United States v. Corbin

11 F. 238, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2388
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 13, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 F. 238 (United States v. Corbin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Corbin, 11 F. 238, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2388 (D.N.H. 1882).

Opinion

Clark, D. J.

The respondent was indicted under the statute of March 3, 1823, (3 St. p. 771, § 1,) for sending a false writing and affidavit to the pension-office. He was found guilty by the jury, and now moves for a new trial, for various rulings of the court; and for arrest of judgment, for certain faults and defects in the indictment.

Before examining carefully the reasons for a new trial, the court has turned its attention to the motion in arrest of judgment; because, if the indictment be so deficient or insufficient that no judgment ought to be rendered upon it, a new trial would be of no avail to the government. And so, if it be found that all the rulings of the court upon the trial were right, and there was no occasion for a new trial, and yét the indictment was fatally faulty, the judgment would have to be arrested. Is, then, this indictment sufficient in its allegations, and are they well and correctly stated ? The respondent says it is not sufficient, nor is the pleading good:

(1) Because it is double, containing or including two distinct offences in one count, to-wit, that lie (the respondent) transmitted to the pension-office a certain writing and affidavit — two distinct documents. (2) That it (the indictment) does not definitely and specifically allege or assign the particular statements in the writing and affidavit believed to be false, and traverse the same, or alleged that they were false; and (3) that it charges no act which is a crime or misdemeanor by the laws of the United States. (4) The act of March 3, [239]*2391823, (3 St. p. 771, § 1,) provides “ that if any person or persons shall falsely make, alter, forge, or counterfeit,” or shall transmit to or present at, or cause or procure to ho transmitted to or presented at, any office or officer of the government of the United States, any deed, power of attorney, order, certificate, receipt, or other writing, in support of or in relation to any account or claim, with intent to defraud the United States, knowing the same to be false, altered, forged, or counterfeited, every such person shall be doomed and adjudged guilty of felony.

The indictment, after reciting that one Shedd had a claim against the United States, and that the respondent was intending and contriving to defraud the 0 nited States, and to induce them to pay the claim of Shedd, alleges that the respondent “did transmit, and cause and procure to be transmitted, to the office of the commissioner of pensions,” to-wit, to the office of the commissioner of pensions of the United States, a certain writing and affidavit, purporting to bo made, subscribed, and sworn to by one Adolphus Hall, and by one Jacob Litchfield, both of Grantham, in said district, in which writing and affidavit it was al leged and declared as follows: It then sets out the affidavit, in hcec verba. Then it proceeds: “The said Austin Corbin then and there, well knowing the said writing and affidavit to be false and untrue, and then and there well knowing the statements contained in said writing and affidavit to be untrue and false, then and there did willingly transmit to, and did cause and procure to be transmitted to, the office of the said commissioner of pensions the said false writing and affidavit,” etc. Grounding himself upon this expression of “writing and affidavit” the respondent supports his first objection, because he says the pleading Is double; that he is accused of two crimes in the same count — that of sending a false writing, and of sending a false affidavit, to the pension-office. If this were so, we are inclined to the opinion that the objection would be of more serious import. Two crimes cannot be charged in the same count, and judgment will be arrested for such defective pleading. State v. Nelson, 8 N. H. 163; Morse v. Eaton, 23 N. H. 415. But we are of the opinion such is not the case here.

The expression “writing and affidavit” may mean two documents, or it may mean one — a writing called or known as an affidavit. Standing alone it might be ambiguous; but-where the writing and affidavit is recited in the indictment it is shown clearly to be but one instrument, — an affidavit, — a writing called an affidavit.

This objection, therefore, must be overruled. If the sense of a word be ambiguous, it shall be construed according to the context. Arch. II, and authorities cited. The next objection, that the indict[240]*240ment does not specify the particular statements in the affidavit relied upon as false, is of a more serious character. The same objection in substance was taken at the trial, but was overruled upon the authority of the case in 8 How. 41, (U. S. v. Staats.)

The offence in that case was the same as in this; the indictment was substantially the same in its allegations, and upon the same clause of the same statute. There was in that case no particular assignment of the falsity of the writing or affidavit, but a general allegation that the respondent knew that it was “false and untrue,” and the court held that the acts charged constituted an offence within the provisions of the statute, and overruled the particular objections there taken. ^ A more careful examination of that ease, however, and other authorities, together with a consideration of the principles and rules regulating criminal proceedings, has satisfied us that the objection is a fatal one, and that the judgment in this case must be arrested. Though in the ease of U. S. v. Staats the indictment was the same as here, the point made here was not made there, nor does the attention of the court appear to have been called to it. Two considerations arose there: (1) Whether the indictment should not have described the offence to have been committed “feloniously;” and (2) whether the acts charged constituted the offence described in the statute ; that is, whether the sending a writing false in its statements constituted the offence, or a writing false in its execution — not a genuine paper. The court held that the offence need not be described as committed feloniously, and that sending a paper containing false statements, though genuine in its execution, constituted the offence, but nothing further. No question was there made, like the one in this case, whether, in describing the offence, the indictment should not have been framed with more particularity, and have shown more definitely in what the falsify of the writing consisted.

It is a well-established rule in criminal proceedings that every indictment must charge the crime with such certainty and precision that it may be understood, charging all the requisites that constitute the offence, and that every averment be so stated that the party accused may know the general nature of the crime of which he is accused. 1 Chit. Crim. Law, 172; Arch. Crim. PI. & Ev. 39. Thus, in an indictment for obtaining money by false pretences-, it was held necessary to specify the false pretences. R. v. Mason, 2 T. R. 581; R. v. Munoz, 2 Strange, 1127. So, in an indictment for extortion, the indictment must show what fee was due, and what was taken. R. v. Lake, 3 Leon, 268. An indictment for stopping the highway [241]*241must specify what part was stopped, R. v. Roberts, Show. 389. So an indictment which may apply to either of two different offences, and does not specify which, is bad. R. v. Marshall, 1 Moody, C. C. 158.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. 238, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-corbin-nhd-1882.