Respondent was convicted of illegal possession of a still and
carrying on the business of a distiller without a bond, in
violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5601(a)(1) and (4). The trial
judge's instructions informed the jury of statutory provisions
authorizing it to infer guilt from respondent's unexplained
presence at the still site. The Court of Appeals reversed the
convictions as violative of due process requirements.
Held:
1. The statutory presumption in § 5601(b)(2) is
constitutionally permissible, since there is a rational connection
between a defendant's unexplained presence at a still and the
comprehensive crime of the illegal distilling operation. Pp.
380 U. S.
65-68.
2. The statute deprives the trial judge of none of his normal
powers with respect to submitting the case to the jury or granting
a judgment notwithstanding a verdict. P.
380 U. S.
68.
3. The statute does not prevent the jury from being instructed
on the standards for reasonable doubt, and the jury here was
instructed that the statutory inference was not conclusive. Pp.
380 U. S.
68-70.
322 F.2d 292 reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
After a jury trial in the United States District Court for the
Middle District of Georgia, respondent Jackie Gainey was convicted
of violating 26 U.S.C. § 5601(a)(1)
Page 380 U. S. 64
(possession, custody or control of a set up, unregistered still
and distilling apparatus) and 26 U.S.C. § 5601(a)(4) (carrying
on "the business of a distiller or rectifier without having given
bond as required by law"). [
Footnote 1] In the course of his instructions, the trial
judge informed the jury of two statutory provisions which authorize
a jury to infer guilt of the substantive offenses from the fact of
a defendant's unexplained presence at the site of an illegal still.
[
Footnote 2] The Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Page 380 U. S. 65
reversed the convictions on the ground that these statutory
inferences are unconstitutional, [
Footnote 3] because it thought the connection between
unexplained presence at an illegal still and the substantive
offenses of "possession" and "carrying on" is insufficiently
rational to satisfy the due process requirements formulated by this
Court in
Tot v. United States, 319 U.
S. 463. We granted certiorari,
sub nom. United
States v. Barrett to review the exercise of the grave power of
annulling an Act of Congress. 375 U.S. 962.
If either statutory inference is valid, the judgment of the
Court of Appeals must be reversed, because concurrent sentences
were imposed by the District Court.
Emspak v. United
States, 349 U. S. 190,
349 U. S. 195;
Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.
S. 263,
279 U. S. 299
(1929). We find the inference authorized by § 5601(b)(2)
constitutionally permissible, and therefore reverse the judgment
without reaching the validity of § 5601(b)(1).
The legislative record shows that Congress enacted these
provisions because of
"the practical impossibility of proving . . . actual
participation in the illegal activities except by inference drawn
from [the defendant's] presence when the illegal acts were
committed. . . . [
Footnote
4]"
The statutes were passed against a backdrop of varying
formulations
Page 380 U. S. 66
among the Circuits of the standards which should shape a trial
judge's instructions to a jury in telling it what weight to accord
the fact of a defendant's unexplained presence at an illegal still
site. Long before 1958, the year the statutes were enacted, trial
judges had been instructing juries that a defendant's presence at a
still could be considered by them in determining whether the
defendant had participated in carrying on the illegal operation.
Barton v. United States, 267 F. 174, 175-176 (C.A.4th
Cir.).
Compare Wilson v. United States, 162 U.
S. 613. The Fourth Circuit had endorsed such a charge.
Barton v. United States, supra. In the Third and Fifth
Circuits, the precedents were less clear.
See Graceffo v.
United States, 46 F.2d 852 (C.A.3d Cir.);
Fowler v. United
States, 234 F.2d 697, 699 (C.A.5th Cir.).
The variations among the courts of appeals concerned the
reasonableness of inferring guilt of the substantive offense from
the fact of unexplained presence at the site of the criminal
enterprise. It is that question which Congress has now resolved in
favor of the established practice of trial judges to include the
inference in their charges. [
Footnote 5] And it is the same question of reasonableness
which the petitioner asks this Court to determine in passing on the
constitutionality of § 5601(b)(2).
As the Court of Appeals correctly stated in this case, the
constitutionality of the legislation depends upon the rationality
of the connection "between the facts proved and the ultimate fact
presumed."
Tot v. United
States,
Page 380 U. S. 67
319 U. S. 463,
319 U. S. 466.
The process of making the determination of rationality is, by its
nature, highly empirical, and, in matters not within specialized
judicial competence or completely commonplace, significant weight
should be accorded the capacity of Congress to amass the stuff of
actual experience and cull conclusions from it. As the record in
the Circuits shows, courts have differed in assessing the weight to
be placed upon the fact of the defendant's unexplained presence at
a still.
See United States v. Freeman, 286 F.2d 262
(C.A.4th Cir.). Yet it is precisely when courts have been unable to
agree as to the exact relevance of a frequently occurring fact in
an atmosphere pregnant with illegality that Congress' resolution is
appropriate.
The rationality of the inference provided by § 5601(b)(2)
must be viewed in the context of the broad substantive offense it
supports. Section 5601(a)(4) proscribes "carrying on" the
enterprise of illegal distillation -- an offense which is one of
the most comprehensive of the criminal statutes designed to stop
the production and sale of untaxed liquor.
See Vukich v. United
States, 28 F.2d 666, 669 (C.A.9th Cir.). Those who aid and
abet the enterpriser come within the statute's reach by virtue of
18 U.S.C. § 2 (1958 ed.).
United States v. Giuliano,
263 F.2d 582 (C.A.3d Cir.). Suppliers, haulers, and a host of other
functionaries have been convicted under the statute.
See United
States v. Pritchard, 55 F. Supp.
201 (D.C.W.D.S.C.),
aff'd, 145 F.2d 240 (C.A.4th
Cir.). Congress was undoubtedly aware that manufacturers of illegal
liquor are notorious for the deftness with which they locate arcane
spots for plying their trade. Legislative recognition of the
implications of seclusion only confirms what the folklore teaches
-- that strangers to the illegal business rarely penetrate the
curtain of
Page 380 U. S. 68
secrecy. [
Footnote 6] We
therefore hold that § 5601(b)(2) satisfies the test of
Tot
v. United States, supra.
But it is said that this statute is unconstitutional upon a
different ground -- that it impinges upon the trial judge's powers
over the judicial proceeding. We cannot agree. Our Constitution
places in the hands of the trial judge the responsibility for
safeguarding the integrity of the jury trial, including the right
to have a case withheld from the jury when the evidence is
insufficient as a matter of law to support a conviction. The
statute before us deprives the trial judge of none of his normal
judicial powers. We do not interpret the provision in the statute
that unexplained "presence . . . shall be deemed sufficient
evidence to authorize conviction" as in any way invading the
province of the judge's discretion. The language permits the judge
to submit a case to the jury on the basis of the accused's presence
alone, and, to this extent, it constitutes congressional
recognition that the fact of presence does have probative worth in
the determination of guilt. But where the only evidence is of
presence, the statute does not require the judge to submit the case
to the jury, nor does it preclude the grant of a judgment
notwithstanding the verdict. And the Court of Appeals may still
review the trial judge's denial of motions for a directed verdict
or for a judgment
n.o.v.
The statute does not prevent the jury from being "properly
instructed on the standards for reasonable
Page 380 U. S. 69
doubt."
Holland v. United States, 348 U.
S. 121,
348 U. S. 139.
In this case, the trial judge instructed the jury as follows:
"There is one other matter which I should mention. I charge you
that the presence of defendants at a still, if proved, with or
without flight therefrom, or attempted flight therefrom, if proved,
would be a circumstance for you to consider along with all the
other testimony in the case. Of course, the bare presence at a
distillery and flight therefrom of an innocent man is not, in and
of itself, enough to make him guilty. It is possible under the law
for an innocent man to be present at a distillery, and it is
possible for him to run when about to be apprehended, and such an
innocent man ought never to be convicted, but presence at a
distillery, if you think these men were present, is a circumstance
to be considered along with all the other circumstances in the case
in determining whether they were connected with the distillery or
not. Did they have any equipment with them that was necessary at
the distillery? What was the hour of day that they were there? Did
the officers see them do anything? Did they make any
statements?"
"It is your duty to explore this case, analyze the evidence pro
and con fairly. Presence at a still, together with other
circumstances in the case, if they are sufficient in your opinion
to exclude every reasonable conclusion except that they were there
connected with the distillery in an illegal manner, . . . carrying
on the business as charged . . . , if you believe those things,
would authorize you in finding the defendants guilty."
"And, under a statute enacted by Congress a few years back, when
a person is on trial for . . . carrying on the business of a
distiller without giving bond as required by law, as charged in
this case, and the
Page 380 U. S. 70
defendant is shown to have been at the site of the place . . .
where and at the time when the business of a distiller was engaged
in or carried on without bond having been given, under the law such
presence of the defendant shall be deemed sufficient evidence to
authorize conviction, unless the defendant by the evidence in the
case and by proven facts and circumstances explains such presence
to the satisfaction of the jury."
"
Now this does not mean that the presence of the defendant
at the site and place at the time referred to requires the jury to
convict the defendant if the defendant, by the evidence in the
case, facts and circumstances proved, fails to explain his presence
to the satisfaction of the jury. It simply means that a jury may,
if it sees fit, convict upon such evidence, as it shall be deemed
in law sufficient to authorize a conviction, but does not require
such a result."
(Emphasis supplied.) The jury was thus specifically told that
the statutory inference was not conclusive. "Presence" was one
circumstance to be considered among many. Even if it found that the
defendant had been present at the still, and that his presence
remained unexplained, the jury could nonetheless acquit him if it
found that the Government had not proved his guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.
Holland v. United States, supra. In the
absence of the statute, such an instruction to the jury would
surely have been permissible.
Cf. Wilson v. United States,
supra. Furthermore, in the context of the instructions as a
whole, we do not consider that the single phrase unless the
defendant by the evidence in the case and by proven facts and
circumstances explains such presence to the satisfaction of the
jury" can be fairly understood as a comment on the petitioner's
failure to
Page 380 U. S. 71
testify. [
Footnote 7]
Cf. Bruno v. United States, 308 U.
S. 287. The judge's overall reference was carefully
directed to the evidence as a whole, with neither allusion nor
innuendo based on the defendant's decision not to take the
stand.
In
McNamara v. Henkel, 226 U.
S. 520,
226 U. S. 525, the
Court approved a proceeding which did no more than "accord to the
evidence, if unexplained, its natural probative force." That is all
that Congress has done here. We cannot find that the law it enacted
violates the Constitution.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The evidence for the prosecution showed that an old Dodge truck
with darkened headlights drove up to the site of a secluded still,
hidden in a swamp in Dooly County, Georgia. The respondent, Jackie
Gainey, left the truck, turned on a flashlight, and walked toward
the still. There he was confronted by state and federal revenue
agents. The respondent attempted to flee, but, after a short chase,
he and his waiting colleagues were apprehended. Since the trial,
one of Gainey's co-defendants, Roy Lee Barrett, has died; the
other, Cleveland Johns, elected to reserve, and has completed, his
sentence.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 5601(b)(1) provides:
"
(1) Unregistered stills. --"
"Whenever on trial for violation of subsection (a)(1) the
defendant is shown to have been at the site or place where, and at
the time when, a still or distilling apparatus was set up without
having been registered, such presence of the defendant shall be
deemed sufficient evidence to authorize conviction, unless the
defendant explains such presence to the satisfaction of the jury
(or of the court when tried without jury)."
Section 5601(b)(2) provides:
"
(2) Failure or refusal of distiller or rectifier to give
bond. --"
"Whenever on trial for violation of subsection (a)(4) the
defendant is shown to have been at the site or place where, and at
the time when, the business of a distiller or rectifier was so
engaged in or carried on, such presence of the defendant shall be
deemed sufficient evidence to authorize conviction, unless the
defendant explains such presence to the satisfaction of the jury
(or of the court when tried without jury)."
These sections were introduced into the Code in 1958. The
statutory inferences are modeled after 18 U.S.C. § 545 (1958
ed.), originally § 4 of the Smuggling Act of 1866, 14 Stat.
178, 179. Similar wording appears in 21 U.S.C. § 174 (1958
ed.), the Narcotic Drugs Import and Export Act of 1909, 35 Stat.
614, the constitutionality of which was sustained in
Yee Hem v.
United States, 268 U. S. 178.
[
Footnote 3]
A third count charged a violation of § 5602, which
prohibits carrying on the business of a distiller with intent to
defraud the United States. The Court of Appeals reversed the
conviction on this count also, and the Government did not seek
review of this reversal. A fourth count, charging that the
defendants, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5180 (1958 ed.),
worked in a distillery on which no sign was placed showing the name
of the person engaged in the distilling, resulted in a directed
verdict of acquittal.
[
Footnote 4]
Hearings before a Subcommittee of the House Committee on Ways
and Means on Excise Tax Technical and Administrative Problems, Part
3, p. 95, 84th Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 5]
Bozza v. United States, 330 U.
S. 160, contributed to congressional concern.
See Hearings,
note 4
supra. But that case did not deal with the problem of
presence alone as insufficient evidence where the substantive
offense is "carrying on" the enterprise of illegal distillation.
Bozza's conviction for "carrying on" the enterprise of illegal
distillation was affirmed by this Court.
[
Footnote 6]
"Very few of the illicit distillers allow anyone except their
most intimate friends to approach their distilleries. Such places,
as a rule, are forbidden ground for the reason that, when the
violators are arrested, it is a difficult matter to prove them
guilty when so few persons have ever seen them operating their
distilleries."
Atkinson, After the Moonshiners, By One of the Raiders, at p.
23.
"The first requisite for an illicit still is a good stream of
cool water. . . ."
"The next requisite is seclusion. It must be placed where no one
ever travels, or even thinks of traveling."
Id. at p. 18.
[
Footnote 7]
Indeed, the better practice would be to instruct the jurors that
they may draw the inference unless the evidence in the case
provides a satisfactory explanation for the defendant's presence at
the still, omitting any explicit reference to the statute itself in
the charge.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting in part.
The statute which the Court finds constitutional provides:
"Whenever on trial for violation of subsection (a)(4) [making it
an offense to carry on the business of a distiller or rectifier
without having given bond as required by law], the defendant is
shown to have been at the site or place where, and at the time
when, the business of a distiller or rectifier was so engaged in or
carried on, such presence of the defendant shall be deemed
sufficient evidence to authorize conviction, unless the defendant
explains such presence to the satisfaction of the jury (or of the
court when tried without jury)."
26 U.S.C. § 5601(b)(2).
It would be possible to interpret the statute as compelling
judges to give the following instruction to juries:
"If you find that the defendant was present at the still, then
the law requires you to assume that he was there carrying on the
business of a distiller within the meaning
Page 380 U. S. 72
of the statute; but you need not make this assumption if the
defendant has given another explanation of his presence there and
you are satisfied of the truth of that explanation."
If the statute were read as compelling such an instruction, I
would find it constitutionally intolerable for the reasons so well
stated by my Brother BLACK.
The Court, however, interprets the statute as merely allowing,
not compelling, the jury to draw the inference of "carrying on"
from the fact of "presence." The jury is left free to reject the
inference if, in light of all the circumstances of the case, a
reasonable doubt remains as to the defendant's guilt. That is the
way the jury would normally function, apart from the statute. So, I
have concluded that the statute, as construed, merely provides a
rule of evidence, and no more.
There are, to be sure, dangers inherent in any statutory
presumption. Perhaps the jury will be overawed if it is told that
some particular factual inference has been enshrined in an Act of
Congress. Therefore, the Court quite rightly suggests that the
better practice would be to omit "any explicit reference to the
statute itself in the charge."
Ante, p. 71,
n 7. Or perhaps the judge may feel that the
statute restricts his power to withhold an insufficient case from
the jury or to grant a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The
Court reassures the trial judge that the statute does not thus
invade the province of his discretion. Nor is the function of the
appellate courts in any way circumscribed.
In my view, the acute danger in the statute as construed and
applied lurks in its provision that the jury may draw the inference
in question "unless
the defendant explains such presence
to the satisfaction of the jury. . . ." (Emphasis supplied.) If
this meant that the judge should instruct that the inference may be
drawn unless the defendant himself becomes a witness and
personally
Page 380 U. S. 73
explains his presence at the still, then, as my Brother BLACK
says, the statute would clearly subject the defendant to an
impermissible compulsion to testify. But more subtly compelling
instructions than that are outlawed by the same policy. It has long
been the rule in the federal courts that the defendant's failure to
testify ought not to be even the subject of unfavorable
comment:
"It is not everyone who can safely venture on the witness stand,
though entirely innocent of the charge against him. Excessive
timidity, nervousness when facing others and attempting to explain
transactions of a suspicious character, and offences charged
against him, will often confuse and embarrass him to such a degree
as to increase, rather than remove, prejudices against him. . . .
[C]ounsel is forbidden by the statute (now 18 U.S.C. § 3481)
*
to make any comment which would create or tend to create a
presumption against the defendant from his failure to testify."
Wilson v. United States, 149 U. S.
60,
149 U. S.
66-67.
Just as it is improper for counsel to argue from the defendant's
silence, so is it improper for the trial judge to call attention to
the fact of defendant's silence. Indeed, under 18 U.S.C. §
3481, the defendant is entitled as a matter of right to have the
trial judge expressly tell the jury that it must not attach any
importance to the defendant's failure to testify; or, if the
defendant sees fit, he may choose to have no mention made of his
silence by anyone.
Bruno v. United States, 308 U.
S. 287.
Page 380 U. S. 74
I have previously expressed my view that this rule against
comment on the defendant's silence is mandated by the Fifth
Amendment, because "[u]sing a defendant's silence as evidence
against him is one way of having him testify against himself."
Scott v. California, 364 U. S. 471,
364 U. S. 472
(dissenting opinion).
The charge in the present case does not, in my view, satisfy the
requirements of the Fifth Amendment. The judge told the jury that
the inference could be drawn
"unless the defendant, by the evidence in the case and by proven
facts and circumstances, explains such presence to the satisfaction
of the jury."
I believe the charge in that form runs counter to the federal
policy that forbids conviction on compelled testimony not only
because, as my Brother BLACK points out, it puts direct pressure on
the defendant to come forward and testify, but also because it
amounts in practical effect to an improper comment on the
defendant's silence where, as here, he resists the pressure and
does not take the stand in his own behalf. Unlike the Court,
therefore, I would not interpret the statute before us as
attempting a
pro tanto repeal of 18 U.S.C. § 3481 by
authorizing such an instruction.
*
"In trial of all persons charged with the commission of offenses
against the United States and in all proceedings in courts martial
and courts of inquiry in any State, District, Possession or
Territory, the person charged shall, at his own request, be a
competent witness. His failure to make such request shall not
create any presumption against him."
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting.
Respondent Gainey was tried and convicted of possession of an
unregistered still [
Footnote 2/1]
and of carrying on the
Page 380 U. S. 75
business of a distiller without having given bond [
Footnote 2/2] in violation of a federal
statute. Other provisions of the statute, [
Footnote 2/3] entitled "Presumptions," declare that
presence at the site of such a distillery
"shall be deemed sufficient evidence to authorize unless the
defendant explains such presence to the satisfaction of the jury. .
. ."
At the trial federal and state officers testified, among other
things, that they had seen Gainey at a still site. Gainey did not
testify. The trial court, quite appropriately if the foregoing
provisions are valid, instructed the jury
Page 380 U. S. 76
that Gainey's unexplained presence at the still was "deemed in
law sufficient" to convict. I think that the statutory provisions
which authorize such a charge deprived Gainey (1) of his
constitutional right to trial by jury, guaranteed him both in Art.
III, § 2, and in the Sixth Amendment; (2) of due process of
law guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment, which includes the right to
be tried for a crime in a court according to the law of the land,
without any interference with that court's judicial functions by
the Congress; and (3) of his right guaranteed by the Fifth
Amendment not to be compelled to be a witness against himself.
First of all, let me say that I am at a loss to understand the
Court's puzzling statement that,
"where the only evidence is of presence the statute does not
require the judge to submit the case to the jury, nor does it
preclude the grant of a judgment notwithstanding the verdict."
The provisions in question both say unqualifiedly that "presence
of the defendant shall be deemed sufficient evidence to authorize
conviction" unless the defendant explains his presence. The Court
holds that this statutory command in § 5601(b)(2) is valid,
[
Footnote 2/4] but then, for some
reason, adds that judges are free to ignore it or, after telling
juries that they may rely on it, are free to set aside the verdicts
of those juries which do. In other words, under the Court's
holding, the judge is left free to take the extraordinary course of
following a valid statute or not, as he chooses. Judges are not
usually given such unlimited discretion to disregard valid
statutes. And as the Court indicates elsewhere in its opinion, it
was to prevent judges from setting aside jury verdicts based on
presence alone that Congress passed this statute in the first
place. Besides being almost self-contradictory, it amounts to an
emasculation of
Page 380 U. S. 77
those statutory provisions, I think, to say that the judge was
not required to tell the jury about them. But whether or not he was
bound to do so, the fact is that here, he did, and so this jury
deliberated with the judge's solemn instruction that Congress had
decided that proof of mere unexplained presence at a still was
sufficient to convict Gainey of having illegally possessed it or
carried on its business. Few jurors could have failed to believe
that it was their duty to convict under this charge if presence was
proved, and few judges could have failed to believe it was their
duty to uphold such a conviction, even though all of them in a
particular case might have felt that mere presence alone was not
enough to show guilt.
It has always been recognized that the guaranty of trial by jury
in criminal cases means that the jury is to be the factfinder. This
is the only way in which a jury can perform its basic
constitutional function of determining the guilt or innocence of a
defendant.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Toth v.
Quarles, 350 U. S. 11,
350 U. S. 15-19;
Reid v. Covert, 354 U. S. 1,
354 U. S. 5-10
(opinion announcing judgment). And, of course, this
constitutionally established power of a jury to determine guilt or
innocence of a defendant charged with crime cannot be taken away by
Congress, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part. Obviously, a
necessary part of this power, vested by the Constitution in juries
(or in judges when juries are waived), is the exclusive right to
decide whether evidence presented at trial is sufficient to
convict. I think it flaunts the constitutional power of courts and
juries for Congress to tell them what "shall be deemed sufficient
evidence to authorize conviction." And if Congress could not thus
directly encroach upon the judge's or jury's exclusive right to
declare what evidence is sufficient to prove the facts necessary
for conviction, it should not be allowed to do so merely by
labeling its encroachment a "presumption." Neither
Tot v.
United States, 319 U. S. 463,
relied
Page 380 U. S. 78
on by the Court as supporting this presumption, nor any case
cited in
Tot approved such an encroachment on the power of
judges or juries. In fact, so far as I can tell, the problem of
whether Congress can so restrict the power of court and jury in a
criminal case in a federal court has never been squarely presented
to or considered by this Court, perhaps because challenges to
presumptions have arisen in many crucially different contexts, but
nevertheless have generally failed to distinguish between
presumptions used in different ways, treating them as if they are
either all valid or all invalid, regardless of the rights on which
their use may impinge. Because the Court also fails to
differentiate among the different circumstances in which
presumptions may be utilized and the different consequences which
will follow, I feel it necessary to say a few words on that subject
before considering specifically the validity of the use of these
presumptions in the light of the circumstances and consequences of
their use.
In its simplest form, a presumption is an inference permitted or
required by law of the existence of one fact, which is unknown or
which cannot be proved, from another fact which has been proved.
The fact presumed may be based on a very strong probability, a weak
supposition or an arbitrary assumption. The burden on the party
seeking to prove the fact may be slight, as in a civil suit, or
very heavy -- proof beyond a reasonable doubt -- as in a criminal
prosecution. This points up the fact that statutes creating
presumptions cannot be treated as fungible, that is, as
interchangeable for all uses and all purposes. The validity of each
presumption must be determined in the light of the particular
consequences that flow from its use. When matters of trifling
moment are involved, presumptions may be more freely accepted, but,
when consequences of vital importance to litigants and to the
administration of justice are at stake, a more careful scrutiny is
necessary.
Page 380 U. S. 79
In judging the constitutionality of legislatively created
presumptions, this Court has evolved an initial criterion which
applies alike to all kinds of presumptions: that, before a
presumption may be relied on, there must be a rational connection
between the facts inferred and the facts which have been proved by
competent evidence, that is, the facts proved must be evidence
which is relevant, tending to prove (though not necessarily
conclusively) the existence of the fact presumed. And courts have
undoubtedly shown an inclination to be less strict about the
logical strength of presumptive inferences they will permit in
civil cases than about those which affect the trial of crimes. The
stricter scrutiny in the latter situation follows from the fact
that the burden of proof in a civil lawsuit is ordinarily merely a
preponderance of the evidence, while, in a criminal case, where a
man's life, liberty, or property is at stake, the prosecution must
prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Morrison v.
California, 291 U. S. 82;
291 U. S. 96-97.
The case of
Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.
S. 219, is a good illustration of this principle. There,
Bailey was accused of violating an Alabama statute which made it a
crime to fail to perform personal services after obtaining money by
contracting to perform them, with an intent to defraud the
employer. The statute also provided that refusal or failure to
perform the services, or to refund money paid for them, without
just cause, constituted "
prima facie evidence"
(
i.e., gave rise to a presumption) of the intent to injure
or defraud. This Court, after calling attention to prior cases
dealing with the requirement of rationality, passed over the test
of rationality and held the statute invalid on another ground.
Looking beyond the rational relationship doctrine, the Court held
that the use of this presumption by Alabama against a man accused
of crime would amount to a violation of the Thirteenth Amendment to
the Constitution, which forbids "involuntary
Page 380 U. S. 80
servitude, except as a punishment for crime." In so deciding,
the Court made it crystal clear that rationality is only the first
hurdle which a legislatively created presumption must clear -- that
a presumption, even if rational, cannot be used to convict a man of
crime if the effect of using the presumption is to deprive the
accused of a constitutional right. In
Bailey, the
constitutional right was given by the Thirteenth Amendment. In the
case before us, the accused, in my judgment, has been denied his
right to the kind of trial by jury guaranteed by Art. III, §
2, and the Sixth Amendment, as well as to due process of law and
freedom from self-incrimination guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
And, of course, the principle announced in the
Bailey case
was not limited to rights guaranteed by the Thirteenth Amendment.
The Court said in
Bailey:
"It is apparent that a constitutional prohibition cannot be
transgressed indirectly by the creation of a statutory presumption
any more than it can be violated by direct enactment. The power to
create presumptions is not a means of escape from constitutional
restrictions."
219 U.S. at
219 U. S.
239.
Thus, the Court held that presumptions, while often valid (and
some of which, I think, like the presumption of death based on long
unexplained absence, may perhaps be even salutary in effect), must
not be allowed to stand where they abridge or deny a specific
constitutional guarantee. It is one thing to rely on a presumption
to justify conditional administration of the estate of a person
absent without explanation for seven years,
see Cunnius v.
Reading School District, 198 U. S. 458;
compare Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S. 34; it
would be quite another to use the presumption of death from seven
years' absence to convict a man of murder. I do not think it can be
denied that use of the statutory presumptions in the case
before
Page 380 U. S. 81
us, at the very least, seriously impaired Gainey's
constitutional right to have a jury weigh the facts of his case
without any congressional interference through predetermination of
what evidence would be sufficient to prove the facts necessary to
convict in a particular case.
The
Bailey case also emphatically answers the Court's
insistence that this encroachment on Gainey's constitutional rights
was justified or neutralized by the trial court's instruction that,
while evidence of unexplained presence was sufficient under the
statute to convict, the jury nonetheless was not compelled to
convict. This same kind of contention was made to this Court and
rejected in
Bailey, where the Alabama Supreme Court had
upheld that State's presumption on the ground that,
"with such evidence before them, the jury are still left free to
find the accused guilty or not guilty according as they may be
satisfied of his guilt or not by the whole evidence."
Bailey v. State, 161 Ala. 75, 78, 49 So. 886, 887. This
Court answered that contention then, as I think it should now,
saying:
"The point is that, in such a case, the statute
authorizes the jury to convict. It is not enough to say
that the jury may not accept that evidence as alone sufficient, for
the jury may accept it, and they have the express warrant of the
statute to accept it is as a basis for their verdict."
219 U.S. at
219 U. S. 235.
(Emphasis in original.) And the Court added that
"The normal assumption is that the jury will follow the statute,
and, acting in accordance with the authority it confers, will
accept as sufficient what the statute expressly so describes."
Id. at
219 U. S.
237.
Even if I could accept the doctrine that Congress, after
declaring that certain conduct shall be a crime, has further power
to tell judges and juries that certain evidence shall be sufficient
to prove that conduct and convict
Page 380 U. S. 82
a defendant, I could not agree that these statutory presumptions
are constitutional. They declare mere presence at a still site,
without more, to be sufficient evidence to convict of the crimes of
carrying on a distillery business and possessing a still. [
Footnote 2/5] While presence at a still is
unquestionably a relevant circumstance to add to others to prove
possession or operation of a still, I could not possibly agree that
mere presence is sufficient, in and of itself, without any
supporting evidence, to permit a finding that, beyond a reasonable
doubt, the person present carried on a distillery business or
possessed a still, or even aided and abetted in committing those
crimes. Indeed, with respect to the crime of possession, as the
Court concedes, we held squarely to the contrary in
Bozza v.
United States, 330 U. S. 160,
quite properly, I think. In setting aside the
Bozza
conviction for possession of a still, which had been based on mere
presence at a still, this Court was acting in accordance with the
historic principle that
"independent trial judges and independent appellate judges have
a most important place under our constitutional plan, since they
have power to set aside convictions."
United States ex rel. Toth v. Quarles, 350 U. S.
11,
350 U. S. 19.
This judicial responsibility to pass on the sufficiency of the
evidence must be exercised in each case, no more to be controlled
by a general congressional enactment than it could be by a special
act directed to one case only. [
Footnote 2/6] This protective function of the court is
amply demonstrated in the case before us: while Gainey was
originally indicted on four counts,
Page 380 U. S. 83
the trial judge directed a verdict of acquittal on one [
Footnote 2/7] and the Court of Appeals
ordered acquittal on another. [
Footnote
2/8]
It indeed is true, as the Court suggests, that it was to make
convictions possible on no more evidence than presence that the
presumption statute here under consideration was passed.
Undoubtedly a presumption which can be used to produce convictions
without the necessity of proving a crucial element of the crime
charged -- and a sometimes difficult-to-prove element at that
[
Footnote 2/9] -- is a boon to
prosecutors and an incongruous snare for defendants in a country
that claims to require proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Quite accurately such a use of a presumption has been described as
"First Aid to the District Attorney." [
Footnote 2/10] Instead of supporting the
constitutionality of such a use of statutory presumptions, however,
I think this argument based on necessity and convenience points out
its fatal defects. I suppose no one would deny that the
Government's burden would also be made lighter if the defendant was
not represented by counsel,
compare Gideon v. Wainwright,
372 U. S. 335,
Page 380 U. S. 84
or if the jury could receive and consider confessions extorted
by torture,
compare Brown v. Mississippi, 297 U.
S. 278, or if evidence obtained from defendants through
illegal searches and seizures could be used against them,
compare Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U. S. 643, but
this Court has not hesitated to strike down such encroachments on
those constitutional rights. Yet here the Court sanctions a method
less crude, but just as effective, to deny Gainey his
constitutional right to a trial by jury. [
Footnote 2/11]
I cannot subscribe to the idea that any one of the
constitutional grants of power to Congress enumerated in Art. I,
§ 8, including the Necessary and Proper Clause, contains
either an express or an implied power of Congress to instruct
juries as to what evidence is sufficient to convict defendants in
particular cases. [
Footnote 2/12]
Congress can
Page 380 U. S. 85
undoubtedly create crimes, but it cannot constitutionally try
them. The Constitution specifically prohibits bills of attainder.
Congress can declare certain conduct a crime, unless barred by some
constitutional provision, but it must, if true to our Constitution
of divided powers and the Fifth Amendment's command that cases be
tried according to due process of law, leave the trial of those
crimes to the courts, in which judges or juries can decide the
facts on their own judgment without legislative constraint and
judges can set aside conviction which they believe are not
justified by the evidence.
See Tot v. United States,
319 U. S. 463,
319 U. S. 473
(concurring opinion). "[I]t is not within the province of a
legislature to declare an individual guilty or presumptively guilty
of a crime."
McFarland v. American Sugar Refining Co.,
241 U. S. 79,
241 U. S. 86.
See Manley v. Georgia, 279 U. S. 1. Yet,
viewed realistically, that is what the presumption which the Court
today approves does in this case. I think that the presumption
which should govern instead in criminal trials in the courts of
this country is the time-honored presumption of innocence accorded
to all criminal defendants until they are proved guilty by
competent evidence.
Nor can a power of Congress to detract from the constitutional
power of juries and judges to decide what facts are enough to
convict be implied because of the power of Congress to make
procedural rules or rules of evidence.
See Ex parte Fisk,
113 U. S. 713,
113 U. S. 720.
It is not disputed that Congress has power to prescribe rules
governing admissibility of evidence and purely procedural matters.
The Congress unquestionably could declare the fact of presence to
be admissible evidence, for certainly it is relevant when
considered along with other circumstances. Yet this power to say
what shall or shall not be admissible in no way empowers Congress
to determine what facts, once admitted, suffice to prove guilt
beyond a reasonable
Page 380 U. S. 86
doubt. [
Footnote 2/13] And I
certainly cannot join the Court when it says:
"The process of making the determination of rationality is, by
its nature, highly empirical, and, in matters not within
specialized judicial competence or completely commonplace,
significant weight should be accorded the capacity of Congress to
amass the stuff of actual experience and cull conclusions from
it."
The implication of this statement is that somehow Congress is
better qualified to decide what facts are sufficient to convict
defendants than are courts and juries. I accept the proposition
that Congress is the proper branch of our Government to decide
legislative policies and enact general laws, and that, in so doing,
it must of necessity deal with facts to some extent. This is as the
Constitution provides. But Congress is not authorized, nor has it
any special "expertise" with which I am familiar which entitles it,
to direct juries as to what conclusions they may or must draw from
the unique facts of specific criminal cases tried in federal
courts. Moreover, even were I to assume that Congress does have an
expertise to assess facts in lawsuits which is superior to that of
juries and judges, I still could not join the Court's opinion, for
I think that the Founders of our Government decided for us that
these are matters "within specialized" -- and exclusive --
"judicial
Page 380 U. S. 87
competence." As this Court has said with reference to jury trial
of facts:
"whether right or wrong, the premise underlying the
constitutional method for determining guilt or innocence in federal
courts is that laymen are better than specialists to perform this
task."
United States ex rel. Toth v. Quarles, 350 U. S.
11,
350 U. S.
18.
Besides impairing Gainey's right to trial by jury according to
due process safeguards, the statutes in this case, I think,
violated Gainey's constitutional rights in still another way. These
statutory presumptions must tend, when incorporated into an
instruction, as they were here, to influence the jury to reach an
inference which the trier of fact might not otherwise have though
justified, to push some jurors to convict who might not otherwise
have done so.
Cf. Pollock v. Williams, 322 U. S.
4,
322 U. S. 15. The
undoubted practical effect of letting guilt rest on unexplained
presence alone is to force a defendant to come forward and testify,
however much he may think doing so may jeopardize his chances of
acquittal, since, if he does not, he almost certainly destroys
those chances. This is compulsion, which I think runs counter to
the Fifth Amendment's purpose to forbid convictions on compelled
testimony. The compulsion here is, of course, more subtle and less
cruel physically than compulsion by torture, but it is nonetheless
compulsion, and it is nonetheless effective. I am aware that this
Court, in
Yee Hem v. United States, 268 U.
S. 178,
268 U. S. 185,
held that use of a presumptive squeeze like this one did not amount
to a form of compulsion forbidden by the Fifth Amendment. The
Court's reasoning was contained in a single paragraph, the central
argument of which was that, despite a presumption like this, a
defendant is left "entirely free to testify or not as he chooses."
That argument, it seems to me, would also justify admitting in
evidence a confession
Page 380 U. S. 88
extorted by a policeman's pointing a gun at the head of an
accused, on the theory that the man being threatened was entirely
free to confess or not, as he chose. I think the holding in
Yee
Hem is completely out of harmony with the Fifth Amendment's
prohibition against compulsory self-incrimination, and I would
overrule it.
See Feldman v. United States, 322 U. S.
487,
322 U. S. 494
(dissenting opinion);
compare Leyra v. Denno, 347 U.
S. 556.
See also State v. Lapointe, 81 N.H.
227, 123 A. 692, quoted with approval in the opinion of the court
below, 322 F.2d 292, 296 (C.A.5th Cir.).
For all the foregoing reasons, I think that these two statutory
presumptions by which Congress has tried to relieve the Government
of its burden of proving a man guilty and to take away from courts
and juries the function and duty of deciding guilt or innocence
according to the evidence before them, unconstitutionally encroach
on the functions of courts and deny persons accused of crime rights
which our Constitution guarantees them. The most important and most
crucial action the courts take in trying people for crime is to
resolve facts. This is a judicial, not a legislative, function. I
think that, in passing these two sections, Congress stepped over
its constitutionally limited bounds and encroached on the
constitutional power of courts to try cases. I would therefore
affirm the judgment of the court below and grant Gainey a new trial
by judge and jury with all the protections accorded by the law of
the land.
[
Footnote 2/1]
26 U.S.C. § 5601(a)(1) (1958 ed.) provides:
"Offenses."
"Any person who --"
"(1) Unregistered stills."
"Has in his possession or custody, or under his control, any
still or distilling apparatus set up which is not registered, as
required by section 5179(a) . . ."
"
* * * *"
"shall be fined not more than $10,000, or imprisoned not more
than 5 years, or both, for each such offense."
[
Footnote 2/2]
26 U.S.C. § 5601(a)(4) (1958 ed.) provides:
"Offenses."
"Any person who --"
"
* * * *"
"
(4) Failure or refusal of distiller or rectifier to give
bond."
"Carries on the business of a distiller or rectifier without
having given bond as required by law . . ."
"
* * * *"
"shall be fined not more than $10,000, or imprisoned not more
than 5 years, or both, for each such offense."
[
Footnote 2/3]
Section 5601(b)(1) provides:
"
(b) Presumptions."
"
(1) Unregistered stills. --"
"Whenever on trial for violation of subsection (a)(1) the
defendant is shown to have been at the site or place where, and at
the time when, a still or distilling apparatus was set up without
having been registered, such presence of the defendant shall be
deemed sufficient evidence to authorize conviction, unless the
defendant explains such presence to the satisfaction of the jury
(or of the court when tried without jury)."
Section 5601(b)(2) provides:
"
(2) Failure or refusal of distiller or rectifier to give
bond. --"
"Whenever on trial for violation of subsection (a)(4) the
defendant is shown to have been at the site or place where, and at
the time when, the business of a distiller or rectifier was so
engaged in or carried on, such presence of the defendant shall be
deemed sufficient evidence to authorize conviction, unless the
defendant explains such presence to the satisfaction of the jury
(or of the court when tried without jury)."
[
Footnote 2/4]
Although the Court does not consider the validity of §
5601(b)(1), its reasoning surely would seem to apply to that
section as well.
[
Footnote 2/5]
I agree with the Court's holding that the language of §
5601(b)(2) "permits the judge to submit a case to the jury on the
basis of the accused's presence alone." The Court does not suggest
any reason why it would interpret the identical language in §
5601(b)(1) any differently.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Such an act obviously would be proscribed as a bill of
attainder, forbidden by Art. I, § 9.
See United States v.
Lovett, 328 U. S. 303;
Cummings v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277;
Ex parte
Garland, 4 Wall. 333.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The trial judge directed a verdict of acquittal on a count
charging Gainey with working in a distillery which did not bear a
sign showing the name of the person engaged in the distilling and
denoting the business in which he was engaged, an offense made
punishable by 26 U.S.C. §§ 5180(a), 5681(c) (1958
ed.).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Count three of the indictment charged Gainey with carrying on
the business of a distiller with intent to defraud the United
States of taxes, a violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5602 (1958 ed.).
The Court of Appeals, holding that the record showed "no evidence
whatever of intent to defraud," set aside the jury's verdict of
conviction on that count. 322 F.2d 292, 300.
[
Footnote 2/9]
In this case, however, the record shows that there
unquestionably was enough other evidence to submit the case to the
jury without need for any artificial presumption. But the Court
does not suggest that the use here of this presumption either
should be or could be called harmless.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Chamberlain, Presumptions as First Aid to the District Attorney,
14 A.B.A.J. 287
[
Footnote 2/11]
"Once the thumbscrew and the following confession made
conviction easy; but that method was crude and, I suppose, now
would be declared unlawful upon some ground. Hereafter, presumption
is to lighten the burden of the prosecutor. The victim will be
spared the trouble of confessing, and will go to his cell without
mutilation or disquieting outcry."
Casey v. United States, 276 U.
S. 413,
276 U. S. 420
(dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 2/12]
It might be argued, although the Court does not so argue or
hold, that Congress, if it wished, could make presence at a still a
crime in itself, and so Congress should be free to create crimes
which are called "possession" and "carrying on an illegal
distillery business," but which are defined in such a way that
unexplained presence is sufficient and indisputable evidence in all
cases to support conviction for those offenses.
See Ferry v.
Ramsey, 277 U. S. 88.
Assuming for the sake of argument that Congress could make
unexplained presence a criminal act, and ignoring also the refusal
of this Court in other cases to uphold a statutory presumption on
such a theory,
see Heiner v. Donnan, 285 U.
S. 312, there is no indication here that Congress
intended to adopt such a misleading method of draftsmanship, nor,
in my judgment, could the statutory provisions, if so construed,
escape condemnation for vagueness under the principles applied in
Lanzetta v. New Jersey, 306 U. S. 451, and
many other cases.
[
Footnote 2/13]
"While it is within the province of the legislature to determine
the sources of evidence, the modes of verification, who may or may
not be competent witnesses, I am not prepared to say they may weigh
and determine the quantity of evidence, which shall suffice to
produce conviction in the mind of the judge or juror who tries a
cause."
Thomas, J., dissenting
Commonwealth v. Williams, 6 Gray
(72 Mass.) 1, 10, cited with approval in
State v. Beswick,
13 R.I. 211, 219.