Schouweiler v. United States

27 F.2d 515, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3424
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1928
DocketNo. 5410
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 515 (Schouweiler v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schouweiler v. United States, 27 F.2d 515, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3424 (9th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

DIETRICH, Circuit Judge.

The appellant and six others were convicted upon an indictment charging a conspiracy to violate section 593 of the Tariff Act of 1922, defining smuggling and kindred offenses (42 Stat. 982 [19US C A §' 496]). The indictment was returned August 31, 1927, and the period of the conspiracy is therein alleged to have been from May 1, 1926, up to that date. Its object, as averred, was to commit the offense of importing into the United States, near the city of San Diego, Cal., from some foreign country to the grand jurors unknown, with intent to defraud the revenues -Qf the United States, 31 sacks, containing 12 quarts each, of contraband intoxicating liquor, without paying the taxes thereon or conforming with other requirements of the law. Seven overt acts are specified, two on .Tune 4, one on June 5, two on June 23, one on July 1, and one during the period from July 20 to August 6, all in the year 1926.

The principal assignment challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. It was shown that, during the period covered by the indictment and for some time prior thereto, two “rum boats,” the [516]*516Clara French and the Marion Douglas, with large quantities of liquor on board, were lying about 60. miles off the coast from. Los Angeles. The plan of the persons interested therein was from time to time, as there was opportunity, clandestinely to land in the United States portions of the liquor by means of smaller speed boats. One of these speed boats was the Jackie, owned by the defendant Delian, with defendant Nicholles captain, and manned by the defendants Thompson, Fairbanks, and others. Nieholles, who was a witness for the government, testified that during the month of June, 1926, the Jackie brought in four loads of liquor; the first three being landed at the Venice Pleasure pier, and the last at San Diego. On this last trip, the Jackie, with 200 cases received from the Marion Douglas, was chased by a revenue cutter as she came into the harbor. Temporarily eluding the cutter, she was able to land 160 cases, and the other 40 were cast overboard.- Of these 40 cases, divers from the cutter recovered 31, and these apparently constitute the liquor particularly referred to in the indictment. That there was a conspiracy, as alleged, the evidence leaves no doubt, and the question is of appellant’s connection therewith. We therefore concern ourselves only with the evidence in so far as it bears upon that question.

Walker, the owner of and engineer on the Clara French, testified to his going, under engagement with one Detweiler, from Vancouver, where he resided, to the place where the Marion Douglas lay off the coast from Los Angeles. This was in March, 1926. When he reached the Marion Douglas there were on board several men, and he estimated she had a cargo of from 12,000 to 15,000 eases of liquor. He remained there until June, and received portions of the liquor from time to time for delivery to the speed boats. After the Clara French had been so operating for a considerable period, he, being advised so to do, sent a letter by a fish boat addressed to “Dr. Ross,” at Los Angeles, and it turned out that “Dr. Ross” was Sehouweiler. The letter was so worded that it would be meaningless to a stranger. After waiting a few days and receiving no answer, the witness went ashore for the purpose of seeing “Dr. Ross.” He did not find him at an address in Los Angeles given to him by the captain of the Clara French, whereupon he went to San Diego to make inquiry, and there he got in touch with Sehouweiler over the telephone, and told him where the Clara French was, that he had a load of liquor on board, and was short of supplies. By appointment he met Sehouweiler soon thereafter, and in response to his request Sehouweiler gave him $50 and took a list of supplies needed on the Clara French. This was in the presence of the defendant Thompson and others, and about June 4 Sehouweiler, in the witness’ presence, gave Thompson money, whereupon Thompson, accompanied by the witness, proceeded to various places for the purchase of the requisite supplies. During this visit the witness also conferred with Sehouweiler, when he was with others of the defendants. When the witness started to return to the Clara French, he learned she had been seized by the Mexican government. He saw Sehouweiler later, got more money from him, and was informed by him that he expected soon to have the Clara French -free and the crew released. On one of these occasions Sehouweiler appeared to be “sore,” because he said “the stuff was not what it should be on the Marion Douglas”; that “there was a shortage of cargo he could not account for,” and the witness told him where some of the liquor was.

Meholles testified he knew Sehouweiler, and had heard of him as “Dr. Ross.” “In April, May, and June, 1926, I was employed on the boat Jackie by Sehouweiler, which was used to haul liquor for him.” First became acquainted with the Jackie about the middle of May, 1926, and while I was with her she. brought in four loads. The fourth trip was June 22; got 200 cases from-the Marion Douglas. The order came from Sehouweiler; was present when ownership of liquor on the Marion Douglas was discussed; talked about it with Sehouweiler and Murphy; discussed it on several occasions; the first was at Santa Barbara; they were discussing about dividing the cargo and money owed to Sehouweiler by some of the owners of a previous trip, and the liquor was to be held until certain debts on a previous cargo- were paid. Something was said about Sehouweiler having charge of the cargo in the meantime; similar conversations at Sehouweiler’s house at a later time between Sehouweiler, Murphy, and others. It was Murphy who employed witness to use the Jackie for these trips. Mr. Delian came down and told him to make the last tiip. The order for the liquor was in the same handwriting and in the same code as former orders. They were all in code. It was made out in Mr. Sehouweiler’s house, the same as the rest of them were.

On cross-examination he stated he got the liquor orders from Mr. Murphy and Mr. Delian. On the last trip an extra man on the Jackie had the order, and he (the'witness) [517]*517did not see it until they got to the Marion Douglas. He didn’t know who the extra man was, and he didn’t know whose order it was, but it was in the same handwriting as the other orders. Saw Schouweiler at the Venice pier on June 13 and June 20. He had no conversation with Schouweiler about the liquor on the last trip, and did not know to whom it belonged. He was not told where the extra man got the order, “but the handwriting and the code were the same as on the others.” He further testified upon redirect examination that on June 14 Schouweiler came with him on the Jackie with a load of liquor from the Marion Douglas to the Venice pier; and that, while he never saw Schouweiler write an order for liquor, he did, at Schouweiler’s house, see Mrs. Schouweiler write an order for 1,000 eases, and these eases were taken from the Marion Douglas and that was the writing with which he was familiar.

There was other circumstantial evidence, including an entry in a notebook in Schouweiler’s handwriting, and testimony respecting the purchase of supplies which has been hereinbefoi'e referred to, all tending in a measure to corroborate these witnesses. The testimony for the defendants can be regarded only as creating a conflict, and hence need not be reviewed. Upon the whole record we have no doubt that the evidence was ample-to warrant submission to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 515, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schouweiler-v-united-states-ca9-1928.