and distribution of the drugs on the
respective dates not "in the original stamped package or from the
original stamped package," in violation of § 4704(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1954. Counts Three and Six charged
facilitating concealment and sale of the drugs on the respective
dates, with knowledge that the drugs had been unlawfully imported,
in violation of § 2(c) of the Narcotic Drugs Import and Export
Act, [
Footnote 1] as amended by
the Act of November 2, 1951, 65 Stat. 767. In short, Congress had
made three distinct offenses in connection with the vending of
illicit drugs, and the petitioner, having violated these three
independent provisions, was prosecuted for all three as separate
wrongdoings, despite the fact that these violations of what
Congress had proscribed were compendiously committed in single
transactions of vending. Duty tried before a jury, petitioner was
convicted, and no question touching
Page 357 U. S. 388
the conviction is before us. In controversy is the legality of
the sentences imposed by the trial court. These were imprisonment
for a term of one to five years, imposed on each count, the
sentences on the first three counts to run consecutively, the
sentences on the remaining three counts to run concurrently with
those on the first three counts. Thus, the total sentence was three
to fifteen years. Petitioner moved, under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, to
vacate the sentence, claiming that, for all three counts, a
sentence as for only one count could be imposed. The motion was
denied, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, 100 U.S.App.D.C. 315,
244 F.2d 763, with expressions of doubt by two of the judges, who
felt themselves bound by
Blockburger v. United States,
284 U. S. 299. We
brought the case here, 355 U.S. 903, in order to consider whether
some of our more recent decisions, while not questioning
Blockburger but moving in related areas, may not have
impaired its authority.
We adhere to the decision in
Blockburger v. United States,
supra. The considerations advanced in support of the vigorous
attack against it have left its justification undisturbed, nor have
our later decisions generated counter currents.
That the
Blockburger opinion did not lay out with
particularity the course of anti-narcotics legislation is scant
basis for suggesting that the Court was unaware of it or did not
duly heed the relevant criteria for statutory construction in
dealing with the specific legislation before it. The Court was not
an innocent in the history of narcotics legislation.
Blockburger was not the first case that brought
prosecutions under successive enactments dealing with the control
of narcotics before the Court. At the time of
Blockburger,
it was not customary to make the whole legislative history
connected with particular statutes in adjudication part of the
conventional apparatus of an opinion. What is more to the point
about the
Page 357 U. S. 389
Blockburger decision is that the unanimous Court that
rendered it then included three Justices conspicuous for their
alertness in safeguarding the interests of defendants in criminal
cases and in their insistence on the compassionate regard for such
interests. Invidiousness is not implied in saying that Mr. Justice
Brandeis, Mr. Justice Butler and Mr. Justice Roberts [
Footnote 2] would not have joined in finding
that Congress established independent curbs as tactical details in
the strategy against illicit narcotics trade if it could be
reasonably maintained that what in fact Congress was doing was
merely giving different labels to the same thing. The fact that an
offender violates by a single transaction several regulatory
controls devised by Congress as means for dealing with a social
evil as deleterious as it is difficult to combat does not make the
several different regulatory controls single and identic. In
Blockburger, the offender was indicted, convicted, and
cumulatively sentenced for two separate offenses: selling forbidden
drugs not "in the original stamped package" (now § 4704(a) of
the Internal Revenue Code), and of selling such drugs not "in
pursuance of a written order of the person to whom such article is
sold" (now § 4705(a) of the Internal Revenue Code). The
petitioner here was likewise indicted, tried, convicted and
cumulatively sentenced for the two foregoing offenses and, in
addition, for violating the amended § 2(c) of the Narcotic
Drugs Import and Export Act. And so, while
Page 357 U. S. 390
Blockburger was sentenced to ten years for the two offenses,
petitioner was sentenced to a maximum of fifteen years. The Court
of Appeals inevitably found the
Blockburger case
controlling.
We are strongly urged to reconsider
Blockburger by
reading the various specific enactments of Congress as reflecting a
unitary congressional purpose to outlaw nonmedicinal sales of
narcotics. From this, the conclusion is sought to be drawn that,
since Congress had only a single purpose, no matter how numerous
the violations by an offender, of the specific means for dealing
with this unitary purpose, the desire should be attributed to
Congress to punish only as for a single offense when these multiple
infractions are committed through a single sale. We agree with the
starting point, but it leads us to the opposite conclusion. Of
course, the various enactments by Congress extending over nearly
half a century constitute a network of provisions, steadily
tightened and enlarged, for grappling with a powerful, subtle and
elusive enemy. If the legislation reveals anything, it reveals the
determination of Congress to turn the screw of the criminal
machinery -- detection, prosecution and punishment -- tighter and
tighter. The three penal laws for which petitioner was convicted
have different origins both in time and in design. The present
§ 2(c) of the Narcotic Drugs Import and Export Act derives
from an enactment of February 9, 1909, § 2, 35 Stat. 614. The
present § 4705(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 derives
from the Act of December 17, 1914, § 2, 38 Stat. 785, 786. The
present § 4704(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 derives
from the Revenue Act of 1918, § 1006, 40 Stat. 1057, 1130
(1919). [
Footnote 3] It seems
more daring than convincing
Page 357 U. S. 391
to suggest that three different enactments, each relating to a
separate way of closing in on illicit distribution of narcotics,
passed at three different periods, for each of which a separate
punishment was declared by Congress, somehow or other ought to have
carried with them an implied indication by Congress that, if all
these three different restrictions were disregarded, but, forsooth,
in the course of one transaction, the defendant should be treated
as though he committed only one of these offenses.
This situation is
toto coelo different from the one
that led to our decision in
Bell v. United States,
349 U. S. 81. That
case involved application of the Mann Act -- a single provision
making it a crime to transport a woman in interstate commerce for
purposes of prostitution. We held that the transportation of more
than one woman as a single transaction is to be dealt with as a
single offense, for the reason that, when Congress has not
explicitly stated what the unit of offense is, the doubt will be
judicially resolved in favor of lenity. It is one thing for a
single transaction to include several units relating to proscribed
conduct under a single provision of a statute. It is a wholly
different thing to evolve a rule of lenity for three violations of
three separate offenses created by Congress at three different
times, all to the end of dealing more and more strictly with, and
seeking to throttle more and more by different legal devices, the
traffic in narcotics. Both in the unfolding of the substantive
provisions of law and in the scale of punishments, Congress has
manifested an attitude not of lenity, but of severity, toward
violation of the narcotics laws. Nor need we be detained by two
other cases relied on,
United States v. Universal C.I.T. Credit
Corp., 344 U. S. 218, and
Prince v. United States, 352 U. S. 322. In
the former, we construed the recordkeeping provisions of the Fair
Labor Standards Act as punishing "a course of conduct." Of
Page 357 U. S. 392
the
Prince case it suffices to say that the Court was
dealing there "with a unique statute of limited purpose." 352 U.S.
at
352 U. S.
325.
Finally, we have had pressed upon us that the
Blockburger doctrine offends the constitutional
prohibition against double jeopardy. If there is anything to this
claim, it surely has long been disregarded in decisions of this
Court, participated in by judges especially sensitive to the
application of the historic safeguard of double jeopardy. In
applying a provision like that of double jeopardy, which is rooted
in history and is not an evolving concept like that of due process,
a long course of adjudication in this Court carries impressive
authority. Certainly if punishment for each of separate offenses as
those for which the petitioner here has been sentenced, and not
merely different descriptions of the same offense, is
constitutionally beyond the power of Congress to impose, not only
Blockburger but at least the following cases would also
have to be overruled:
Carter v. McClaughry, 183 U.
S. 365;
Morgan v. Devine, 237 U.
S. 632;
Albrecht v. United States, 273 U. S.
1;
Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.
S. 640;
American Tobacco Co. v. United States,
328 U. S. 781;
United States v. Michener, 331 U.S. 789;
Pereira v.
United States, 347 U. S. 1.
Suppose Congress, instead of enacting the three provisions
before us, had passed an enactment substantially in this form:
"Anyone who sells drugs except from the original stamped package
and who sells such drugs not in pursuance of a written order of the
person to whom the drug is sold, and who does so by way of
facilitating the concealment and sale of drugs knowing the same to
have been unlawfully imported, shall be sentenced to not less than
fifteen years' imprisonment:
Provided, however, That if he
makes such sale in pursuance of a written order of the person to
whom the drug is sold he shall be sentenced to only ten years'
imprisonment:
Provided
Page 357 U. S. 393
further, That if he sells such drugs in the original
stamped package he shall also be sentenced to only ten years'
imprisonment:
And provided further, That if he sells such
drugs in pursuance of a written order and from a stamped package,
he shall be sentenced to only five years' imprisonment."
Is it conceivable that such a statute would not be within the
power of Congress? And is it rational to find such a statute
constitutional, but to strike down the
Blockburger
doctrine as violative of the double jeopardy clause?
In effect, we are asked to enter the domain of penology, and
more particularly that tantalizing aspect of it, the proper
apportionment of punishment. Whatever views may be entertained
regarding severity of punishment, whether one believes in its
efficacy or its futility,
see Radzinowicz, The History of
English Criminal Law: The Movement for Reform, 1750-1833,
passim, these are peculiarly questions of legislative
policy. Equally so are the much mooted problems relating to the
power of the judiciary to review sentences. First the English and
then the Scottish Courts of Criminal Appeal were given power to
revise sentences, the power to increase as well as the power to
reduce them.
See 7 Edw. VII, c. 23, § 4(3); 16 &
17 Geo. V, c. 15, § 2(4). This Court has no such power.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
35 Stat. 614, as amended. This provision was subsequently
amended, 70 Stat. 570, 21 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 174.
[
Footnote 2]
For typical expressions of the attitudes of these members of the
Court,
see, e.g., Horning v. District of Columbia,
254 U. S. 135,
254 U. S. 139
(dissenting opinion of Brandeis, J.);
Burdeau v. McDowell,
256 U. S. 465,
256 U. S. 476
(same);
Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.
S. 438,
277 U. S. 471,
277 U. S. 485
(dissenting opinions of Brandeis and Butler, JJ.);
Sorrells v.
United States, 287 U. S. 435,
287 U. S. 453
(separate opinion of Roberts, J., joined by Brandeis, J.);
Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97,
291 U. S. 123
(dissenting opinion of Roberts, J., joined by Brandeis and Butler,
JJ.);
Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.
S. 319,
302 U. S. 329
(dissent of Butler, J.).
[
Footnote 3]
This statute, amendatory of the 1914 Act,
supra,
introduced the "original stamped package" concept.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN, dissenting.
The problem of multiple punishment is a vexing and recurring
one. It arises in one of two broad contexts: (a) a statute or a
portion thereof proscribes designated conduct, and the question is
whether the defendant's conduct constitutes more than one violation
of this proscription. Thus, murdering two people simultaneously
might well warrant two punishments, but stealing two one-dollar
bills might not. (b) Two statutes or two portions of a
Page 357 U. S. 394
single statute proscribe certain conduct, and the question is
whether the defendant can be punished twice because his conduct
violates both proscriptions. Thus, selling liquor on a Sunday might
warrant two punishments for violating a prohibition law and a blue
law, but feloniously entering a bank and robbing a bank, though
violative of two statutes, might warrant but a single
punishment.
In every instance, the problem is to ascertain what the
legislature intended. Often the inquiry produces few if any
enlightening results. Normally these are not problems that receive
explicit legislative consideration. But this fact should not lead
the judiciary, charged with the obligation of construing these
statutes, to settle such questions by the easy application of
stereotyped formulae. It is at the same time too easy and too
arbitrary to apply a presumption for or against multiple punishment
in all cases, or even to do so one way in one class of cases and
the other way in another. Placing a case in the category of "unit
of offense" problems or the category of "overlapping statute"
problems may point up the issue, but it does not resolve it.
Where the legislature has failed to make its intention manifest,
courts should proceed cautiously, remaining sensitive to the
interests of defendant and society alike. All relevant criteria
must be considered, and the most useful aid will often be common
sense. In this case, I am persuaded, on the basis of the origins of
the three statutes involved, the text and background of recent
amendments to these statutes, the scale of punishments prescribed
for second and third offenders, and the evident legislative purpose
to achieve uniformity in sentences, that the present purpose of
these statutes is to make sure that a prosecutor has three avenues
by which to prosecute one who traffics in narcotics, and not to
authorize three cumulative punishments for the defendant who
consummates a single sale.
Page 357 U. S. 395
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurs,
dissenting.
The first three counts of this indictment cover one sale of
narcotics made on February 26, 1955. The one sale was broken down
for purposes of the three counts into three crimes:
(1) petitioner made the sale "not in pursuance of a written
order," which is contrary to the requirement of 68A Stat. 551, 26
U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 4705(a);
(2) the narcotics were sold "not in the original stamped
package," which is contrary to the requirements of 68A Stat. 550,
26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 4704(a);
(3) petitioner "facilitated the concealment and sale," which is
in violation of 65 Stat. 767, 21 U.S.C. § 174.
Another single sale, one made on February 28, 1955, was likewise
broken down into three separate and distinct crimes.
Consecutive sentences were imposed for the three crimes
resulting from the first sale. Sentences imposed for the three
crimes resulting from the second sale were made to run concurrently
with each other and with the sentences imposed for the three
offenses resulting from the first sale.
Plainly, Congress defined three distinct crimes, giving the
prosecutor, on these facts, a choice. But I do not think the courts
were warranted in punishing petitioner three times for the same
transaction. I realize that
Blockburger v. United States,
284 U. S. 299,
holds to the contrary. But I would overrule that case.
I find that course necessary because of my views on double
jeopardy, recently expressed in
Hoag v. New Jersey,
356 U. S. 464.
And see 356 U. S.
Illinois, 356
Page 357 U. S. 396
U.S. 571. Once a crucial issue is litigated in a criminal case,
that issue may not be the basis of another prosecution. Here, the
same sale is made to do service for three prosecutions. The
different evidence test, which was adopted without much analysis by
the Court in
Carter v. McClaughry, 183 U.
S. 365,
183 U. S.
394-395 (
cf. Ex parte Nielsen, 131 U.
S. 176), would permit the practice. Yet I agree with
Bishop:
". . . in principle, and by the better judicial view, while the
legislature may pronounce as may combinations of things as it
pleases criminal, resulting not infrequently in a plurality of
crimes in one transaction or even in one act, for any one of which
there may be a conviction without regard to the others, it is, in
the language of Cockburn, C.J., 'a fundamental rule of law that out
of the same facts a series of charges shall not be preferred.'
*"
1 Criminal Law (9th ed. 1923) § 1060. I think it is time
that the Double Jeopardy Clause was liberally construed in light of
its great historic purpose to protect the citizen from more than
one trial for the same act.
That analysis was adopted by the Court in
Ballerini v.
Aderholt, 44 F.2d 352, 353, a case close on its facts to the
present one. There, two counts were charged from one sale: (1) a
sale without registration and payment of the tax and (2) a sale
without requiring a written order. The court said:
"The offense charged in each count was the unlawful sale of the
same ounce of heroin. As there was but one sale, it would seem to
follow that there was but one criminal act committed against the
laws of the United States. The failure of appellant to register and
pay the special tax, as charged in the first count, or to obtain a
written order, as charged in the second count, could not have been
the basis of a criminal
Page 357 U. S. 397
prosecution. It was only in the event of a sale that such
failure could become material. At last it was the sale, and not the
failure to register, pay the tax, or secure the written order, that
constituted the offense."
Cf. Mr. Justice Rutledge concurring in
District of
Columbia v. Buckley, 75 U.S.App.D.C. 301, 305, 128 F.2d 17,
21.
I would read the three present statutes from that approach. I
would hold that the prosecutor was given the choice of one of three
prosecutions for this single sale. I would resist a reading which
inferred that Congress intended multiple offenses from the same
sale, for that would not make the statutes square with the
Constitution.
*
Regina v. Elrington, 9 Cox C.C. 86, 90, 1 B. & S.
688.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, dissenting.
Even assuming the vitality of
Blockburger v. United
States, 284 U. S. 299, I
must dissent from the disposition of this case. In
Blockburger, the Court held that multiple punishment right
be imposed as the consequence of a single sale of narcotics,
provided that separate statutory offenses were involved in the same
transaction. In determining whether there were separate statutory
offenses, the Court said:
"The applicable rule is that where the same act or transaction
constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the
test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or
only one,
is whether each provision requires proof of a fact
which the other does not."
284 U.S. at
284 U. S. 304.
(Emphasis added.)
The Court's decision today is inconsistent with the principles
of
Blockburger because it allows separate offenses to be
proved and separate punishments to be imposed upon the proof of a
single fact. The petitioner
Page 357 U. S. 398
has been convicted of a sale of narcotics "not from the original
stamped package" in violation of 26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) §
4704(a), and for having "facilitated the concealment and sale" of
narcotics in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 174. But § 4704(a)
provides that
"the absence of appropriate tax-paid stamps from narcotic drugs
shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this subsection by
the person in whose possession the same may be found,"
and § 174 provides that,
"whenever on trial for a violation of this subsection the
defendant is shown to have or to have had possession of the
narcotic drug, such possession shall be deemed sufficient evidence
to authorize conviction unless the defendant explains the
possession to the satisfaction of the jury."
Therefore, under the statutes, proof of the single fact of
possession of unstamped narcotics suffices to convict the defendant
of offenses under either § 4704(a) or § 174. Since, under
Blockburger, punishment under separate sections can be
sustained only if "each provision requires proof of a fact which
the other does not," 284 U.S. at
284 U. S. 304,
the decision of the court below should be reversed.