The owner of property alleged to have been stolen on board an
American vessel, on the high seas, is a competent witness to prove
the ownership of the property stolen, on an indictment against the
person charged with the offense, under the "Act for the punishment
of certain crimes against the United States," passed 30 April,
1790.
The fine imposed on the person who shall be convicted of the
offense of stealing on the high seas on board a vessel of the
United States is part of the punishment in furtherance of public
justice, rather than an indemnity or compensation to the owner.
From the nature of an indictment and the sentence thereon, the
government alone has the right to control the whole proceedings and
execution of the sentence. Even after verdict, the government may
not choose to bring the party up for sentence, and if sentence is
pronounced and the fine is imposed, the owner has no authority to
interfere in the collection of it, any more than the informer or
prosecutor, and the fine therefore must be deemed receivable by the
government and the government alone.
In cases of necessity, where a statute can receive no execution
unless the party interested be a witness, there he must be allowed
to testify, for the statute must not be rendered ineffectual by the
impossibility of proof.
In cases where, although the statute giving the party or the
informer a part of the penalty or forfeiture contains no direct
affirmation that he shall nevertheless be a competent witness, yet
the court will infer it, by implication, from the language of the
statute or its professed objects.
On indictment for stealing sovereigns while on board the ship
Carroll of Carrolton on the high seas.
The defendants, William Murphy and William Morgan, were indicted
under the 16th section of the act entitled, "an Act for the
punishment of certain crimes against the United States," approved
on 30 April 1790, for taking and carrying away, with an intent to
steal and purloin, on board of an American vessel on the high seas,
one hundred and two gold coins called sovereigns, each of the value
of five dollars, of the personal goods of Francis McMahon.
The defendants having pleaded not guilty, and the case being
brought to trial, Francis McMahon, the owner of the property
described in the indictment, was called as a witness on the
part
Page 41 U. S. 204
of the United States to prove the ownership of the said property
and that it had been stolen from him in June 1840, in his passage
on board the ship
Carroll of Carrolton from Liverpool to
the City of New York, and also, to prove facts and circumstances
tending to show that the defendants were guilty of the said
offense, to the competency of which witness as to either of the
said matters the counsel for the defendants objected on the ground
that he was interested in the event of the suit, and so interested
that he would not be rendered competent by any release to be
executed by him. And thereupon the judges were divided in opinion
upon the following questions which were presented for their
decision.
"1. Whether the said Francis McMahon, the owner of the property
alleged to have been stolen, was a competent witness to be examined
on the part of the United States, as to all the matters above
mentioned?"
"2. If not competent to testify as to the guilt of the
defendants, whether he was competent to prove the ownership of the
property described in the indictment, and that it had been taken
and carried away, with intent to steal and purloin?"
"3. If not competent for both or either of the above purposes,
without having released his interest in the fine to be imposed on
the defendants in case of their conviction, whether, by releasing
to the United States all his right to and interest in such fine,
his competency would be restored?"
Which said points, upon which the disagreement has happened,
were stated above under the direction of the said court at the
request of the counsel for the parties in the cause and were
ordered to be certified unto the Supreme Court of the United States
at the next session, pursuant to the act in such case made and
provided.
Page 41 U. S. 207
STORY, JUSTICE, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants, William Murphy and William Morgan, were indicted
under the 16th section of the act entitled, "an Act for the
punishment of certain crimes against the United States," approved
on 30 April 1790, for taking and carrying away, with an intent to
steal and purloin, on board of an American vessel on the high seas
one hundred and two gold coins, called
Page 41 U. S. 208
sovereigns, each of the value of five dollars, of the personal
goods of Francis McMahon.
The defendants having pleaded not guilty and the case being
brought to trial, Francis McMahon, the owner of the property
described in the indictment, was called as a witness on the part of
the United States to prove the ownership of the said property and
that it had been stolen from him in June, 1840, in his passage on
board the ship
Carroll of Carrolton from Liverpool to the
City of New York, and also to prove facts and circumstances tending
to show that the defendants were guilty of the said offense, to the
competency of which witness as to either of the said matters the
counsel for the defendants objected on the ground that he was
interested in the event of the suit, and so interested that he
would not be rendered competent by any release to be executed by
him. And thereupon the judges were divided in opinion upon the
following questions, which were presented for their decision.
"1. Whether the said Francis McMahon, the owner of the property
alleged to have been stolen, was a competent witness to be examined
on the part of the United States, as to all the matters above
mentioned?"
"2. If not competent to testify as to the guilt of the
defendants, whether he was competent to prove the ownership of the
property described in the indictment, and that it had been taken
and carried away, with intent to steal and purloin?"
"3. If not competent for both or either of the above purposes,
without having released his interest in the fine to be imposed on
the defendants, in case of their conviction, whether, by releasing
to the United States all his right to and interest in such fine,
his competency would be restored?"
We have considered these questions, and I am now directed to
deliver the opinion of this Court upon them.
The first question presents in its most general form the
consideration of the competency of McMahon, the owner of the goods
alleged to have been stolen, and it must be admitted to involve no
small difficulty, whether viewed in relation to principle or
authority. The act of Congress, Act of 30 April 1790, ch. 36,
§ 16, upon which this prosecution is founded, provides
"That if any person, within any of the places under the sole and
exclusive jurisdiction
Page 41 U. S. 209
of the United States or upon the high seas, shall take and carry
away, with an intent to steal or purloin, the personal goods of
another, or if any person or persons having at any time hereafter
the charge or custody of any arms, ordnance, munitions &c.,
belonging to the United States, shall, for any lucre or gain, or
wittingly, advisedly, and of purpose to hinder or impede the
service of the United States, embezzle, purloin or convey away any
of the said arms, ordnance, munitions &c., the person or
persons so offending, their counselors &c., shall, on
conviction, be fined not exceeding the fourfold value of the
property so stolen, embezzled or purloined, the one moiety to be
paid to the owner of the goods or the United States, as the case
may be, and the other moiety to the informer and prosecutor, and be
publicly whipped not exceeding thirty-nine stripes."
It is not unimportant to observe in the construction of this
section of the act that the fine is, as to its amount, purely in
the discretion of the court; that whatever it may be, it rests on a
mere contingency, even after conviction, whether it will ever be
paid or not, depending upon the ability of the convict; and that if
the fine is to be awarded as a part of the sentence of the court
upon the indictment (as it seems properly to be), then it must be
taken to be a part of the punishment, in furtherance of public
justice, rather than an indemnity or compensation to the owner,
since it may bear no proportion to his loss or injury. Besides,
from the very nature of an indictment and the sentence thereon, the
government alone has the right to control the whole proceedings and
execution of the sentence. Even after verdict, the government may
not choose to bring the party up for sentence, and if sentence is
pronounced and the fine is imposed, the owner has no authority to
interfere in the collection of it, any more than the informer or
prosecutor, and the fine therefore must be deemed receivable solely
by the government, and then it is distributable by the government
and by the government only. It would indeed require strong language
in any statute where the proceedings were by indictment, to
construe that indictment or the sentence thereon to be controllable
by other parties who might have an interest in or under the
sentence. In this respect, there is a great difference between an
information or action
qui tam, where a part of the penalty
or forfeiture belongs to the informer
Page 41 U. S. 210
or prosecutor and an indictment the conviction upon which may
entitle the informer or prosecutor to a part of the penalty or
forfeiture. In the former case, the informer or prosecutor may not
be a good witness -- at least not unless under special
circumstances; in the latter case, he may be, for notwithstanding a
conviction upon the indictment, he must still sue for the penalty
or forfeiture by action or information, and cannot receive it under
the sentence upon the indictment. This distinction was adverted to
by Mr. Justice Bayley in delivering the opinion of the court in
King v. Williams, 9 Barn. & Cres. 549, upon which we
shall have occasion to comment more at large hereafter.
The rules as to the competency of witnesses in criminal cases
are not, exactly and throughout, the same in America as in England,
although in most cases they concur. Thus, for example, in cases of
forgery, the party whose name is supposed to have been forged is
not a competent witness in England. But a different course has
generally, although perhaps not universally, prevailed in America.
So the owner of stolen goods has been universally admitted as a
competent witness, in America, at least, to prove the identity of
his property and the fact of the theft, if not to prove all other
facts, although, independently of the statute of 21 Hen. VIII, c.
11, his competency seems to have been a matter of doubt in
England.
The general rule undoubtedly is, in criminal cases as well as in
civil cases, that a person interested in the event of the suit or
prosecution is not a competent witness. But there are many
exceptions, which are as old as the rule itself. Thus it is stated
by Lord Chief Baron Gilbert as a clear exception that where a
statute can receive no execution unless a party interested be a
witness, there he must be allowed, for the statute must not be
rendered ineffectual by the impossibility of proof. Gilb. on Evid.
114; 1 Phil. Evid. ch. 8, § 7, 125 (edit. 1839 by Cowen). So
cases of necessity, where no other evidence can be reasonably
expected, have been from the earliest period admitted as another
exception. Thus, for example, upon indictments for robbery, the
person robbed is constantly admitted as a competent witness
although he will be entitled to a restitution of his goods upon
conviction of the offender. 1 Phil. Evid. ch. 5, § 6, 120
(edit. 1839, by Cowen). So in an action against
Page 41 U. S. 211
the hundred by the party robbed, brought under the Statute of
Winton, he is admitted as a competent witness to prove the robbery
and the amount of the loss, upon the acknowledged ground that it
is, from necessity, in default of other proof. 2 Roll.Abr. 686; 1
Phil.Evid. ch. 5, § 2, 70 (edit. 1839, by Cowen). Another
exception, quite as remarkable and standing upon a ground
applicable to the present case, is that of a person who is to
receive a reward for or upon the conviction of the offender, for he
is universally recognized as a competent witness whether the reward
be offered by the public or by private persons. The ground of this
exception is forcibly stated by Mr. Justice Bayley in
King v.
Williams, 9 Barn. & Cress. 549, 556, where he says:
"The case of reward is clear, on the grounds of public policy,
with a view to the public interest, and because of the principle
upon which such rewards are given. The public has an interest in
the suppression of crime and the conviction of guilty criminals. It
is with a view to stir up greater vigilance in apprehending that
rewards are given, and it would defeat the object of the
legislature, by means of those rewards, to narrow the means of
conviction and to exclude testimony, which would otherwise be
admissible."
Another exception is in cases where, although the statute giving
the party or the informer a part of the penalty or forfeiture
contains no direct affirmation, that he shall nevertheless be a
competent witness, yet the court will infer it by implication from
the language of the statute or its professed objects. Several cases
of this sort are collected and commented upon, by Mr. Justice
Bayley in the case of
King v. Williams, and they fully
support the exception. Mr. Phillips also, in his work on Evidence,
has given a summary of the leading decisions. 1 Phil. Evid. ch. 3,
§ 7, 125 (edit. 1839, by Cowen). Indeed, Mr. Justice Bayley
puts the exception, founded upon statute provisions, upon a very
broad and comprehensive ground which is fully in point in the
present case. He says
"Where it is plain that the detection and conviction of the
offender are the objects of the legislature, the case will be
within the exception, and the person benefited by the conviction
will, notwithstanding his interest, be competent."
And in the very case then in judgment, which was a case for a
forcible entry into a dwelling house, on
Page 41 U. S. 212
the statute of 21 Jac. I., c. 15, where the prosecutor would,
upon conviction, be entitled to judgment of restitution of the
premises, he was held incompetent solely because (to use the
language of the learned judge)
"the public interest will still have the protection of a common
law indictment, and there is nothing from which an inference can be
drawn that it was with a view to the public interest, and not for
the sake of the benefit of the party grieved, that the provision
for restitution was introduced into the statute."
Now every word of this passage shows that in the case now before
us, the party ought to be held competent. No common law indictment
will lie for the offense, but only the statute remedy, and the
statute is obviously drawn with a view to the public interest and
the suppression of public crimes, and not for the interest of the
party aggrieved, since the fine is in the discretion of the court,
and may be purely nominal.
Looking to the objects of the present section, the promotion of
public justice and the suppression of public crimes, in which the
government have a deep interest, and looking to the ordinary means
by which the ends can be accomplished, it is difficult not to
perceive that if the owner of the stolen goods be incompetent, it
will be found utterly impracticable, in most cases falling within
the purview of the section, to procure any conviction, however
frequent or however flagrant may be the offense. The places on land
where the offense may be committed are such as, being within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, contain but few
inhabitants or few whose residence is not transitory and changing.
Take the case of a lighthouse establishment, where scarcely any
other inhabitants are found but the keeper and his family; if he
and his wife are excluded as witnesses from incompetency, how will
it be practicable to establish the identity of the property stolen
or of the person of the thief, however atrocious and premeditated
may be the circumstances under which the offense is committed? It
may be in the night time; it may be in the broad day, even by a
company of conspirators. But take the very case now in judgment,
that of a theft committed on the high seas, where money is stolen
from a passenger or an officer of the ship, or from one of the crew
-- who else besides himself can be expected to establish the
identity of the property or the circumstances of the theft? It is
scarcely possible that it could be
Page 41 U. S. 213
done in one case in one hundred. Can Congress reasonably be
supposed, in cases of offenses committed upon the high seas, thus
to have intended to shut out all the ordinary means and ordinary
proofs of the offense, and thus to have given new encouragement,
and new motives to theft and embezzlement and plunderage? We think
not. Upon all the grounds of exception already stated, upon the
ground of necessity, and of public policy, and of attaining the
manifest objects of the statute, and the ends of justice, we think
that the witness was admissible for all the purposes stated in the
first question.
This decision is not new in America. On the contrary, the
doctrine has been recognized, at least to an equal extent, in
Connecticut and Massachusetts. In the case of
Salisbury v.
State of Connecticut, 6 Conn. 101, the judges of the supreme
court of that state held that the owner of goods stolen was a
competent witness for all the matters in issue upon an indictment
for the theft, although the statute declared that the thief, upon
being convicted, should forfeit and pay treble the value of the
property stolen to the owner thereof. It is true that one main
ground of this decision, by a majority of the judges, was that
there must be another action,
qui tam, by the owner to
enforce the forfeiture. But the same judges held that in such an
action
qui tam, brought by the owner, he would be a
competent witness to prove the loss and identity of his property
for the like reasons as, under the Statute of Winton, the party
robbed is admitted. In
Commonwealth v. Moulton, 9 Mass.
30, upon an indictment for theft, it was held that the owner of the
goods was a competent witness as to all the facts in the case,
notwithstanding the witness would, by the statute, upon the
conviction of the offender, be entitled to restitution of his
goods, and if they were not restored, to satisfaction out of the
future earnings of the convict and to recompense out of the county
treasury for his labor and expense in the prosecution. Upon that
occasion, the court said that when (under a former statute) the
party from whom goods were stolen was by law entitled to treble the
value, he was always received as a competent witness as to all
pertinent facts.
As to the second and third questions, they do not require any
particular examination, after what has been already stated. We have
only to say that if we had not been of opinion, upon the
Page 41 U. S. 214
first question, that the witness was a general witness, we
should have entertained no doubt that he was a competent witness
for the purposes stated in the second question, upon the ground of
necessity and the analogy to the case of the party robbed under the
Statute of Winton. And as to the third question, we should have no
doubt that if the witness had such an interest in the fine as would
have rendered him incompetent, his competency might have been
restored by a release. If, as the argument for the defendant seems
to assume, the release is of a mere possibility, no release would
be necessary, for a possibility of interest is no objection to the
competency of a witness. If it is, on the other hand, a fixed
interest in the event of the prosecution, then it is clearly
releasable.
Upon the whole, we are of opinion that all the questions ought
to be answered in the affirmative. But at the same time we desire
to say that although a competent witness, the credibility of his
testimony is a matter for the consideration of the jury under all
the weight of circumstances connected with the case, and his
interest in the result. We shall direct a certificate to be sent to
the Circuit Court of the Southern District of New York
accordingly.