Ballew v. United States

160 U.S. 187, 16 S. Ct. 263, 40 L. Ed. 388, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2356
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 16, 1895
Docket547
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 160 U.S. 187 (Ballew v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballew v. United States, 160 U.S. 187, 16 S. Ct. 263, 40 L. Ed. 388, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2356 (1895).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The assignments of error address themselves to four rulings of the court, the one admitting in evidence the pension certificate and the other excluding certain testimony, and two to the refusal to give the instruction requested, as well as to the error alleged in the instruction given.

The ground of objection relied upon as to the record from the Pension Office is that the copy was improperly authenticated, because the certificate signed by the acting Secretary of the Interior, and under the seal of the department, referred only to the official character of the Commissioner of Pensions, and the faith and credit to which his attestations were entitled, and Eev. Stat. § 882 is cited in support of the contention. That section feads as follows:

“ Copies of any' books, records, papers, or documents in any of the Executive Departments, authenticated' under the seals of such Departments, respectively, shall be admitted in evidence equally with the originals thereof.”

, By reference to the transcript in question in the record, we find that the certificate of the acting Secretary of the Interior was preceded by a certificate signed “ Wm. Lochren, Commissioner of Pensions,” certifying that “ the accompanying page, *192 numbered 1, is truly copied from the original in the office of the Commissioner of Pensions.” The records of the Pension Office constitute part of the records of the Department of the Interior, of which Executive Department the Pension Office is but a constituent. We think that the certificates in question, taken together, were a substantial compliance with the statute.

The exception taken to the ruling out of certain answers made by Ohamblee, one of defendant’s witnesses, on his redirect examination, results from the following facts: The witness upon his examination in chief testified solely with reference to the circumstances connected with the giving by the pensioner of the check of $1887.34, which formed the basis of the charge of withholding covered by the first count in the indictment. The cross examination was confined to the same subject. • At the close of the cross examination the witness stated that he.had been asked by a special examiner of pensions, who was investigating the matter, what he knew about the consideration of the check in question. The witness further, said that A. W„ Ballew came and asked him if he had been interviewed by the examiner, to which inquiry of Ballew the witness stated he had answered yes, and had informed Ballew that .the examiner had questioned him about the eighteen hundred dollar check,' and that he told him that he thought the check had been given for a house and lot. The witness next stated that Mr. Ballew then told him that the pensioner had given the check to Hurley Ballew. .

Upon redirect examination he testified as follows :

“ Q. In that conversation with A. W. Ballew, the defendant here, what did he say was the basis of that money given to Hurley Ballew ?
“A. What did A.W. Ballew say he done as a matter of inducement to her *
“Q. Yes.
“ A. I don’t know anything, only that he prosecuted this pension claim, and as to what he had to do with Hurley I don’t know that he ever said anything. I think he told me he got his fee from the pension department as attorney.
*193 “ Q. That is all he ever got ?
“A. That is all he got, I think he told me.
“ Q. That he got his fee from the pension department ?
“ A. That is all he ever got.”

Objection being interposed by the district attorney to proof of Ballew’s declarations, the objection was sustained and the testimony excluded from the consideration of the jury.

The ground upon which counsel for plaintiff in error rests his claim of admissibility is that when a confession is put in evidence by the prosecution, it is the right of the accused to demand that all of the conversation in which the alleged confession was made should be received. We are unable to reach the conclusion that Ballew’s mere statement to a witness, that the pensioner had given his son the check, was a confession, or in the nature of a confession. It had no tendency to establish his guilt or to operate to his prejudice, and confessions are only admitted as being statements against the interest of the party by whom they are claimed to have been made. But the reexamination of the witness was not directed to the ascertainment of what other statements had been made in the conversation upon the subject about which he had testified on his cross-examination, to wit, the check to Hurley Ballew, but to the drawing out of new matter, not connected with the subject to which the cross-examination related. This was clearly improper. 1 G-reenleaf on Evidence, § 467, and cases cited. See, also, cases cited in note a to Ibid. 15th ed. § 201, and People v. Beach, 87 N. Y. 508, 512.

The statute upon which the first count is based reads as follows:

“Any .agent or attorney or other person instrumental in prosecuting any claim for pension or bounty land, who shall directly or indirectly contract for, demand, or receive, or retain any greater compensation for his services or instrumentality in prosecuting a claim for pension or bounty land than is .herein provided, or for payment thereof at any other time or in any other manner than is herein provided, or who shall wrongfully withhold from a pensioner or claimant the whole or any part of the pension or claim allowed and due such pen *194 sioner or claimant, or the land warrant issued to any such claimant, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall for every such offence be fined not exceeding five hundred dollars, or imprisonment at hard labor not exceeding two years, or both, in the discretion of the court.”

The refusal of the court to give the charge asked, and the charge by it given, proceeded upon the theory that although pension money was actually paid over to the pensioner and by her deposited in bank, the obtaining thereafter of such money from the pensioner constituted a withholding under the statute just quoted. The word “ withholding ” has a definite signification, and we think contemplates, as used in the statute under consideration, not the fraudulent obtaining of money from a pensioner, but the withholding of the money before it reaches the hands of the pensioner and passes under his dominion and absolute control. The context of the statute supports this view, for its penalty is imposed for the wrongful withholding of the whole or any part of the pension claim allowed and due such pensioner, and not for a wrongful obtaining of the same. The fact that the offence of withholding is limited to any agent or attorney or other person instrumental in prosecuting any claim for pension demonstrates that Congress intended to legislate merely against the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 U.S. 187, 16 S. Ct. 263, 40 L. Ed. 388, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballew-v-united-states-scotus-1895.