Ainsworth v. United States

1 App. D.C. 518, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 3064
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1893
DocketNo. 268
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 App. D.C. 518 (Ainsworth v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ainsworth v. United States, 1 App. D.C. 518, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 3064 (D.C. Cir. 1893).

Opinion

The Chief Justice

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case is brought into this court on appeal from an interlocutory judgment of the court below, rendered on a demurrer to an indictment against the defendants for manslaughter, whereby the demurrer was overruled and the defendants required to plead. It was owing to the peculiar circumstances of the case, with the prospect of a very protracted, laborious and expensive trial, that this court deemed it proper and to be in the interest of justice to allow the defendants to bring their case here by an appeal, and to be heard as to whether there was a sufficient indictment against them upon which they could be tried and convicted. We deem it proper, however, to say that this case will not furnish a precedent to be readily and lightly followed in the future practice of the court, for, to afford facility to the allowance of appeals in criminal cases from mere interlocutory judgments would greatly obstruct and delay, and in many cases seriously embarrass, if not entirely defeat, the fair and speedy administration of the criminal law in this District. We must avoid producing such a result.

The indictment is against four persons, namely, Ainsworth, Dant, Covert, and Sasse, charging them with the omission or neglect of duty, whereby death was caused to one Frederick B. Loftus, named in the indictment. The occasion of the alleged omission or neglect of duty, and the resulting death of the party named, was the change or alteration attempted to be made in the interior foundation supporting walls or piers of that ill-fated building, on 10th street between E and F streets, in the city of Washington, [521]*521known as Ford’s Old Theater.” The building was used by the government as the record and pension office of the War Department; and the purpose of the change or alteration in the foundation of the interior supporting walls or piers, was the preparation for the introduction of an electric lighting plant or apparatus for lighting the building. The building, and the official work conducted therein, and all the clerks engaged in the work, were under the direction and control of Col. Ainsworth, one of the defendants charged in the indictment. On the 9th of June, 1893, the time of the occurrence of the appalling catastrophe referred to in the indictment, the building was filled with clerks and employees of the government.

The indictment contains but a single count. It is very long and elaborate, and states at great length the full particulars of the structure, and the relations of the several parts of the building, the one to the other, and the dependence for security of the several floors of the building upon the interior foundation walls or piers; and of which dependence, it is alleged, the defendants had knowledge.

It is then averred that Ainsworth and the other defendants undertook and assumed the performance of all and every-part of the work, which became and was necessary, to permit of the introduction into the building of the electric light plant; and such work was being performed, and while being so performed, it was under the entire care, charge, control, management and supervision of the defendants; and having undertaken and assumed the performance of the work, and having the entire care, charge, control, management and supervision thereof, it became and was their duty to so regulate and conduct the performance of the work, and all parts thereof, as not to endanger the stability of the second and third floors of the building; and to do and to cause to be done, and to require to be done, everything in their power, and to use and exercise every care and precaution in their power, necessary to render and -make the performance of the work, and each and every part thereof, safe [522]*522and secure, and free from danger to the lives of the persons in the building for the time being, among whom was Loftus, the party whose death was caused by the alleged omission or neglect of duty by defendants.

But, as alleged by the indictment, being wholly unmindful, neglectful, and regardless of their duty in that behalf, the defendants did wilfully and feloniously neglect and omit to so regulate and conduct the performance of a part of the work, to wit, the work of excavating and removing the, earth from around, about, and under the pier at the west end of the most northerly of the two interior walls of the central cellar, as not to endanger the stability of the said second and third floors of the building; and then and there, &c., did wilfully and feloniously further neglect and omit to do, and cause to be done, and to require to be done, everything in their power, and to use and exercise every care and precaution in their power, necessary to render and make the performance of the part of the work last mentioned, safe and secure, and free from danger to the lives of the persons in the building at the time being; but being so wholly unmindful, neglectful, and regardless of their duty in that behalf, to the contrary, did then and there, &c., improperly remove, and cause to be removed, and suffer and permit to be removed, from around, about, and under the pier last aforesaid, the earth, supporting the same, without first having relieved, or caused said pier to be relieved, by the device called shoring, or in some other feasible way, from the great pressure upon it of the weight of the iron columns, beams, &c., and parts of the second and third floors immediately above it. By reason of which most culpable negligence, acts and omissions of the defendants, the said last-mentioned pier did then and there sink and break; and the columns, beams, and the parts of the second and third floors immediately above said pier, did then and there give way and fall down to and upon the first floor, and down into the excavation, made under the said first floor' for the extension of the said central cellar; and the defendants thereby did, then and [523]*523there, wilfully and feloniously give the said Loftus divers mortal wounds, of which he then and there instantly died.

The defendants demurred to the indictment, and assigned in support of the demurrer four specific grounds for quashing the indictment. The grounds assigned are these:

1. That the indictment shows upon its face a misjoinder of the defendants.

2. That there is a failure to charge any definite individual duty upon the defendants, and that there is no notice given them of the particular act of negligence for which they are sought to be held liable.

3. That, by the indictment, the defendants are charged with an illegal measure of care and diligence; and

4. That the indictment charges upon the defendants a criminal responsibility for the alleged omission of a joint or common duty, but does not charge that there was an exclusive duty upon any one of the defendants, &c., in respect to any portion of the work.

It is certainly a fundamental principle in the common law, that every party accused of crime is entitled to have every essential fact that enters into the definition of the offense, set forth in an indictment, with such full and entire accuracy, that the offense may judicially appear to the court in pronouncing judgment thereon, whether upon demurrer or after conviction. This is especially necessary where the act or omission charged as producing the injury is not in itself necessarily unlawful, but only becomes so by its peculiar circumstances and relations to the result that follows, in the natural sequence of events.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 App. D.C. 518, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 3064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ainsworth-v-united-states-cadc-1893.