Hummelshime v. State

93 A. 990, 125 Md. 563
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 93 A. 990 (Hummelshime 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
Hummelshime v. State, 93 A. 990, 125 Md. 563 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants were convicted in a trial by jury in the Circuit Court for Alleg’any County upon an indictment which charged them with having unlawfully conspired to demand from a certain Elmer J. Miller the sum of eight *565 hundred dollars for the purpose of corruptly influencing two of the accused in the performance of their official duties as members of the City Council of Cumberland, the sum mentioned being intended as a bribe to secure the votes of the two councilmen in favor of the payment of a claim against the municipality, held by the firm of Merrill Ruckgaber Company, in the amount of eight thousand dollars. A brief preliminary statement of the circumstances under which the prosecution developed will facilitate our discussion of the questions raised by the record.

In August, 1914, some persons, undisclosed by the proof, acting through Mr. David A. Robb as their attorney, engaged the William J. Burns Detective Agency to investigate the municipal administration of Cumberland, and particularly the official conduct of Dr. A. K. Hummelshime and Mr. Ward M. Eichelberger, two of the members of the City Council. The agency detailed for the investigation a dectective by the name of Elmer J. Miller. It was arranged to have him appear in Cumberland in the pretended capacity of a representative of the Merrill-Ruckgaber Company, a firm employed in the construction of the dam for the new City water supply, and whose claim for a balance of $8,000.00 on account of that work remained unpaid. The consent of the firm was obtained for Miller to assume the name of Albert Ruckgaber. one of its members, who was not known in Cumberland, and to confer with the councilmen ostensibly for the purpose of securing a settlement of the claim. The detective arrived in Cumberland on the last day of August. Erom the first to the sixth of September he had a series of interviews with the appellants, which -were held with them separately, but, according to his testimony, were connected and sanctioned by their co-operation, and culminated in a proposition submitted to him by Harold B. Hummelshime, son of the councilman, that eight hundred dollars be paid in advance for the votes of his father and Mr. Eichelberger in favor of the allowance of the Merrill-Ruckgaber claim by the City Council, with the understanding that the n^oney was to be refunded *566 in the event that the motion for the payment of the claim should be defeated. The defendants do not deny that they had interviews with Miller, under the belief that he was a member of the claimant firm, or that a bribe of $800.00 for the votes of the two councilmen was discussed and agreed upon, but they testified that he originated the proposal and that they entertained it only with the object of securing his conviction for attempted bribery. It was planned that the money should be delivered in the City of Washington, and Miller met Harold B. Hummelshime there, by appointment, for that purpose, but no payment was actually made, except of the sum of ten dollars on account of the latter’s expenses, as the detective concluded that he had succeeded in providing sufficient evidence for a successful prosecution of the defendants upon the present charge.

The primary fact of concerted action on the part of the defendants in reference to the proposed bribe being admitted, the real issue in the case was whether the conduct of the accused was actuated by innocent motives or by an unlawful purpose. As the determination of that vital question was exclusively within the province of the jury, and is not subject to review by this Court, there is no occasion for us to recite the evidence offered by the prosecution and defense in support of their respective theories.

In our examination of the record we have been unable to find any prejudice to the appellants in any of the rulings. The evidence adduced by the State was kept strictly within its due and proper bounds, and adequate opportunity was afforded for the development of the defense.

The first and second bills of exceptions show that the detective Miller, after testifying to his first interview with Dr. Hummelshime, was asked to refresh his recollection from verified copies of his notes as to what happened^the next day. Upon objection being made the Court ruled that the witness might use the notes simply to aid his memory as to when the next conversation occurred. The inquiry was not pursued and the notes do not appear to have been used for *567 any purpose, and these exceptions, therefore, need not be further considered.

The third exception was taken to. the overruling of an objection to a question propounded to the same witness as to whether a mail chute, in the Woolworth Building in New York, in which he had placed a letter addressed to Dr. Hummelshime, was connected with the mail box on the lower floor. This was a proper fact to he proven in that connection, and the same question had already been asked and answered in the affirmative without objection.

On cross-examination the detective was asked who was employing the Burns Detective Agency for the Cumberland investigation. An objection to this question was sustained, but when it was changed in form so as to inquire whether any of several designated persons had anything to do with the employment of the agency, the objection was overruled. There is no suggestion that the proper presentation of the defendant’s case depended upon a knowledge of the identity of the persons by whom the services of the detective agency were secured. The defendants were, of course, entitled to ask, as reflecting upon the interest or bias of a particular witness, whether he was one of those who had promoted the investigation, and this right was fully protected by the Court’s ruling. But a general inquiry as to the names of the citizens who were instrumental in having the detective sent to Cumberland could not aid the jury in determining the guilt or innocence of the accused upon the specific charge preferred.

By the fifth hill of exception it appears that the detective was asked on cross-examination whether he investigated any other members of the City Council. This question he declined to answer. He was then asked to state his reason for this refusal, hut an objection was here interposed and sustained. The next question propounded was whether it was necessary to investigate any other person in connection with the water system. This was also disallowed, and forms the subject of the sixth exception. There can he no doubt as to *568 the propriety of these rulings, as the questions, were plainly irrelevant to the issue before the jury.

The seventh exception was reserved to the action of the Court in overruling an objection to a question asked the witness Miller as to whether it is usual for detectives to act. under assumed names in making investigations like the one in which he was engaged in this instance. His answer was in the affirmative. It was doubtless the object of this inquiry to support Miller’s credibility by showing that he was not resorting to any unusual methods, for the kind of service in whch he was engaged, when he concealed his identity in the manner described.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 990, 125 Md. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummelshime-v-state-md-1915.