Clyde L. Powell v. United States

226 F.2d 269
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 5, 1955
Docket12463
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 226 F.2d 269 (Clyde L. Powell 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
Clyde L. Powell v. United States, 226 F.2d 269 (D.C. Cir. 1955).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant Powell was convicted by the District Court, without a jury, upon a presentment by the Grand Jury for contempt in that he gave “obstructive and contumacious” answers to questions propounded to him and in that he disobeyed an order of the court that he answer. The evidence upon the trial consisted of transcripts of the Grand Jury proceedings and affidavits filed by Powell, accepted as evidence and uncontradicted. Found guilty, he was sentenced to imprisonment for one year.

Because of the view we take of the case we must relate the events in some detail. Powell was subpoenaed to appear before the Grand Jury and to bring with him his “official diaries” as Assistant Commissioner of Rental Housing for the Federal Housing Administration from 1946 to 1954. He appeared and, being asked to produce the diaries, replied: “I have no such diaries. * * * They were left — whatever I had was left in my office.” Asked, “Did you take any of those diaries out of your office?”, he replied, “No, sir.” The prosecutor then asked, “Who kept the diaries in your office?”. Powell refused to answer, invoking his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.

The precise situation at this point is to be noted carefully. The question to which Powell pleaded the privilege was “who kept” the diaries. He had testified without objection or equivocation that he had no diaries, that whatever he had was left in the office, and, in response to the question whether he took any of the diaries out of the office, he had answered a categorical “No, sir.” The prosecutor’s next inquiry was so framed that it could have referred to Powell himself or to some other person. This was the question to which Powell claimed the privilege. We will notice as we proceed that this particular question was never renewed. We also now note that the word “kept”, in relation to the diaries, plagues the consideration throughout. A person may “keep” a diary by making entries in a book, or, we suppose, one may “keep” a diary by retaining physical possession of the book. The former is the usual meaning, but it is somewhat difficult to tell whether that is the meaning in which the prosecutor used it in this case. Further we note that it had not been established that there actually were any diaries. Later it appears there were none in the usual sense of the word. However that may be, the prosecutor assumed throughout that there were diaries.

The prosecutor continued: “Mr. Powell, you say you did not take those diaries from your office when you left ?”. Powell *271 replied: “My answer remains as heretofore given.” It is to be noted that in this question the prosecutor repeated to Powell an answer which Powell had theretofore made and called on him to reaffirm (or to disavow) it. Powell reasserted his prior answer, which was as the prosecutor had recited it. Privilege was not remotely involved in this exchange. The prosecutor repeated the question, again reciting Powell’s answer that he did not take any diaries from his office, and Powell replied again that his answer remained the same. There is no room for doubt that the prosecutor knew that Powell had answered that question and knew what the answer had been; the prosecutor himself twice recited the answer.

The prosecutor then changed the line of questioning and asked, “Where are your official diaries for the year 1946?”. The same question was asked for each year through 1954. To each of these questions Powell replied that his answer remained “as heretofore given” or in some similar phrase. This answer may have been ambiguous. Powell had never specifically answered a question as to “where”. He had said he had no diaries, and he had claimed the privilege as to “who” kept them. At this point, then, his reference to an answer “heretofore given” may have been to either of those answers. However that may be, the matter is immaterial, because Powell was not charged in the presentment with refusing to answer questions as to “who” or “where”.

The prosecutor returned to his original line of questioning and asked, “Will you tell this Grand Jury whether or not you took any of those diaries from your office?”. He repeated that question in slightly different words, and both times Powell replied that his answer remained the same. Thus four times the prosecutor repeated his original question whether Powell took the diaries, and four times Powell adhered to his original answer. Then the prosecutor asked the direct question whether Powell claimed the privilege on that question, and finally Powell said, “I refuse to answer on my constitutional privilege.”

All the foregoing occurred in the Grand Jury room. The only persons present were the Grand Jurors, the prosecutor, Powell, and the reporter. Counsel for Powell was not present, and no other observer was there.

Powell was taken immediately into court. No transcript of the Grand Jury proceedings was then available. The proceedings were described to the court by the prosecutor. The prosecutor’s statement was as follows:

“Mr. Powell appeared before the Grand Jury and, when questioned as to whether or not he had the diaries with him, he said he did not. When he was asked whether or not he took the diary for each specific year and he was asked about from 1946-47 through to 1954, whether he took those diaries from his official office at the Federal Housing Authority, he claimed his constitutional privilege against self incrimination.”

The foregoing statement of the prosecutor was inaccurate and incomplete. When Powell had been asked whether he took the diaries, he answered, as we have already seen, that he had no diaries and that whatever he had was left in the office. It was after he had repeated four times that his answer to that question remained “as heretofore given” that he finally claimed the privilege on that question. Moreover the prosecutor had not asked Powell whether he took the diaries for each specific year 1946 through 1954 but had asked him “where” those diaries were, a very different question.

Counsel for the defense took a clear position. He said: “If that is the factual situation, as stated by Mr. Gold-schein [the prosecutor],” the witness should answer the question. In a colloquy with the court the question was made unmistakably clear. The court itself stated it: “The question is whether he took them [the diaries] when he left his official office.” The prosecutor *272 agreed that that was the question, and counsel for the defense said, “Your Hon- or, if that is the question alone, I submit he should answer it.” The court then directed Powell to answer that question before the Grand Jury.

The importance of the inaccuracy of the prosecutor’s recitation to the court is apparent and becomes more so. The court was not made aware that Powell had repeatedly answered the question to which he later claimed the privilege and which the court was being urged to direct him to answer.

Powell was forthwith returned to the Grand Jury. The prosecutor inquired as to whether he (Powell) had heard the direction of the court with reference to answering “certain .questions” and announced that he was going to repeat “those questions”. He then asked, “Mr. Powell, did you remove from your office, as Assistant Commissioner of Rental Housing for the Federal Housing Administration for the United States your official diary for the year 1946?”. Powell answered, “I.

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Bluebook (online)
226 F.2d 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clyde-l-powell-v-united-states-cadc-1955.