Commonwealth v. O'Brien

66 Mass. 84
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 Mass. 84 (Commonwealth v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. O'Brien, 66 Mass. 84 (Mass. 1853).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is an indictment against Michael O’Brien, William Clarke, and Jane Harper, for a conspiracy, After a conviction of the three defendants, the case comes before this court upon a motion in arrest of judgment

Several causes for an arrest of judgment are stated, of which the principal one is this, namely, because the second count sets forth an executed conspiracy to commit a felony, and thus the misdemeanor is merged in the felony; and because it is double, vague, uncertain, and contradictory, and does not set out the offence with sufficient certainty and precision. The argument is, that by Rev. Sts. c. 125, § 17, it is made a substantive offence, if any person shall, either verbally, or by any written or printed communication, maliciously threaten to accuse another of crime, with an intent thereby to extort money; which offence may be punishable in the state prison not more than two years ; that by St. 1852, c. 37, defining felony, such offence of threatening, &c., being punishable in the state prison, is a statute felony; and, therefore, when it is charged, after an allegation of the conspiracy, that two of the defendants, pursuant to the conspiracy, did threaten, &c., it in effect charges that the thing conspired to be done was done, and when done was a felony, and so the conspiracy was merged, under the authority of Commonwealth v. Kingsbury, 5 Mass. 106. Supposing the last case is good law, which it is unnecessary here to consider, several questions of law must be decided before this case can be brought within it; as, whether the offence, "which the three defendants are alleged to have conspired together to commit, is the same offence which it is alleged they did commit; whether the offence of threatening to accuse one of crime, in order to extort money, is made felony by the statute; or, if it is, whether conspiracy is not also made felony, by force if the [89]*89same statute; because it is not contended that a conspiracy to commit a misdemeanor will be merged in the commission of the misdemeanor, or the conspiracy to commit a felony be merged in the felony, if committed. In order to see whether any such principle of merger can apply, it will be necessary to look carefully to the indictment to see whether it is charged that the offence which they conspired to commit was actually committed. We take the second count, the first not being relied on. The case of conspiracy is peculiar, and the rules of pleading adapted to it must, of course, conform. These rules, and the principles on which they rest, are stated in the recent case of Commonwealth v. Hunt, 4 Met. 111, and we would especially refer to the statement of them on page 125. It being an established rule, that the offence is consummate and complete by the unlawful combination, it is unnecessary to allege that such purpose was accomplished and carried into effect; or if it is so alleged, it is unnecessary to prove it. But the purpose to be accomplished must be distinctly stated, with as much certainty as practicable, so that it may appear to be unlawful. So, if the charge be of an unlawful combination to accomplish some purpose not in itself unlawful, the unlawful means, by which it is to be accomplished, must be set out with the same degree of certainty, that being the gist of the offence.

With a view to these rules, we are to consider this indictment. It charges a conspiracy entered into by two men and a woman. It avers that said O’Brien, Clarke, and Jane Harper, at, &c., on, &c., intending fraudulently and maliciously to deprive said Bigelow of his good name and character, and to subject him, without any cause, to punishment for the crime of adultery, and to extort from him money, to the amount of $1,000, &c. Thus far it is merely preliminary, and these are not traversable averments, but intended merely to give character and effect to the unlawful conspiracy, which it goes on to state as follows : “ did falsely, unlawfully, wickedly and maliciously combine, conspire, confederate, and agree together to entrap, seduce, and insnare, and falsely charge and accuse him, said Bigelow, of the crime of adultery, and thereby and [90]*90by the means aforesaid to extort,” &c. This is the charge of crime to be met and traversed. It is clearly the charge oí a conspiracy to accomplish an unlawful purpose, to extort money by false charges and representations. Taking the in troductory statement of intent, the averment of combination, what is its natural import? Even taking the preliminary intent stated, namely, to defame him and expose him to punishment, these are not set forth as the ultimate object and purpose of the conspiracy, but only as subordinate and conducive to the intent subsequently added in the same statement, to extort money, to wit, $1,000. Taking it with the traversable allegation which follows, it seems clear it was intended as a conspiracy, not actually to complain of the party to the grand jury, and thus subject him to infamy and punishment as an end, but to entrap him into an equivocal situation, which would give color to such an accusation, and then threaten to charge and impute the offence under such circumstances as to lead him to believe that, by means of such false testimony, aided by the colorable circumstances, he might be exposed to such infamy and punishment, and thus induce him to pay money to purchase his escape from such accusation. Take the natural meaning of the word “ extort; ” it is to obtain money or other valuable thing either by compulsion, by actual force, or by the force of motives applied to the will, and often more overpowering and irresistible than physical force. What the grand jury have charged, and what the traverse jury have found true, is, that these defendants conspired to seduce and entrap said Bigelow, and then falsely charge and accuse him of the crime of adultery. The term “charge and accuse ” thus used, and in this connection, does not mean actually charge before a grand jury or magistrate, but to impute to him these offences falsely, as a means of inducing him to pay money to avoid such actual prosecution.

The indictment then proceeds to set forth what acts were done by means of this conspiracy of the three defendants, and the averment that a part of the acts constituting these means were done by the woman, and part by the men, is wholly con-' sistent with the charge of one joint combination. It alleges [91]*91that, in pursuance of the conspiracy, the said Jane Harper did entice, allure, and attempt to seduce said Bigelow to visit her, at the house of said O’Brien and Clarke, described, &c., on the evening of said day; and, in further pursuance of said conspiracy, the said O’Brien and Clarke, on, &c., did maliciously threaten and accuse him, said Bigelow, of the crime of adultery with said Jane Harper, he being a married man, with an intent unjustly and fraudulently to obtain and extort money. We think the words “ threaten and accuse,” in this sentence, are used in the same sense in which the words “ charge and accuse ” are used in alleging the conspiracy entered into by the three. The means were not set out in the charge of conspiracy, nor was it necessary that they should be.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Mass. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-obrien-mass-1853.