Hart v. United States

183 F. 368, 105 C.C.A. 588, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5054
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1910
DocketNo. 2,040
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 F. 368 (Hart v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. United States, 183 F. 368, 105 C.C.A. 588, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5054 (6th Cir. 1910).

Opinion

TAYLER, District Judge.

At the March term,-1906, of the District Court for the Southern Division of the Eastern District of Michigan, the grand jury returned three indictments for violation of the oleomargarine law against the plaintiff in error, John Hart, and two others. One indictment charged Hart with carrying on the business of a manufacturer of oleomargarine without having paid the special tax required by law. A second indictment charged him in the first count with producing, removing, and furnishing certain colored oleomargarine, and with defrauding the United States by not paying the tax thereon, and in the second count with the same offense as to another lot of colored oleomargarine. The third indictment charged him with violation of the law in neglecting to cancel stamps on empty oleomargarine packages. The three indictments were, by order of the court, consolidated, and the trial proceeded upon all of them. A verdict of guilty was returned against the defendant below on all three indictments, and from the judgment entered error is prosecuted.

Thirty-nine assignments of error are presented on behalf of the plaintiff in error. Many of them are trivial, and none substantial. Classifying them, they relate to the sufficiency of the indictments, the admission of testimony, the refusal to strike out certain testimony, the refusal to charge as requested, and certain instructions given by the trial judge. These assignments will be taken up in the general order just indicated.

[370]*370The objections to the first indictment, which charges the defendant with carrying on the business of a manufacturer of oleomargarine without having paid the special tax, are that the indictment does not charge the defendant with manufacturing for sale or removal for consumption by others; that it charges no offense known to the law; that the indictment contains no statement of facts constituting any specific offense; that it does not contain any statement of facts constituting the defendant a manufacturer; that it does not charge the place where the defendant manufactured for sale; and that the defendant was not given a speedy trial, as provided by the sixth amendment to the Constitution of the United States. In none of these objections do we find any serious ground of attacking the sufficiency of' the indictment. The indictment charges the defendant in the language of the statute, and is in every substantial respect in the same form as the indictment which was sustained by this court iin the case of Hartman v. United States, 168 Fed. 30, 94 C. C. A. 124. The last objection made to this indictment, if it means anything, must refer to the fact that the defendant, in anticipation of this prosecution, escaped the vigilance of the marshal and was a fugitive from justice until a short time before he was put upon trial. This can hardly be said to be a denial of the constitutional right to a speedy trial.

* The objections to the other two indictments are of a similar nature, although not identical; and it is. a sufficient answer to say that the)' set out the offenses charged substantially in the language of the statute, and, therefore, sufficiently define the crime charged, and informed the defendant of the offense with which he was charged. As none of the objections to the indictments raise any new or difficult question, it would unnecessarily prolong this opinion to devote any further attention to them.

Some of the assignments of error, as we have just indicated, relate •to questions as to the admissibility of testimony. These assignments are covered by Nos. 2 to 27, inclusive. It will be well, before considering these specific objections, to generally state the facts as developed by the testimony on behalf of the government. The defendant did not himself testify or offer any testimony.

The plaintiff in error, during the period covered by these indictments, was a legally qualified dealer in white oleomargarine in the city of Detroit. The tax on white oleomargarine is a quarter of a cent a pound; on colored oleomargarine, 10 cents a pound. The general charge against Hart was that he received large quantities of white oleomargarine, and that he caused this white oleomargarine, or a large part of it, to be artificially colored yellow in imitation of butter, and did not pay the tax which the law provides shall be levied .on colored oleomargarine. He purchased between April 1, 1905, and February 16, 1906, from Braun, Fitts & Co., of Chicago, manufacturers of oleomargarine, over 125,000 pounds of white oleomargarine. This oleomargarine was shipped in tubs marked “J. IT.” to Detroit, and was paid for by Hart. In January and early in February, 1906, internal revenue officers, having been led by their pre[371]*371vious investigations to do so, found that the tubs containing this white oleomargarine were being taken from the Michigan Central Station in Detroit to a residence at the corner of Orchard and Trumbull streets, which was not the regular place of business of the defendant. The shipments arrived from Chicago two or three times a week, and many cart loads were conveyed to the premises at Trumbull street. During the same period a large quantity of empty five-pound cartons were delivered to the same place, and many full five-pound cartons were taken away. Some of these empty cartons were taken in defendant’s wagon from his store to the premises above referred to, and many of the filled cartons were taken thence- to the defendant’s store at 378 Gratiot avenue.

While the premises at Trumbull and Orchard were being watched by the revenue inspectors, a machine called a “butter worker” (that is, a machine in which white oleomargarine may be worked over and mixed with coloring matter) was moved therefrom to the adjoining house. An examination made of the butter worker after its ■ removal disclosed the name of the maker, and also the fact that it was the property of John Hart, or that he was interested in it. A few days later the butter worker was removed from the house adjoining the- one on the corner of Orchard and Trumbull, and taken to a house at the corner of Riopelle and Winder streets. To this place also empty five-pound cartons were taken, and from it filled cartons were carried to the defendant’s place of business. An examination of the premises at Riopelle and Winder, made under the authority of a search warrant on the 16th day of February, disclosed all of the paraphernalia for artificially coloring uncolored oleomargarine. Here, also, were found three empty tubs bearing JO-cent tax stamps which were wholly intact. Upon the lids of each of these tubs were the initials, “J. H., Detroit, Michigan.”

It is not necessary to recite any more fully the testimony disclosing the character of the work which was carried on on these premises. The articles found there conclusively establish the fact that colored oleomargarine had been there manufactured in large quantities and that it was packed in five-pound cartons. Indeed 262 cartons filled with colored oleomargarine which had evidently just been mixed were found there by the officers, as well as a can.- partially ' filled with coloring matter used to color butter or uncolored oleomargarine. Ten 60-pound tubs of uncolored oleomargarine were standing around a large hard-coal base-burner stove. There was a very hot fire in the stove; the purpose manifestly being to soften the oleomargarine, so that it could be worked up with artificial coloring-matter. The windows were covered with paper, bags, and coffee sacks, so as to screen them from outside observation. In the cellar were fragments of thirty tubs which had upon them the initials “J.

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Bluebook (online)
183 F. 368, 105 C.C.A. 588, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-united-states-ca6-1910.