United States v. Cook

84 U.S. 168, 21 L. Ed. 538, 17 Wall. 168, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1322
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by388 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 168 (United States v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Cook, 84 U.S. 168, 21 L. Ed. 538, 17 Wall. 168, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1322 (1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Officers and other persons charged with the safe-keeping, transfer, and disbursement of the public moneys, are required by an act of Congress to keep an accurate entry of each sum received, and of each payment or transfer; and the sixteenth section of the same act provides that if any one of the said officers shall convert to his own use, iu auy way whatever, any portion of the public moneys, intrusted to him for safe-keeping, disbursement, or transfer, or for a.ny other purpose, every such act shall be deemed and adjudged to be embezzlement of so much of the public moneys as *172 shall be thus taken and converted, which is therein declared to be a felony; and the same section also provides, that all persons advising or participating in such act, being convicted thereof before any court of the United States of competent jurisdiction, shall be punished as therein provided. *

Founded on that provision, the indictment in this case contained six counts, charging that the defendant, as paymaster in the army, had in his custody for safe-keeping and disbursement, a large sum of public money, intrusted to him ii: his official character as an additional’ paymaster in the army, and that he, on the respective days therein alleged, did unlawfully, knowingly, and feloniously embezzle and convert' the same to his own use. Such conversion is alleged in the first count, on the 1st of May, 1862, in the second on the 6th of July, in the third on the 16th of October, in the fourth on the 12th of September, in the fifth on the 20th of September, and in the sixth on the 15th of November, all in the same year. Service was made, aud the defendant appeared and demurred to the first five counts, showing for cause, that it appears on the face of the indictment, and by the allegations of the said several counts, that the crime charged against him was committed more than two years before the indictment was found, and filed in court.

Three questions were presented by the demurrer for the decision of the court, upon which the opinious of the judges were opposed, in substance and effect as follows: (1.)'Whe-ther it was competent for the defendant to take excéption, by demurrer, to the sufficiency of the first five counts o.f the indictment for the causes assigned. (2.) Whether the said five counts, or either of them, allege or charge, upon their face, any crime or offence against the defendant for which he is liable in law to be put upon trial, convicted, and punished. Both.of those questions are presented in the record as one, but inasmuch as the answers to them must be different, it is more convenient to divide the question into two parts. (8.) Whether the thirty-second section of the Crimes *173 Act applies to the case, and limits the time within which an indictment must be found for such an offence. *

Forgery of public securities was made a capital felony by that act, as well as treason, piracy, and murder, and the thirty-second section of the act provides that no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for treason or other capital felony, wilful murder or forgery excepted, unless the indictment for the same shall be found-by the grand jury within three years next after the treason or capital offence shall be done or corpmitted.

Provision is also made by the succeeding clause of the same section, that no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or •punished for any offence, not capital, unless the indictment for the samejshall be found within two years'from the time of committing the offence. Pines and penalties, under any penal statute, were also included in the same limitation, but that part of the clause having been superseded by a subsequent enactment, it is omitted.

Appended to the thirty-second section, enacting the limitation under consideration, is the following proviso: Provided that nothing herein contained shall extend to any person or persons fleeing-from.justice. §

Where a statute defining an offence contains an exception, in the enacting clause of the statute, which is so incorporated with the language defining the offence that the ingredients of the offence cannot be accurately and clearly described if the exception is omitted, the-rules of good pleading require that an indictment founded upon the statute must allege enough to'show that the accused is not within the exception, but if the language of the section defining the offence is so entirely separable from the exception that the ingredients constituting the offence may be accurately and clearly defined without any reference to the exception, the pleader may safely omit any such reference, as the matter contained *174 in the exception is matter of defence and must be shown by the accused. *

Offences created by statute, as well as offences at common law, must be accurately and clearly described in an indictment, and if they cannot be, in any case, without an allegation that the accused is not within an exception contained in the statute defining the offence, it is clear that no indictment founded upon the statute can be a good one which does not contain such an allegation, as it is universally -true that no indictment is sufficient if it does not accurately and clearly allege all the ingredients of which the offence is composed.

With rare exceptions, offences consist of more than one ingredient, and in some cases of many, and the rule is universal that every ingredient of which the offence is composed must bo accurately and clearly alleged in the indictment, or the indictment will be bad, and may be quashed on motion, or the judgment may be arrested, or be reversed on error.

Text-writers and courts of justice have sometimes said, that if the exception is in the enacting clause, the party pleading must show that the accused is not within the exception, but where the exception is in a subsequent section or statute, that the matter contained in the exception is matter of defence and must be shown by the accused. Undoubtedly that rule will frequently hold 'good, and in many cases prove to be a safe guide in pleading, but it is clear that it is not a universal criterion, as the words of the statute defining the offence may be so entirely separable from the exception that all the ingredients constituting the offence may be accurately and clearly alleged without any reference to the exception. §

Cases have also arisen, and others may readily be sup *175

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 168, 21 L. Ed. 538, 17 Wall. 168, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-cook-scotus-1872.