Brink v. United States

60 F.2d 231, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2490
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 1932
Docket6106
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 231 (Brink v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brink v. United States, 60 F.2d 231, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2490 (6th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

HICKS, Circuit Judge.

Appellant and James H. Brink, Harry 'Schultz, and Walter Keller, were indicted ■for a conspiracy to violate the National Prohibition Act under section 88, title 18, U. S. C. (18 USCA § 88). Brink alone was put upon trial. He was convicted.

There are numerous assignments of error. Many of - them relate to matters unexcepted to in the court below and therefore present nothing for review.

1 Several assignments challenge the denial of a directed verdict. They are all overruled. We have examined the evidence and find it sufficient to submit the ease to the jury.

1. Earl Marshall was .the principal witness for the government. He had served a sentence in the penitentiary for a violation of the Prohibition Act. He testified in substance that his conviction grew out of his employment by appellant to transport liquor and that appellant had agreed to pay him $45 per week, or a total of $7,200, for the time he served in prison. During eross.examination Marshall was asked: “Did you get any lawyer to enforce the collection of this $7200.00?” He answered, “No sir.” Thereupon counsel asked the witness: -“Q. I will ask you if this question was' asked you and whether you answered according to what I read?” (Reading from a transcript of witness’s testimony before the United States Commissioner): “Q, Who was the man? A. Charles Dornette. Q. You went to see Charles Dornette, that was your lawyer was it not? A. I guess so.” Thereupon the court stated in substance that an unwarranted infereiice might be drawn from the manner in which this matter was being presented and required counsel to read the entire pertinent record of Marshall’s testimony before the commissioner. The record when read justified the court’s comment and action. It is the duty of the court to see that testimony is not misunderstood. Kettenbach v. U. S., 202 F. 377, 385 (C. C. A. 9); Rudd v. U. S., 173 F. 912, 914 (C. C. A. 8).

2. On recross-examination Marshall was vigorously examined by counsel touching this $7,200. In the course of the examination the court said: “You are making a great deal of confusion out of something that he has testified about, that it was $45.00 a week, and began along about the time he was employed, and it ran through all that time down to and through the time he was in the penitentiary at Atlanta, and it was not paid, and amounted to $7200.00, isn’t that the purport of your testimony” — to which the witness responded: “Yes.” We find nothing in this remark by the court that tends to affect any substantial right of appellant. See Hargrove v. U. S., 25 F.(2d) 258, 262 (C. C. A. 8). Marshall had been questioned fully touching this matter of $7,-200 upon his original cross-examination, and it was the duty of the court to keep the cross-examination within reasonable limits.

3. The question arose whether the telephone company’s record of a certain long distance telephone call (Exhibit 7A) was admissible in evidence. During the examination of Miller, a supervisor of the telephone company, the court asked: “Has that got something written on it — where was that writing put on that piece of paper?” The witness answered: “Brunswick, Georgia.” Thereupon the court said: “I should not have put it that way.” This answer was objected to upon the ground that it was evidence of a written instrument which had not been introduced. The exception took the form of a motion to strike out all of the testimony of the witness. We think the motion was properly denied.

4. Upon cross-examination of the government’s witness Speiser, counsel asked: “How about the time you killed that man?” The district attorney objected. Thereupon the following colloquy took place between the court and counsel:

“The Court: Let us find out. Were you ever convicted of killing a man?

“The witness: Never.

*233 “The Court: Have you any evidence that he was convicted of killing- a man?

“Mr. Shafer: I was just told of it over the table.

“The Court: That question put by Mr. Shafer was entirely improper. If he has any evidence of that he may put the question.

“Q. Were you ever charged with that? (Question objected to; objection overruled.) A. Yes, and dismissed in Police Court. Never bound over to the grand jury, it was in self-defense.

“The Court: You could have found that out before you asked the other question. I am going to insist in this ease, as in all eases, because it is becoming too frequent in court, that you do not ask questions that you have no right to ask. It leaves an ugly impression.

“Mr. Shafer: I would like to lake an exception to llie remark of the Court.

“The Court: You may take an exception, and the record may show that this Court takes exception to counsel asking questions for which they have no basis, and on which they have ai temp led to make no investigation, for the solo purpose, as the Court thinks, and wants the record to show, as the Court does think, of leaving au ugly inference to the jury. You may take an exception to that, if you wish.

“Mr. Shafer: Note an exception. I want to say to your Honor I got in this case on short notice, and I come up here and they spring a surprise witness on me, and I have to do the best I can.

“The Court: You do not have to ask questions for which there is no basis.”

These remarks of the court are complained of. We think that under the circumstances they were not improper. The tendency of this line of cross-examination was to create in the minds of the jury an unfavorable and wholly unjustified impression of the witness Speiser.

5. Upon cross-examination Speiser was asked: “You remember about all the other things in the ease that yon want to remember, can’t you remember what yon paid Brink for the whiskey?” Thereupon the court remarked: “The question is not a proper question and should not have been put by counsel in that form.” This remark is assigned as error. We see nothing either erroneous or prejudicial in it.

6. During the examination of its witness White, the government introduced Exhibit 8A. This exhibit was a receipt dated August 21, 1930, to Harold (Harry) Schultz, one of the alleged conspirators, for fines and costs paid to the municipal court at Mans-fie'd, Ohio. Eillbrandt, a government witness, had testified that on August 20, 1930, he, in company with appellant, went to Mansfield and saw a man named Schultz who had been caught there with a load of liquor and had employed an attorney for him. When Exhibit 8A was introduced, the court inquired in substance whether Schultz was the same man referred to by Eillbrandt. His exact language was: “This man Schultz is the same man?” Upon exception the court said: “The Court: I will withdraw my remarks, Gentlemen, you will not consider what the Court said, as to the man about whom the Reverend Eillbrandt testified, and the man’s name Schultz; my statement that that was the man you should not consider, I should not have put it that way. I want to know whether the man they are talking about was the one named Schultz.” We find nothing improper or prejudicial in this incident

7. Upon the introduction of certain documentary exhibits taken from the room of appellant one of appellant’s counsel who had come into the case after the beginning of the trial stated that he wished to have the record show that these exhibits took him by surprise.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 231, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brink-v-united-states-ca6-1932.