Coffin v. United States

162 U.S. 664, 16 S. Ct. 943, 40 L. Ed. 1109, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2239
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1896
Docket801
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 162 U.S. 664 (Coffin 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
Coffin v. United States, 162 U.S. 664, 16 S. Ct. 943, 40 L. Ed. 1109, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2239 (1896).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

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

Fifty-two requests for instructions were submitted on behalf of the defendants to the trial court. The assignments of error are sixty-two in number. The uselessness of this multitude of assignments is demonstrated bj the fact that but nineteen out of the sixty-two were relied upon at bar. These nineteen are grouped in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error under *666 twelve headings. We shall confine oar examination to the consideration of the matters embraced under these headings, and in the order in which they are discussed by counsel.

I. Point 1 alleges that the court erred in refusing to give instructions requested, numbered 47 and 48.

No. 47 reads as follows :

“47. In the indictment in this case it is charged that Theodore P. Haughey, president of the Indianapolis National Bank, with intent to injure and defraud the bank, wilfully misapplied the funds of the bank, and also that, with intent to defraud the bank and to deceive an agent appointed or to be appointed to examine its affairs, he made or caused to be made false entries upon the books of the bank. The defendants Francis A. Coffin and Percival B. Coffin are charged with having, with like intent, aided and abetted said Haughey in said wrongful acts. In order to sustain this charge of aiding and abetting against the defendants the evidence must show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants acted in the-matter with a like intent as that attending the action of Mr. Haughey — that is, it must be shown that the Coffins, charged as aiders and abettors, stood in a similar relation to the alleged crime as Mr. Haughey; that they approached it from the same direction and touched it at the same point. If, as matter of fact, in any of the transactions charged as criminal in this indictment,. Mr. Haughey acted with one intent and the defendants acted with a different and unlike intent, then, as to that transaction, they are not guilty as charged in this indictment.”

No. 48 is similar to No. 47, except that the words “ stood in a similar relation to the alleged crime,” contained in the third sentence of No. 47, are omitted in No. 48.

We held in our former opinion, 156-U. S. 446, that the language of the statute fully demonstrated the unsoundness of the contention then advanced, that no offence was stated in the indictment against the aiders and abettors, because in none of the counts was it asserted that they were officers of the bank or occupied any specific official relation, to it.

The ruling then made establishes the error of the foregoing *667 requests to charge, and hence, practically, disposes of the questions arising under this heading. However, as counsel now contend that their former position was’ misunderstood and was not adequately met by the reasoning previously adopted; we add the following considerations: The contention now advanced admits that one not an officer of the bank may be, under some circumstances, an aider or abettor in violation of section 5209, Revised Statutes, but urges that in order to be such aider or abettor the person so charged, when not an officer of the bank, must stand in such relation to the recreant, bank officer, or have such interest with him in other enterprises, “ as that they may work together for the hurt of the bank for a common purpose.” In other words, the argument substantially asserts that an essential element of the offence of aiding and abetting is the existence of a common purpose between the officer and the aider and abettor to promote or subserve the joint interest of the wrongdoers in enterprises in which they are mutually interested. Rut the statute nowhere requires that there should be a “ common purpose ” on the part of the principal and the aider and abettor to subserve their joint interests by the misapplication committed. It only requires that there should be a misapplication of the moneys of the bank with a joint intent to “ injure or defraud the association o'r any other compan}, body politic or corporate, or any individual person, or to deceive any officer of the association or any agent appointed to examine the affairs of such association.” It is clear that the statute has been violated if the one charged with aiding and abetting is shown to have actually aided and abetted the officer of the bauk in misapplying its funds, no matter whom the accused may have ultimately intended to benefit by his misconduct, provided, of course, there existed the intent to defraud enumerated in the act of Congress. In accord with this view the court properly instructed the jury that there must have existed in the minds of both Haughey and the defendants the wrongful intent stated in the law. The intent contemplated by counsel in the requested instruction was evidently the other and different one heretofore referred to, namely, the beneficial purpose to *668 be subserved or common interest to be promoted by the performance of the wrongful act. But, as we have said, it is not essential that the intent should, in this particular, have been coincident, provided there existed the intent which the law ordains.

The proposition upon which reliance is mainly placed is that the person charged as an aider and abettor “ must stand in the same relation to the crime as the principal, approach it in the same direction, touch it at the same point.” This language is taken from the opinion in State v. Teahan, 50 Connecticut, 92. In that case it was held that one who bought intoxicating liquors from another, the sale being illegal, was not an aider and abettor of the offence of unlawful selling within the meaning of á general statute, which provided that ‘f every person who shall assist, aid, counsel, cause, hire or command another to commit any offence, may be prosecuted and punished as if he were a principal offender.” The court said:

■ “The ‘abetting’ intended by it is a positive act in aid of the commission of the offence — a force, physical or moral, joined with that of the perpetrator in producing it. This is clear from the context, where aiding is classed with ‘assisting,’ ‘causing,’ ‘hiring’ and ‘commanding.’ The abettor, within the meaning of the statute, must stand in the same relation to the crime as the criminal, approach it from the same direction, touch it at the same point. This is not the case with the purchaser of liquor. His approach to the crime is from the other side. He touches it at wholly another point. It.is somewhat like the case of a man who- provokes or challenges a man to fight with him. If the other knocks him down, he has induced, but in no proper sense abetted, this act of violence. He has not contributed any force to its production. He touches the offence wholly on the other side. The purchaser of liquor, by his offer to buy, induces the seller of the liquor to make the sale; but he cannot be said to ‘assist’ him in it. The whole force, moral or physical, that went to the production of the crime as such was the seller’s.”

Separated from the context-in which the. sentence was used *669 by the Connecticut court, it becomes meaningless and confusing.

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Bluebook (online)
162 U.S. 664, 16 S. Ct. 943, 40 L. Ed. 1109, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffin-v-united-states-scotus-1896.