Hughes v. State

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 237, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 369, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 214
CourtErie Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 237 (Hughes v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Erie Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. State, 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 237, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 369, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 214 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

In the court of common pleas on March 9, 1906, the plaintiffs in error, Henry Hughes, H. C. Webster, W. H. Lyons, W. N. Cleveland, J. H. Hilton, the Massillon' Bridge Company, the King Bridge Company, the Bellefontaine Bridge Company, the Canton Bridge Company and the Mount Vernon Bridge Company were jointly indicted with •other defendants for alleged violation of the Valentine antitrust law, I/an. 7586' (B. 4427-1) et seq.

> Two of the plaintiffs in error, the Massillon Bridge Company and the Canton Bridge Company, are not now prosecuting their proceeding in error.

The defendant Hughes was tried separately to a jury and convicted. The other defendants waived a jury, and the ease by their consent was submitted to the court on the recorded evidence in the Hughes case. All the defendants were adjudged guilty and each of them was fined $500, except Hughes, who was fined $1,000.

Prior to these proceedings, ■ except the finding and presentation of the indictment, motions to quash, pleas in abatement and demurrers were filed and overruled by the. court. All defendants except .Hughes waived any claimed errors in such rulings, and those of them who are prosecuting this érror proceeding base their prayer for a reversal substantially on the ground that the evidence does not justify the judgments of conviction.

The defendant Hughes preserved his exception to the overruling of his motion to quash the indictment and numerous other exceptions in the subsequent stages of the ease.

[239]*239The accusation embodied in the indictment, which, under these exceptions, it becomes important to examine, is substantially as follows :

That the defendants on March 10, 1903, “at the. county of Brie aforesaid, and from and since the said tenth day of March, aforesaid, in the year 1903, aforesaid, continually until the day of finding this indictment to wit, the ninth day of March, in the year of our Lord 1906, engaging then and there in a conspiracy against trade, then and there unlawfully were members of, acted with and in pursuance of and knowingly aided and assisted in carrying out the purposes of a certain trust, the purposes of which said trust wei'e then and there to increase the price of certain commodities, to wit, highway bridges, superstructures of said highway bridges, structural bridge iron and structural 'bridge steel, and to prevent competition in manufacturing, transportation, and sale of said commodities, the said'trust being then and there a combination of capital, skill, and acts by the said persons and corporations aforesaid for the purposes aforesaid, and the said corporations being then and there corporations duly organized, existing, and doing business in said state of Ohio, contrary to the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the state of Ohio.”

The motion to quash attacks this indictment upon .the grounds of indefiniteness and duplicity. The statute (Lan. 7589; B. 4427-4) provides that each day’s violation of this act “shall constitute a separate offense,” and it is urged that this indictment by its “continuando” extending over a period of three years, "attempts to charge numerous offenses in one count, and that this is not permissible.

Cases are cited to support this contention, but, without pausing to comment upon them, it is enough to say that in .our judgment they are inapplicable to this kind of an offense as set forth in the indictment.

No emphasis in argument is placed on the point that the indictment is indefinite and does not sufficiently apprise defendant of the nature of the accusation against him. We will therefore pass the question without, however, indicating approval of the form which the charge has taken. It is probable that the defendant Hughes, knowing in what transaction in Erie county he had been engaged in connection with bridges, was not prejudiced by any lack of particularity in the indictment.

We think that the indictment is not vulnerable to attack on other [240]*240grounds and that the pleas in abatement and demurrers were not well taken.

The evidence taken on the Hughes trial and relied on by the state to justify the conviction of all the defendants, is presented to us in a printed pamphlet of something over two hundred pages, disclosing not only the testimony and- exhibits and the instructions given and refused, but numerous exceptions to rulings of the trial court. We will not attempt specific reference to all of them, but will consider such as seem to demand special attention-. Under the waiver by all defendants except Hughes and the submission of the case by them on the evidence on his trial, the various exceptions taken by him to the admission of evidence are not available to his eodefendants so far as those exceptions relate to the forms of questions or any matters other than the competency of the evidence itself. It is very manifest also that such eodefendants have no concern with refusals to instruct the jury as requested in the Hughes case, or with the charge of the court as given. Their trial was without the aid of a jury and no instructions were refused or given.

The defendant Hughes excepted (see page 190 of the printed record) to the permission granted by the court to the state to introduce additional evidence in chief after the closing of the defense and after requests for instructions to the jury had been passed on. The matter was within a discretion of the court which seems to have been properly exercised.

In the introduction of this evidence, however, a question was asked of the witness, E. U. Hirt, by, the counsel calling him (see page 191), which we think should not have been permitted. The testimony related to a conversation with the defendant, Hughes, concerning the letting of a bridge at Fremont in March, 1906. The witness had stated the conversation as he seemed to recall it and added that what he had related was, he thought, the substance of all that was said. Thereupon counsel for the state asked:

“Did he say to you in words or in substance that there might be other bridge companies present, but that he could get them out of the 'way ?’ ’

The witness answered over defendant’s objection:

“Yes, he did.”

While it might have been proper- after exhausting the memory of the witness to invite his attention to any particular subject-matter of conversation, it was not within the bounds of legitimate questioning [241]*241by the attorney who had called the witness, to suggest to him the very statement desired and obtain his assent to such suggestion. The answer so elicited furnished the only important item of evidence from this witness, and the ruling of the court permitting it was both erroneous and prejudicial. It was not justified by any apparent unwillingness on the part of the witness to testify favorably to the state or by any adverse interest, nor was it justified as impeachment of Hughes by any sufficient foundation previously laid therefor.

Although the charge in the indictment did not define the particu- .

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19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 237, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 369, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-state-ohcircterie-1907.