Smith v. State

1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 493, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 201
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedApril 25, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 493 (Smith v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State, 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 493, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 201 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Two separate petitions in error were filed in these oases but only one bill of exceptions, and the oases are, to all intents and purposes, one ease. The plaintiffs in error were indicted and tried jointly in the court of common pleas on a charge of blackmail under Section 6830, Revised Statutes. They were -both found guilty and each- sentenced to a team in the penitentiary, and these proceedings in error were brought to reverse that judgment.

It is claimed that the court below erred in overruling a motion ■to quash the indictment, in overruling a 'demurrer to the indictment, and that the verdict and judgment are against the weight of the evidence.

.First conaideTing the question as to whether the court below should have sustained a demurrer to .the indictment, it is claimed that' the indictment is had because it does not charge an offense against the laws of the state of Ohio'. As stated, the indictment is founded upon Section 6830, Revised Statutes, which provides that:

“Whoever, either verbally or by any letter or writing, or written or printed communication, sent or delivered by him, demands of any person, with menaces, any chattel, money or valuable security, [494]*494or accuses, or knowingly sends or delivers any letter or writing, or any written or printed communication, with or without a name, or with any letter, mark, or designation, accusing or threatening to accuse, any person of a crime punishable by law, or of 'any immoral conduct which, if true, would tend to degrade and disgrace such person, or to expose or publish any of his infirmities or failings, or in any way to subject him to the ridicule or contempt of society, or to do 'an injury to the person or property of any person, with intent to extort or gain from such person any chattel, money, or valuable security, or any pecuniary advantage whatsoever, or with intent to compel the person threatened to do 'any act against his will, with the intent 'aforesaid, shall he imprisoned in the penitentiary not more than five years nor less than one year, and may he finednot more than $1,000/"’

The indictment charges, that for the purpose of obtaining money, to-wit, $250, the defendants charged one Cyrus W. Noble with the crime of arson. The indictment avers:

* * * did threaten him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, to accuse him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, of having committed the crime of arson, and with 'having unlawfully set fire to and burned his own hotel building in EDoytsville, Wood county, Ohio, of the value of $1,000, with intent to defraud; which said act and crime is punishable, under the laws of Ohio, by imprisonment in the penitentiary, and which if true would tend to disgrace 'and degrade him, the said! Cyrus W. Noble, by then and there willfully and maliciously and knowingly did verbally say and state to him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, the words following, to-wit: T (meaning him the said Ezra Smith) understand that yon (meaning Cyrus W. Noble) said that you would pay anyone that gave you any information about who burned your hotel (meaning the hotel of Cyrus W. Noble in Hoytsville, Wood county, Ohio). We (meaning him the said Ezra Smith and Link Still) think we know who done it. We ■thought' we might make you (meaning him the said Cyrus W. Noble) a party to tbe burning of it (meaning said hotel building belonging to said Cyrus W. Noble). If you do not give us (meaning the said Ezra Smith and Link Still) $250 we are going to make you (meaning s'aid_Cyrus W. Noble) trouble. I will see the other man (meaning said Link Still) about it/
“And thereafter, on the twenty-sixth day of April of the same year, in pursuance of, and in furtherance of said unlawful confederacy and conspiracy of them, the said Ezra Smith and Link Still, and with the unlawful, willful and malicious purpose t'o extort money from him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, they, tbe said Ezra Smith and link Still, did then and there unlawfully, willfully and [495]*495maliciously send to him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, a certain writing without any name subscribed thereto, directed to C. W. Noble, he being the same person 'as the Cyrus W. Noble aforesaid, and containing a willful and malicious threat, with menaces, to injure him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, by therein accusing him of said crime of arson aforesaid, which said writing is in the words and figures following to-wit:
“Hoytsville, 0., 4-26, 1902.
“ ‘Mr. C. W. Noble : I understand that Ezra Smith (meaning the Ezra Smith heretofore named), our (meaning them the said Ezra Smith and Link Still) head man, was to see you (meaning said Cyrus W. Noble) and you did not * * * it will take money (meaning the money of Cyrus W. Noble aforesaid) before the thirtieth to keep still. Call and see him (meaning said Ezra Smith) or we (maning said Ezra Smith and link Still) will get your man and you with him. Do not think this is a bluff.’ (Thereby meaning that unless the said Cyrus W. Noble would before the thirtieth of April, A. D. 1902, pay and deliver to them the said Ezra Smith and Link Still, said sum of $250 so by them demanded from the said Cyrus W. Noble on the twenty-fourth day of April, A. D. 1902, as aforesaid, they, the said Ezra Smith and Link Still, would cause and procure the arrest and prosecution of him, the said Cyrus W. Noble, for said crime of arson in having unlawfully burned his s'aid hotel building in Hoytsville, Wood county, Ohio, with intent to defraud. With the intent and purpose then and there and thereby unlawfully, willfully and knowingly, by means of said verbal and written communications aforesaid and with the menace aforesaid, to extort money of -the amount and value of $250 from the said ■Cyrus W. Noble.)”

The indictment sets forth fully the words claimed to have been used verbally by the defendants and the writing -that it is claimed was sent by the defendants to Dr. Noble, 'and -while the indictment avers that the defendants charged Noble with the crime of arson, it goes on further t:o state that they charged Mm with burning his own building; the language set forth in the indictment, and the averments in the indictment show that the defendants did not charge Noble with the crime of arson, and it was not intended in the indictment to charge that they did. The crime of arson is unlawfully burning the building of another, and not one’s own building, and is defined in Bouvierls Law Dictionary and also in Section 6831, Revised Statutes. So that it is apparent it is not charged in this indictment that these, defendants accused or intended to accuse Dr. Noble of the crime of arson, but that the in[496]*496diotment avers and intends to aver that they did not accuse him and threatened to accuse him of setting fire to and burning his own building, to-wit, “his own hotel building, with intent to defraud,” as is 'alleged in the indictment.

It is claimed 'by counsel for the State that this is sufficient allegation under the blackmailing statute to charge the offense; that it is not necessary to go into the crime in detail, but that it is sufficient to charge it generally, and that this language is sufficient to come within the language of the blackmail statute which I have read (Section 6830, Revised Statutes), which makes it a crime to make certain threats, either verbal or'in writing, to another or to threaten to accuse another of certain things, and among them is the commission of 'a crime punishable by law, with intent to extort, etc. If the language of the indictment brings the offense charged within the statute, then it is sufficient to sustain it upon demurrer.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 493, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-ohiocirct-1903.