Garland v. State

75 A. 631, 112 Md. 83, 1910 Md. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 75 A. 631 (Garland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garland v. State, 75 A. 631, 112 Md. 83, 1910 Md. LEXIS 92 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City for unlawfully conspiring with one W. Wallace Elliott and a certain other person to the grand jurors unknown to unlawfully obstruct the due administration of justice in said Court.

*85 The defendant demurred to the indictment and to each count thereof; the demurrer was overruled and the trial resulted in a verdict of guilty.

During the trial nine exceptions were reserved by the defendant; the first seven to the refusal of the Court to allow certain questions to be asked and answered in the cross-examination of a witness for the State; the eighth to the refusal of the Court to strike out the answer of the witness, and the ninth to the overruling of a motion by the defendant, at the conclusion of the State’s testimony, to strike out all of the evidence produced by the State, “or any part thereof, which may be inadmissible.”

After the verdict the defendant filed motions for a neAV trial and in arrest of judgment. These motions were overruled by the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, and the defendant was sentenced to pay a fine of $200 and costs, from which judgment he has appealed.

1. The indictment contains sixteen counts. The demurrer to the first, second, seventh and eighth counts was not pressed in this Court, but it is insisted that the other counts are defective because they fail to give to the defendant any definite or certain information of the ci’ime with which he is charged; and because they “are vague and uncertain, and in each of them the obj ect of the conspiracy is set out as a conclusion of law.”

The first and seventh counts charge as the object of the conspiracy “unlawfully and corruptly to endeavor to influence the jurors of the Grand Jury aforesaid of the September term of the said Court for the said year nineteen hundred and eight, in the discharge of their duty as such jurors as aforesaid, so as to cause said charge against the said Marcyz Plasynski to be dismissed by said Grand Jury for the September term of said Court.”

The second and eighth counts state that the conspiracy was “unlawfully and corruptly to endeavor to impede the jurors of the grand jury aforesaid—in the discharge of- their duty *86 as such jurors as aforesaid, so as to cause said charge ag’ainst the said Mareyz Plasynsld to he dismissed,” etc.

In the other counts the object of the conspiracy is charged as follows:

3rd, 9th and 13th. “Unlawfuly and corruptly to obstruct the due administration of justice in said Oourt in said cause therein and then pendng as aforesaid.”

4th, 10th and 14th. “Unlawfully-and corruptly to impede the due administration of justice in said Oourt in said cause therein then pending as aforesaid.”

5th, 11th and 15th. “Unlawfully and. corruptly to endeavor to obstruct the due administration of justice in said Oourt in said cause therein then pending as aforesaid.”

6th, 12th and 16th. “Unlawfully and corruptly to endeavor to impede the due administration of justice in said Court in said cause therein then pending as aforesaid.”

The nature of the crime with which the appellant is charged, as 'well as the requisites of good pleading in such cases, have been so recently and fully considered and stated by this Court, as to require and admit of but little further discussion. It is well established by the decisions in this State, and by the great weight of authority elsewhere, that the gist of the common law offense of conspiracy is the unlawful combination and agreement. The agreement may be to commit a crime or to accomplish an unlawful purpose or to do a lawful act by a criminal or unlawful means, but in neither case is an overt act necessary to the completion of the offense. Where the object of the combination is to commit a crime or to do an unlawful act, the means by which it is to be accomplished are immaterial, the offense being the unlawful agreement to accomplish the criminal or unlawful purpose.

In an indictment charging the common law offense, the means by which an unlawful or criminal object is to be accomplished need.not be stated, and in stating the object it is only necessary for the indictment to show that the purpose of the conspiracy is criminal or unlawful. When the agreement *87 is to commit an. offense known to the common law or created by statute,, it.is not necessary, in stating the object of the conspiracy, to set out the offense with the accuracy or detail required in an indictment for that offense. The reason for the rule is that the crime of conspiracy does not consist in the accomplishment of the unlawful object, or in doing-the acts by means of which the desired end is to be attained, but the essence of the offense is, as we have stated, the unlawful combination and agreement for any purpose that is unlawful or criminal. This rule does not, of course, apply to conspiracies to d'o a lawful act by unlawful means. In such cases it must appear by the indictment that the means to be employed are unlawful.

In State v. Buchanan et al., 5 G. & J. 317, Judge Buchanan states that at common law a conspiracy to do anything that the law forbids is indictable, and that “ the case of the King v. Marbry and others, 6 T. R. 619, was a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, which is of itself an indictable offense.” The same learned judge, after a most careful review of the decisions in England “running through a space of more than four hundred years,” says that it is clearly settled “that in a prosecution for a conspiracy, it is sufficient to state in the indictment, the conspiracy and the object of it; and that the means by which it was intended to he accomplished need not he set out, being only matters of evidence to .prove the charge, and not the crime itself, and may be perfectly indifferent.”

In the case of Blum v. State, 94 Md. 375, the appellants were indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City “for conspiracy ‘by means of divers false pretenses and representations, and other false and' subtle means and devices to obtain and acquire unto themselves certain properties, moneys, goods and chattels’ of certain corporations and persons named in the indictment, and of certain other persons to the jurors unknown, of the value of $2,500.00, and to cheat and defraud such persons and corporations.” Judge Peabce, after stating that a “large part of the able brief of the ap *88 pellants, and of the oral argument of their distinguished senior counsel (the late Wm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 A. 631, 112 Md. 83, 1910 Md. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garland-v-state-md-1910.