Barnhill v. United States

96 F.2d 116, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1938
DocketNo. 1576
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 F.2d 116 (Barnhill v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnhill v. United States, 96 F.2d 116, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3435 (10th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge.

Jesse F. Barnhill, James W. Morris, Dean V. Johnson, Asa L. Eddy, and Marcus L. Eddy, were charged by indictment containing five counts with having used the mails in furtherance of a scheme to defraud in violation of section 215 of the Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C.A. § 338.

Asa L. Eddy and Marcus L. Eddy entered pleas of guilty. Barnhill, Morris, and Johnson having entered pleas of not guilty were tried; Morris and Johnson being acquitted, and Barnhill convicted on each of the five counts. Barnhill has appealed.

At close of the evidence counsel for Barnhill interposed a motion for a directed verdict, ground therefor not being specified. It is here contended that no substantial evidence was introduced by prosecution to prove charges set out in the indictment, the Government claiming that since no specific ground was set out in the motion for a directed verdict the sufficiency of the evidence should not be reviewed.

A motion for a directed verdict necessarily presents the question of law to the trial court as to whether there . was any substantial evidence to support the allegations of the indictment. Isbell v. U. S., 8th Cir., 227 F. 788; and West v. U. S., 10th Cir., 68 F.2d 96.

In first count is set out a general scheme and the mailing of a letter in furtherance thereof. Each of the other counts by allegation refers to part of count one embracing same general scheme and the mailing of letters in furtherance thereof.

The substance of the charge with respect to the scheme and use of the mails is that defendants would obtain large quantities of a certain natural mineral deposit mined in Nevada, mixing such deposits with water, Eps,om salts, Glauber’s salts, potassium iodide, glycerine, saccharine, and flavoring materials and then bottle such mixture and label same under trade-name of “Ionite”; that defendants would and did represent to the persons to be defrauded that said Ionite if taken by tubercular persons eliminated fever, caused pulse rate to [117]*117become normal, produce negative sputum tests and a normal blood count, such persons gaining weight; that said Ionite mixture was speedy, complete and certain cure for tuberculosis, destroying the tubercular germs within the body in tubercular cases where approved scientific methods had completely failed, and further charged that defendants represented that defendant Johnson had nothing to sell and his only motive in advertising Ionite was benevolence; that all efforts of tubercular specialists in behalf of Johnson had completely failed and Ionite had saved his life; that Johnson underwent a physical examination of May 25, 1935, which included the taking of X-ray pictures and the physician having examined Johnson, including the X-ray pictures, stated that the right lung of Johnson’s was perfect ; that cavity in the left lung caused by the tubercular bacilli had been reduced in diameter'to size of a five-cent piece; and that Ionite was the only remedy that had given Johnson any effective relief from tuberculosis which he had had for at least three years, such Ionite having killed the tubercular germs within his body.

It further charged that defendants represented that a certain child, Delane Greene, had suffered from tuberculosis for a period of two years or more, all efforts of physicians in his behalf having failed; that physicians had informed mother of Delane that they could do nothing for him, but that he was restored to healthy normalcy by said Ionite; and that he was a “remarkable, living, breathing, walking, running testimonial of almost unbelievable and miraculous effects of what ‘Ionite’ has done to and for a tuberculosis person.”

The indictment further charges that defendants well knew that said Ionite if taken by a tubercular person would neither eliminate fever, nor cause pulse rate to become normal, nor produce negative sputum tests,, nor normal blood count, nor cause tubercular persons to gain weight, nor produce speedy, complete, or certain cure for tuberculosis, but was in fact harmful and contrary to approved scientific medical advice and treatment of tuberculosis, and would not kill tubercular germs within the body; that Johnson’s motive was not benevolence but monetary profit, and that specialists had made headway with said Johnson and Ionite had not saved his life; that the physician who examined Johnson and X-ray pictures on May 25, 1935, did not state that his right lung was perfect, or that he had nothing to worry about, but on the contrary advised him that he had active tuberculosis with some infiltration in right lung, and did not tell him that cavity in left lung had been reduced in diameter to size of a five-cent piece, but in fact told him that it had increased in size since May 3, 1935, and was much larger than a five-cent piece.

It further charged that Johnson had received considerable and positive relief from pneumo-thorax treatments and had received no relief by the use of Ionite, and that Ionite had not killed tubercular germs in his body.

The indictment then charged that defendants knew that Delane was not a tubercular person and had not been restored to healthy normalcy by Ionite and that physicians had not informed his mother that they could do nothing for him.

It then charged that all of the aforesaid representations were intended to be and were deceptive, false, and fraudulent and made with the intent and purpose to defraud certain persons by causing them to pay over sums of money to them for said Ionite.

Barnhill and Morris being owners of a mine containing a mineral clay located in Nevada, same as mined was brought by them to Salt Lake City, Utah, there having Asa L. Eddy, a registered pharmacist, to mix such mineral clay with certain other ingredients and bottle it under the trade-name of Ionite. An analysis of a bottle of such liquid disclosed that it contained 12.8 grams of silica in 100 cc’s, calcium 1.46 grams in 100 cc’s, Glauber’s salts 8.32 grams in 100 cc’s, potassium iodide, 1.23 grams in 100 cc’s, iron oxide, 1.5 grams in 100 cc’s, and also aluminum, phosphate, glycerine, saccharine, a trace of manganese, copper, and other metals.

Asa L. Eddy testified that he received a mineral deposit from Barnhill and Morris and in mixing same put 20 pounds of such mineral, 8 pounds of Glauber’s Salts, 8 pounds of Epsom salts, 3 ounces of potassium iodide, 1 gallon of glycerine, 30 grains of vanilla extract, and 5 gallons of water, to make 108 bottles (12 oz.) of Ionite.

In the early part of 1935, Dean V. Johnson of Pleasant Grove, Utah, commenced using Ionite. Thereafter, advertisements were inserted in the Denver Post in the Personal Column headed “All tuberculars, notice,” appearing in issues of April 7, 1935, May 5, 1935, June 2, 1935, June 9, 1935, September 20, 1936, March 14, 1937; with [118]*118exception of advertisements of September 20, 1936, and March 14, 1937, which appeared under name of “Ionite Products” and “Ionite,” the other advertisement being signed by Dean V. Johnson, Pleasant Grove, Utah.

Advertisements of June 2, 1935, and June 9, 1935, in lengthy detail tell how Johnson was suffering from tuberculosis, having had it for three years in all stages; that all efforts of tuberculosis specialists had failed; and that he had found a wonderful mineral which he began using January 9, 1935, and since such time had gained in weight 15 pounds, his temperature returning to normal, and had seven negative sputum tests, and two wonderful blood counts.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F.2d 116, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnhill-v-united-states-ca10-1938.