People v. Erickson

226 P. 637, 66 Cal. App. 307, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 533
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 731.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 P. 637 (People v. Erickson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Erickson, 226 P. 637, 66 Cal. App. 307, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 533 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

On the twenty-second day of May, 1923, the defendant Alfred Erickson, while going through the *308 town of Marysville on Ms way to Feather River canyon, was taken from the tender of a passenger train on the Western Pacific Railroad by a night watchman, searched, found to be carrying, an I. W. W. membership card and was thereupon arrested under the syndicalism law of this state (Stats. 1919, p. 281), and on the twenty-ninth day of May, 1923, an information was filed against him by the district attorney of the county of Yuba by which information the defendant was charged with “then and there being, did then and there willfully and unlawfully and feloniously and knowingly did become and was a member of an organization, society, club and assemblage of persons known and designated, as the ‘Industrial Workers of the World’ and sometimes known and referred to as the ‘I. W. W.’ which said organization, society, club, and assemblage of persons, was then and there organized and assembled to advocate, teach, aid and abet criminal syndicalism as a means of accomplishing a change in industrial ownership and control and affecting political changes,” etc.

The defendant was tried upon the information above set forth, convicted, his motion for a new trial was denied and the cause is now before this court on Ms appeal from the judgment of conviction -and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Three questions are presented for consideration upon this appeal, to wit: the constitutional question presented and dealt with in former cases; the question of essential scienter or knowledge, considered and passed upon in the case of People v. Flanagan, 65 Cal. App. 268 [223 Pac. 1014], and the admission of hearsay testimony.

The case at bar differs very materially from any of the former cases considered by this court in that none of the literature advocating or suggesting forms of sabotage condemned by the statutes was introduced upon the trial of this action. It is only by conjecture or supposition that such a conclusion could be reached from any of the papers, pamphlets, or books presented to the jury as exhibits. The literature in question purports to set forth the purposes and principles of the I. W. W. and of how its aims and purposes are to be accomplished. This literature makes no express reference to direct action or any manner of violence, *309 whatever may be said of the visionary or impossible schemes set forth and contained therein.

We make this statement because, as said, in substance, in the case of People v. Thornton, 63 Cal. App. 724 [219 Pac. 1020], every ease of this kind must rest upon the character of the evidence introduced therein. The statute does not condemn or proscribe the I. W. W. as an illegal organization per se, hence the mere fact of membership in such an organization does not, in and of itself, warrant the conclusion of belonging to an organization seeking to accomplish an industrial change by violence or unlawful means. In other words, the character of the organization is a question always to be determined.

There being nothing in the literature introduced in this case expressly advocating violence or unlawful action denounced by the statutes, and, as we have said, only such conclusion could be arrived therefrom by conjecture, the ruling of the court upon the admission of other testimony becomes important.

To show the continuing and present character and the criminal designs and purposes of the organization, a witness, Elbert Coutts, was placed on the witness-stand and testified to certain criminal acts of members of the I. W. W. occurring between January 2, 1913, and December, 1917. It appears from the transcript that this witness’ membership in the organization ceased with the month of December, 1917. There is no testimony of any witness having actual knowledge of the teachings and acts of the I. W. W. later than December, 1917, set forth in the transcript. The defendant introduced testim'ony to the effect that the organization had discarded sabotage literature and was no longer seeking or advocating an industrial change by violence or unlawful means. Apparently, to bridge this gap and to establish the continuance of the unlawful character of the I. W. W., the following hearsay testimony of Elbert Coutts was introduced over the objection of the defendant: “Q. Have you talked with any of the leaders or discussed the I. W. W. with any of the leaders since 1917 ? A. Well, I couldn’t say leaders; I talked with one of the men I knew quite a while, Harry Letour, in Los Angeles, along toward the latter part ofFebruary or first of March, 1922, during one of these eases down»there. Q. Was there anything said *310 about the teaching of the word sabotage or anything of that character by the organization at the present time ? A. I was talking with him quite a while and that was discussed during the conversation. Q. Who was this man Letour, was he one of the speakers? A. Some time before that he had .been released from Leavenworth where he was confined for a case tried in Sacramento in 1918 and the beginning of 1919. He was a delegate then, member and delegate. Q. Do you know whether or not he was at the time you 'talked to him? A. He didn’t show me a membership card but showed me a delegate slip at that time there, a sheet of paper, and it had his name on there; very similar to the ones they had during the time I was a member, and told me about his time in Leavenworth and also stated he was a member at that time. Q. What was the date of the delegate’s certificate? A. Oh, I don’t remember now; I never paid much attention to it. It was familiar to me. Q. You didn’t know what date it was? A. I don’t remember now; he stated to me at that time he was a member. Q. How long had you known this man? A. I had known him in 1917 when he was Secretary of the I. W. W. in Modesto and met him several years previous to that when he was a member of the I. W. W. and knew him quite well around Modesto and Stockton in 1917 as a member of the I. W. W. Q. Now state what the conversation was. A. At that time he was telling me that I didn’t know about the I. W. W.— what I knew about the I. W. W. and what they were doing, that it didn’t amount to much of it, and he also told me the I. W. W. still taught sabotage but they didn’t carry it on their literature any more but carried it on by word of mouth. By the Court: That part will go out, what he said, what they were doing. Confine yourself to what he said they taught. A. He said they carried on their teaching of sabotage by word of mouth; they had cut it out of the literature, 'and he told me also—he says he wasn’t afraid to tell me ¡this because it would be hearsay testimony at that time. Q. That is what he stated was his conclusion? A. That is what he stated to me was the reason he told me that. Q. As I understand, the only change was that now they were not advocating sabotage in their literature but carried it on by word of mouth? A. Yes, sir.”

*311 It will be noted that this hearsay testimony is not a declaration of a conspirator in furtherance of a conspiracy, and is but a recital of past transactions of the organization and the conclusions of the person with whom the witness Coutts was talking. We have carefully examined the case of

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Stewart
230 P. 221 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P. 637, 66 Cal. App. 307, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-erickson-calctapp-1924.