Carlin Constantine Venus v. United States

266 F.2d 386
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1959
Docket15953_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 266 F.2d 386 (Carlin Constantine Venus v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlin Constantine Venus v. United States, 266 F.2d 386 (9th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

JAMES ALGER FEE, Circuit Judge.

Venus was indicted for knowingly failing to report for induction into the armed forces of the United States in violation of 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 462(a). 1

Venus registered with Local Board No. 140, in San Diego County, California, on September 15, 1948. There is no need to review the episodes previous to the order here charged, except to note that defendant claimed to be a conscientious objector and on one occasion, before the series of incidents upon which the current indictment was based, obeyed an order to report for induction but refused to be inducted. After that, at a time when his file was out of the possession of the Local Board, defendant, according to his testimony at the trial, mailed a postal card in February, 1955, giving a change of address from Modesto to San Diego to the Board. No such postal card ever got into the file of the Board. On July 11, 1955, the file of defendant was returned to the Local Board. The Local Board ordered defendant to report for induction on November 8, 1955. This order was sent to the last address of defendant shown in the file of the Local Board. This was in Modesto, California. Defendant did not report on November 8, 1955. At no time thereafter did defendant formally report for induction.

Defendant testified that he first knew of the order of induction in April, 1956, when he was told by an agent of the F. B. I. He thereupon wrote a letter to the Local Board, but received no response. 2 About a year later, he did go to the Local Board and inspect his file.

In reading the transcript, the evidence of mailing of the order appears substantial. There was no direct proof that the particular envelope containing the order was actually deposited in a United States mail box. But there was positive evidence that the order was made in due course, placed in an envelope properly addressed to Venus, and thereupon deposited in the regular box from whence mails of that office went to the United States mail box. The office duplicate of the order had been marked with the initials of the Board member signing the original. Most important of all, there was marked on this duplicate order the word “Mailed.” This is an entry made in an official document and imports verity of the contents. Unquestionably, there was substantial evidence to go to the jury which tended to establish mailing of the order.

There is no doubt the order was addressed to Modesto. This was the last mailing address which appeared in the files of the Local Board. Therefore, according to law and regulation, the Local Board could not properly have mailed the notice to any other address. There was thus substantial evidence that the order was duly mailed to the appropriate address.

Here another factor enters. Venus testified that he mailed a postal card to the Local Board giving a change of address from Modesto long before the order was issued. This testimony is corrobo *388 rated in some degree by another person who testified he accompanied Venus to the Post Office when the latter mailed a postal card. At the time, the file of the registrant was not in the possession of the Local Board. Since the card did not appear in the files, the presumption of official duty performed carries weight. The Local Board did not have the card. It may well be inferred they never had it. The jury might also have disbelieved the testimony of Venus that he mailed the card.

The trial court refused to give instructions requested by defendant relating to the proof of mailing and the presumption of receipt of letters duly deposited in a United States Post Office. There were also instructions requested which highlighted the testimony that defendant claimed not to have received the order and the fact that he claimed to have mailed a change of address card to the Local Board. Criticisms of the instructions given and refusal of requests are technically correct in part. The implications will be considered later. The trial court gave strongly worded instructions, favorable to defendant, requiring knowledge upon the part of Venus before conviction for failure to report on November 8, 1955. 3

But the case must be reversed. The trial court laid great weight in the instructions upon the continuing duty of Venus to report for induction after the critical date specified in the order. We take no exception to this instruction standing alone. There is generally such a duty. However, the record shows Venus became twenty-six years of age upon the nineteenth day of December, 1955. There is doubt whether there was any machinery by which he could have been legally inducted subsequent to that date. Venus did not have knowledge of the issuance of the induction order, according to his testimony, until April, 1956. Thereupon, he said he wrote a letter to the Local Board informing them of his supposed discovery. Uncontrovertibly, he did later call at the office of the Board and talk to the clerk. No one pretends to say this was not in accordance with and in fulfillment of his continuing duty. There is a conflict between the clerk and Venus as to what was said at the time. But no one contends that the Board or any agent thereof told him to report at any camp or post or army center in accordance with the supposed continuing duty. His testimony is that, if he had known of the order, he would have reported and refused induction. It is perfectly plain that no one connected with the Local Board would send him to an army receiving station: first, because he was over twenty-six years of age when he wrote to the Board in April, 1956, and no one knew then and no one pretends to advise this Court now as to whether the Board had authority to order him to report for induction after he had attained the age; second, because the Local Board had already reported him for prosecution.

We do not need to pass upon the questions which were here decided in Graves v. United States, 9 Cir., 252 F.2d 878, because it is not necessary. It is only held here that the instructions did not adequately cover the factual situation and that the defenses urged were not fairly presented thereby.

This Court does not pass upon the question of the verity of the testimony of Venus. We do not pass upon the question of the legal duty to report continuing after Venus had attained twenty-six years of age. It must be held that there were questions of fact which the court failed to present to the jury under *389 this peculiar combination of circumstances.

The trial court might have instructed the jury that, if they found Venus had obtained knowledge of the terms of the order before November 8, 1955, the day upon which he was thereby required to report for induction, a legal basis for conviction would have been established. In this connection, the instructions as to knowledge which the court gave would have been sufficient. The fact questions as to the mailing of the order by the Local Board and as to the mailing of the change of address by Venus should have been presented by instructions in this connection.

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Related

United States v. Madson
336 F. Supp. 1142 (D. Minnesota, 1972)
United States v. Bruinier
293 F. Supp. 666 (D. Oregon, 1968)
Carlin Constantine Venus v. United States
287 F.2d 304 (Ninth Circuit, 1961)

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266 F.2d 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlin-constantine-venus-v-united-states-ca9-1959.