Sachs v. Government of the Canal Zone

176 F.2d 292, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3751
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 1949
Docket12481
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 176 F.2d 292 (Sachs v. Government of the Canal Zone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sachs v. Government of the Canal Zone, 176 F.2d 292, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3751 (5th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Defendant was charged by information 1 with criminally libeling 2 Daniel E. McGrath, District Attorney for the District of the Canal Zone. 3

*294 Defendant’s demurrer to the information, that it lacks directness and certain ty in setting out the circumstances of the offense and that the facts a-s stated do not constitute an offense, his motion to suppress the use of illegally obtained evidence, and his challenge to the jury panel because of the exclusion of women from it, were all overruled, and the case proceeded to trial before a judge and jury.

At the conclusion of the Government’s evidence, 4 defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was denied. At the conclusion of defendant’s evidence, consisting of the evidence of only one witness, 5 defendant not taking the stand, defendant renewed *295 his motion for a directed verdict. It was again denied, and the cause submitted to the jury, there was a verdict oí guilty, followed by a pre-sentence investigation under Secs. 494-495, Title 6, Canal Zone Code, 6 at which the Government offered evidence in aggravation, and defendant offered none in mitigation, of the offense, and a sentence to the penitentiary at hard labor for nine months.

Defendant appealing is here complaining both of the conviction and of the sentence, assigning many errors in procedure, and asking that if the conviction be affirmed, the sentence be modified.

Before taking up appellee’s claims of error, some general observations are in order. In the first place it is well to note that it is not, it cannot in reason be, contended that the charges the defendant made against the District Attorney were not highly libelous .per se. It is not, it cannot in reason be, contended that they were not deliberately and intentionally made by defendant in his capacity as representative of the United Public Workers (C. I. O.) for the purpose and with the intent of seriously reflecting on and of, thereby, undermining the District Attorney personally and in the conduct of his office in connection with criminal action then being taken against an officer or functionary of the C. I. O.

In the second place, it is quite plain that unless both true and justified, as to both of which the burden was on the defendant, 7 the publication of the libel was a serious offense against the Government of the Canal Zone calling for vigorous prosecution and, if proven, condign punishment.

The record contains not a single word of testimony introduced or offered showing or tending to show that the charges made were true or were in any manner legally justified, and in addition the record contains a statement made by Mr. Cammer, 8 one of the defendant’s counsel, that the defense is a general denial under the plea of not guilty, . and the principal reliance of the defendant is that the criminal act, if any, was not committed in the Zone.

*296 In this state of the 'record, the admonitions of the Congress of the United States, 9 that no indictment shall foe deemed insufficient for defects and that no new trial is to be granted for merely abstract errors • which do not affect the substantial rights of the defendant, have peculiar force. With, therefore, the undisputed facts shown of record, and these statutes held firmly' in mind, we take up appellant’s assignments of error to determine not whether the trial was completely free of error but whether any of the claimed errors prejudicially “affect” appellant’s substantial rights.

Taking them in the order of the five general heads under which appellant presents them in his brief, we are in no doubt that the three presented under the heading, "1. Rulings Before the Trial”, are wholly without merit.

As to the first, overruling the demurrer to .the information, it is quite clear that under modern rules of criminal pleading, 10 without the aid of the^remedial statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 556, or the provision of the Canal Zone Code governing Information for libel, the information is not subject to the demurrer. That the'information did not violate appellant’s substantial ■rights is put beyond the shadow of a doubt when Sec. 201, Title 6, note 1, supra, is looked to.

The second error assigned under this head, the denial of the motion to suppress statements of witnesses obtained by illegal issuance of subpoenas, is patently without merit. The right claimed, the protection invoked by defendant is personal to and may be asserted or waived by the person searched or examined. It was never heard that a defendant could object to the violation of the privileges of -others not claimed by them because that violation discovers evidence by which he is convicted. 11 The cases cited by appellant all dealt with situations where the rights of defendant were invaded. Assuming, without deciding, that the district attorney’s action was an invasion of rights of Miss Hare-wood, which she could have claimed, it was not, it could not have been, an invasion of defendant’s rights.

The third error under this ground, the overruling of the challenge to the panel on the ground that there were no women jurors on it, is especially without substance. Authorized by Title 7, Canal Zone ■Code, 12 to “provide for the selection * * of jurors,” the District Judge of the' Canal Zone has, by Part 5, Sec. 1 of the Rules of the United States District 'Court for the Canal Zone, for many years made it a prescribed qualification for persons serving as jurors in that court that they be of the male sex. The Canal Zone Code and the rules aside, however, it is quite clear that failure to draw women on the jury is not a matter of which appellant can complain 13 as prejudicially affecting his substantial rights.

*297 Under liis second heading, “Rulings During The Trial”, appellant, on pp. 11 and 12 of his brief, makes many subdivisions, but in his summary of the argument, he classifies these by subject matter and somewhat reduces them in number, while in the argument and statement of points, he reduces the many to three mainly relied on.

These, in order of importance as determined by their position, and the space allotted them, in the brief, are:

First, that there was no publication, only circulation, in the Canal Zone, the publication having been outside, and the circulation not being an offense under the statute forbidding publication;

Second, that defendant was denied the right to prove the circumstances surrounding the publication;

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Bluebook (online)
176 F.2d 292, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sachs-v-government-of-the-canal-zone-ca5-1949.