Newman v. People

23 Colo. 300
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 23 Colo. 300 (Newman v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. People, 23 Colo. 300 (Colo. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

That the defendant corruptly received money for omitting to perform this official duty, if such it was, the record leaves no room for doubt. But he contends, inter alia, that the statute imposing this duty is unconstitutional.

A number of errors have been assigned, but only those will be considered which have been argued by counsel. They are, first, that the judgment was pronounced upon counts of the information which had been quashed; second, that the defendant was convicted under an unconstitutional statute; third, that there was a variance between the evidence and the information ; fourth, that the offense, if any, was instigated and procured to be committed by the prosecuting witness; fifth, that there was error in certain instructions.

(1) The verdict of the jury was in these words: “ We, the jury, find defendant guilty, as charged in the first and second counts of the information.” The contention of counsel for plaintiff in error is that this verdict is absolutely void and of no effect, because it finds the defendant guilty under the two counts of the information that were quashed. If the record accompanying this verdict were not considered, the argument might be plausible. The four counts in the information [304]*304were not numbered 1, 2, 3, and 4, though they were separately set forth. When the two coining first (which appropriately might be designated counts No. 1 and No. 2) were quashed, there were but two remaining, and the information then stood as though it had always contained but these two, which, as related to each other and to the information, were as 1 and 2. The defendant pleaded not guilty to them after the court disposed of the motion to quash, and in its instructions to the jury the court referred to these counts as No. 1 and No. 2, and in connection therewith stated what they respectively charged against the defendant. In this view neither the court nor the counsel nor the jury was misled, and no prejudice could possibly result to the defendant.

(2) The variance alleged is that whereas the charge was that the defendant corruptly agreed to omit to seize and take before a judicial officer gambling devices, the proof, at most, showed nothing but a vague understanding between the defendant and the gamblers from whom the money was received that he, the defendant, was not to close the gambling houses.

The distinction which counsel endeavor to make is too unsubstantial and refined for courts to recognize in the administration of the criminal law. It is not to be expected that an arrangement of the sort which the sheriff undoubtedly made with the gamblers would be explicit as to details, or reduced to writing. The understanding necessarily would be somewhat general in its nature; and from the facts in evidence in this case we consider that there is no material variance between the allegation and the proof and think the fair inference, which the jury was entitled to draw, was this agreement contemplated that the sheriff was to omit to perform those acts which reasonably or necessarily would tend to close the gambling houses, or to interfere with the carrying on of gambling. To seize these gambling devices was one effective and statutory way to close the houses, and we have no doubt from the evidence that the sheriff’s corrupt [305]*305agreement included his omission to do the very thing charged, and that the jury were abundantly justified in so finding.

(3) An attempt is made to bring this case within the doctrine of Conner v. The People, 18 Colo. 373, and Saunders v. The People, 38 Mich. 218, wherein it was held that the crime of larceny was not committed where the taking was instigated or suggested to the defendant by the owner, ox-agent of the owner, of the property, for the reason that non-consent of the owner must be shown ; in which cases it was also announced that courts should not give their sanction to the prosecution of persons who committed the acts charged against them at the instigation of others, although the object thereof was to effect their arrest while the act was being committed and to capture old offenders.

Counsel here seek to extend this doctrine to a crime in the nature of bribery, where the object of the bribe giver was to gain some advantage for himself and to hold over the sheriff, as a club, this receipt of money, in case he should thereafter attempt to interfere with the former’s unlawful pi-actices. We think this cannot be done. To constitute bribery, the act of at least two persons is essential,—that of him who gives and him who receives. The minds of the two must concur; and, as to the point now before us, it is immaterial whether the giver makes the first advances or gives the money to get some personal advantage to himself. In fact, in most, if not all, of the cases the very object of the giving of a bribe is to obtain for the giver, or the one for whom he is acting, some supposed advantage or gain for himself.

(4) No useful purpose would .be subserved in discussing the instructions. We have carefully examined the evidence and the instructions given by the court and those refused which defendant submitted, and find that the court’s rulings thereon were substantially correct. The point made that defendant did not, at the time he received the money, know of the existence of this particular statute, counsel admit would be no defense under an indictment for failure to do [306]*306the thing required; but where the charge is receiving money for an agreement to omit to perform that duty, evidence by the defendant of his ignorance of this statute is material as tending to sustain his claim that he never made an agreement not to perform the duty imposed by the statute. An instruction asked by defendant covered this theory and was refused. This ruling was not, under the facts, erroneous. While defendant may not have known of this specific statute, he is conclusively presumed to know that gambling is a crime, and the record shows that he did know it, and, in general, that his official duty was to execute the laws against gambling. His transaction with the gamblers is conclusive that he knew what his duty was in this respect. Certainly he knew that gambling was unlawful, and that the gamblers would not give him money to prevent interference with their practices unless it was within his power, and a part of his duty, to do the things which this statute declares he shall do.

(5) But the principal question in this case, and by far the most important one, is as to the validity of section 1343, which prescribes the duty of the sheriff. If the prosecution rests solely upon this section, the force of the objection urged against it is perceived when it is conceded that, unless it was the official duty of the sheriff thereunder to seize and take before a judicial officer these gambling devices, he was guilty of no offense under section 1302.

In passing upon the acts of a coordinate department of government, courts always shrink from the exercise of their unquestioned power to declare such acts in violation of the fundamental law, and enter upon such a consideration with reluctance and hesitation. In all cases of doubt, the presumption in favor of the constitutionality of an act is indulged. Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, chap. 7, p. 192, et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Colo. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-people-colo-1896.