Hall v. United States

168 U.S. 632, 18 S. Ct. 237, 42 L. Ed. 607, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1353
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 3, 1898
Docket312
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 168 U.S. 632 (Hall 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
Hall v. United States, 168 U.S. 632, 18 S. Ct. 237, 42 L. Ed. 607, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1353 (1898).

Opinion

.Me. Justice Peckha-m

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant was indicted in the Circuit; Court of the United States for the Southern District of ÍTew York in October, 1896, for embezzling and stealing a certain letter and its contents, described in the indictment, containing money. The indictment was under section 5467, Kevised Statutes,- which is set out in the margin. 1 The defendant was employed in a department of the postal service as a clerk at *634 station F, a branch post office of the-United States in the city of blew York.

The indictment contained three counts. The first and second counts charged that the defendant wilfully embezzled, etc., the letter, which was intended to be delivered by a letter carrier. These counts were drawn with reference to the first clause in the statute above referred to. The third count is under the second clause of the statute, and alleged that the defendant, “ being then and there employed in a department of the postal service "of the United States, to wit, as clerk at station F, a branch post office of the United States, in the said city of blew York, did unlawfully, wilfully and feloniously steal, take and carry away a certain United States Treasury note of the denomination and value of one dollar, and three silver certificates of the United States, each of the denomination and value of one dollar, the said treasury note and the said silver certificates then and there being the money and property of one Joseph E. Jacobs, and the same treasury, note and the same silver certificates were then and there feloniously stolen and taken, as aforesaid, by the said-William E.-Hall from and out of a certain letter which then and there had come into his possession in his capacity as such clerk, as aforesaid, and by virtue of his said office and employment, and the said letter was directed in the tenor following — that is to say t ‘ Mrs. Susan Metcalf, bk>. 346 E. 24th St., blew York City, bT. Y.,’ and the same was then intended to be delivered by a letter carrier, and had not then been .delivered to the party to whom the same was directed,” against, etc.

The defendant was arraigned, pleaded not guilty and was subsequently tried at a term of the United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of blew York, a,nd convicted and sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor in the Kings County penitentiary for the term of two years.

*635 Upon the trial, /after the evidence had been given on the part of the prosecution and the Government had rested its case, the counsel for the defendant asked the court to direct the’ jury to acquit the defendant upon several grounds, (1) that the evidence failed to prove the crime charged in the indictment ; (2) that a material allegation to be proved by the Government was the fact that the letter, described in the indictment and alleged to have been secreted, destroyed and embezzled and its contents stolen by the.defendant, was intended to be delivered by a letter carrier, while the uncontradicted evidence showed that such letter was not intended to be delivered by a letter carrier, and therefore a material allegation in the indictment was not only not proved but was absolutely disproved; (3) that, there was a fatal variance between the indictment and the proofs offered to sustain it by the Government, and the defendant should therefore be Acquitted.

The motion to direct an acquittal was denied by the court and the defendant duly excepted. The defendant sued out a writ of error from thi$ court to review the judgment of conviction, and the validity of the exception to the refusal of the court to direct the jury to acquit is the sole question now before us.

After his conviction the defendant moved in arrest of judgment and for a new trial. Thé judgment was arrested on, the first two counts, and the motion for a new trial was denied. We take a statement of the facts proved upon the trial, from the opinion delivered by the learned judge in denying that motion, as we think the statement contains all that is material for the consideration of the case, and that it is a correct summary of the evidence in the particulars mentioned. It is as follows:

“ The evidence showed that the Government detectives prepared a special delivery letter, designed as a test or decoy letter, containing marked bills and delivered it, bearing a special delivery stamp, to the night clerk in charge of branch station F of the post office in this city. The defendant was not a letter carrier, but a clerk employed at that office, whose duty it was to take charge of special delivery letters, enter *636 them in a book kept for that purpose, and then place them in course of transmission. The letter in question was addressed to Mrs. Susan Metcalf, a fictitious person, 346 E. 24th street, New York city, a fictitious number. The letter was placed by the night clerk with other letters upon the table where such letters were usually placed, and the defendant, entering the office not long after, took this letter, along with the others on the same table, removed them to his' desk and properly entered the other letters, but did not enter this letter. On leaving the office not long after, the omission to enter the letter having been observed, he was arrested and the money contents of the letter, marked and identified by the • officers, were found upon his person. The officers testified upon cross-examination that the address was a fictitious one; that the letter was designed as a test letter, and that they ‘ did not intend that the letter should be delivered to Mrs. Susan Metcalf or to that address,’ and that ‘ it could not be delivered to that person at that address.’ ”

The question now before us is whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain this conviction under the third count of the indictment. We think it is. Section 5467, Revised Statutes, describes two distinct offences; the first clause of the section is directed against any person employed in any department of the postal service who secretes,’ embezzles, etc., any letter entrusted to him or which shall come into his possession, and which was intended to be conveyed by mail or carried or delivered by any mail, carrier, mail messenger, route agent, letter carrier or othér person employed in any department of the postal service, or forwarded through or delivered from any post office or branch post-office established by the authority of the Postmaster General, and which shall contain any note, etc. This is one of the' offences set forth in that section. The other offence set. forth in the same section does not in terms provide that the letter must have been intended to have been conveyed by mail oí carried or delivered by any mail carrier, letter carrier, etc., but it provides that “any such person,” (meaning thereby any person employed in any department of the • postal service as described in the first part of the section,) *637

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Bluebook (online)
168 U.S. 632, 18 S. Ct. 237, 42 L. Ed. 607, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-united-states-scotus-1898.