United States v. Crandell

25 F. Cas. 684, 4 D.C. 683, 4 Cranch 683

This text of 25 F. Cas. 684 (United States v. Crandell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Crandell, 25 F. Cas. 684, 4 D.C. 683, 4 Cranch 683 (circtddc 1836).

Opinion

The Court

was of opinion that the United States could not, for the purpose of proving the intent of the defendant in publishing the libel stated in the first count, give in evidence to the jury any papers subsequently published by the defendant, or found in his possession unpublished by him, which would be libels, and might be substantive subjects of public prosecution, if published.

[689]*689Mr. Key then offered to prove the publication, by the defendant, of the libels stated in the first, second, and third counts, by proving the following facts, namely: That a large collection of libels, and among them several copies of those charged in those counts, with the words, “read and circulate” written thereon in his handwriting, were found upon the traverser; that he undertook to account for their being in his possession, and gave untrue and contradictory accounts; that he acknowledged that he had brought here those then shown to him, being the same now in court, and that they comprehended all he brought here except about a dozen ; and that prior to the traverser’s arrest sundry similar publications had been privately sent to various persons in this district by some unknown person or persons in the district. 1 Hawk. c. 73, § 13. The having in one’s custody a written copy of a libel, publicly known, is an evidence of the publication of it.” Rex v. Beere, 1 Ld. Raym. 414; 3 Chitty Cr. Law, 871, 875; 1 Id. 568; Malony v. Bartley, 3 Camp. 210; 1 Russell, 235.

The counsel for the defendant objected, and cited Holt on Libels, 291; The King v. Burdett, 4 B. & A. 95; Starkie on Ev. part 4, pp. 849, 853; 1 Vent. 31; Smith v. Wood, 3 Camp. 323 ; 12 Vin. Ab. 227, Evidence, T. 661; The King v. Fitton & Carr, 2 Keb. 502.

The Court was of opinion that the Attorney of the United States may give evidence of the publication, in this district, of any copies of the libels charged in the first and second counts of the indictment. That if he shall have given any evidence tending to show such a publication here, he will be permitted to show that other copies of the same libels were found in the possession of the defendant. He may then give evidence that a certain number of papers or pamphlets were found in the possession of the defendant, together with the copies of the libels charged, and of the publication of which, in this district, he shall have given evidence; but he will not be permitted to give in evidence to the jury the contents of any of the papers other than those charged as libels in this indictment, unless such other papers have relation to the libels charged in the indictment, and would not, in themselves, be substantive ground of prosecution.

He may then give evidence to the jury of any confessions or acknowledgments made by the defendant in relation to any of the matters charged in the indictment. Starkie on Slander, 351, 352, and Wyatt v. Gore, Holt, N. P. Rep. 299.

The Attorney for the United States, having offered evidence to prove that the defendant was-asked if he was aware of the nature of the pamphlets put into his hands in New York, and said he [690]*690supposed they were of the same nature as those he had been a subscriber for, and that he approved the sentiments they contained, offered in evidence to the jury the publications found on the defendant relating to the same subject with the libels charged in the indictment; and contended that they were competent to be given to the jury with evidence that some of them were indorsed in the defendant’s handwriting with the words, “ read and circulate,” to prove, not only the evil intent of the defendant in publishing the libellous paper charged in the first count, but as evidence of the publication, by the defendant, of the paper charged as a libel in the second count.

He contended also that the pamphlets themselves purporting, upon their-title page, to be printed and published in New York, are evidence of their own publication, and that it is only necessary to prove a copy to have been found in the defendant’s possession, with the words, “read and circulate” indorsed thereon by the defendant, to charge him with the publication of them here.

The Court was of opinion that the printing and publishing of these pamphlets, in New York, is not evidence of their publication here, so as to fix upon the defendant here such a knowledge of their publication as to make his possession alone, even with the words “read and circulate” written upon them, evidence of the publication of them, by him, here.

That, in order to show the evil intent with which the defendant published the paper charged in the first count, it is not competent for the United States to give, in evidence to the jury, other unpublished papers or pamphlets, found in the defendant’s possession, unless accompanied by evidence of some acknowledgment or admission by the defendant that he knew and approved their contents.

That the evidence did not appear to the Court to justify the inference that the defendant knew and approved the contents of those pamphlets, unless it can be connected with evidence that they were of the same nature with those which he had been a subscriber for.

The Attorney for the United States then gave evidence tending to show that the defendant had been a subscriber for the “Emancipator ; ” and the Court permitted the Attorney of the United States' to give in evidence several numbers of that paper, as containing the sentiments alluded to by the defendant, as those which he approved, to show the evil intent with which he published the libel charged in the first count; but confined him to the reading of the sentiments cpntained in the “Emancipator” itself; and refused to permit him to read to the jury the publications advertised for sale by the secretary of the anti-slavery society, in the [691]*691Emancipator, although evidence had been given tending to prove that the defendant was a member of that society.

The Attorney of the United States then being about to offer evidence in support of the third count; the counsel of the defendant objected that the count was so vague, uncertain, and imperfect, that the Court ought not to permit evidence to be given in support of it; and the counsel on both sides agreed that the Court should now consider the question as if upon a motion to quash that count.

Mr. Key, for the United States, and in support of the indictment, cited the precedents in 2 Chitty, 45, 47, and 48.

The defendant’s counsel cited 3 Chitty, 901, 903, and 904; 1 Russell, 210.

The CouRT (Morsell, J., contra;,) permitted evidence to be given upon the third count, without prejudice to a motion in arrest of judgment upon that count, if the verdict should be against the defendant.

On the part of the defendant, it was then urged that the papers, found upon the defendant, had been illegally seized under pre-tence of an unlawful warrant commanding the officer, to whom it was directed, to arrest the defendant, and to search for and seize any incendiary pamphlets or papers which should be found in the defendant’s possession, and bring them, with the defendant, before the justices who issued the warrant, and that therefore the pamphlets and papers so found are not admissible in evidence to the jury-

Upon that point the defendant’s counsel cited Entick v. Carrington, 2 Wils.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 684, 4 D.C. 683, 4 Cranch 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-crandell-circtddc-1836.