United States v. Ford

34 F. 26
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 34 F. 26 (United States v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Ford, 34 F. 26 (W.D.N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Dick, J.’

The question of law presented as the ground for this motion has produced some conflict and confusion injudicial opinions, but I think it has been settled by a decided weight of authority.

The principle has often been judicially announced that at common law an attempt to commit a felony is a misdemeanor, and an attempt to commit a misdemeanor is itself a misdemeanor. The difficulty has been in defining an attempt to commit a crime with satisfactory accuracy, as each case was, in a greater or less degree, dependent on its own circumstances. An effort to make a general definition of such offense has, there[27]*27fore, always been vague and indefinite. A mere intention to commit a crime does not render a person amenable to law. It must be manifested by some accompánying act of willful wrong or culpable negligence to make it criminal in law. A man’s motives and intentions can only be properly inferred from tbe means which he uses, and the acts which ho does. An attempt imports something done towards the accomplishment of a conceived purpose, ■without success. An attempt to commit a crime is an incomplete effort made by some act intermediate to a criminal intention and a consummated crime. The intention of the actor can alone be clearly ascertained by the movements which he has made to complete his design. The criminal nature of an offense is a conclusion of law derived from the facts and circumstances of the case. In an attempt to commit a crime, the acts and words of a wrong-doer are, therefore, essential ingredients to constitute an offense, and show the purpose he had in view. The word “attempt” is generally used in the law in describing the offense of an unsuccessful effort to commit a crime; but it has no technical meaning importing sufficient legal certainty as to the manner, the means used, and the intention of the wrong-doer. Its force and effect in an indictment was dependent upon a statement of the facts and circumstances that accompanied and constituted the illegal effort alleged. An assault is an attempt to do some personal violence to another, and the word “assault” has acquired a technical signification that imports an allegation of intentional violence and illegality. This definite technical meaning of the word makes it unnecessary, in an indictment for an assault with intent to commit a crime, to describe such offense with the same particularity that would be required in an indictment for the commission of the crime itself. In the indictment now before us, for an attempt to rescue spirituous liquors duly seized by the officers of the law, if it had been alleged that such attempt was made by an assault upon such officers while in the discharge of their official duty, such allegation would have been sufficiently definite, and would have been supported by the evidence offered on the trial.

In 2 Whart. Crim. Law, § 2686, there is a definition of an indictable attempt to commit a crime, and it is as full and accurate as can, probably, be made: but Mr. Wharton says, in a subsequent section, (2708,) “Attempt is a term peculiarly indefinite.”

The indefinite nature of the offense, at common law, of an attempt to commit a crime, has induced the enactment of many statutes in England and this country, sotting forth, in express terms, what acts shall constitute an attempt to commit the'crimes referred to in such statutes. In a case not thus specifically defined, the offense of an attempt to commit a crime, although declared, in general terms, in a statute as a crime, remains as at common law, and its nature is dependent upon its peculiar circumstances, and they must be distinctly alleged in an indictment. The overt acts or words that indicate the intention of the alleged wrongdoer must be considered by the jury, upon the evidence, in determining the essential question- — whether such intention was criminal. Everything necessary to be proved must be alleged.

[28]*28Brevity in pleading is very desirable in criminal cases, and unnecessary prolixity in the manner of statement should be carefully avoided; but every matter legally essential to constitute the offense must be so definitely alleged as to be clearly intelligible. The want of specific averment cannot be supplied by implication. It is not waived by the failure of the defendant to avail himself of a demurrer, or amotion to quash, and it is not cured after verdict by any United States statute of jeof-ails. There are many non-essential matters that are often found in indictments that may be regarded as surplusage, while there are others that must be proved as alleged, or there will be a fatal variance on the trial.

A person indicted for crime has a constitutional right “to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation,” by having the offense, and the facts that constitute it, plainly and fully alleged in the indictment, so that he may have a reasonable opportunity of introducing evidence, and making defense before a jury that can investigate the facts, and a court that can see whether the facts alleged constitute the crime charged.

Every indictment should show that an offense has been committed, and how committed, so that the defendant may have all the privileges humanely accorded by law to all persons accused of crime, — a motion to quash the indictment, a demurrer to the indictment, a fair trial before a well-informed jury, a motion in arrest of judgment, a writ of error, and full security against a second prosecution for the same offense.

In the case U. S. v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S. 542, Chief Justice Waite announced in clear, precise, and comprehensive terms,' the requisites of a good and sufficient indictment, as settled by many adjudications; but I deem it unnecessary to quote the language so carefully and accurately employed, and so easily accessible to the legal profession.

In some cases words spoken are acts sufficient to constitute an attempt to commit a crime, if they are of such a character as to be well calculated and adapted to accomplish the crime intended. Thus, threats of immediate personal violence, made against a reasonably prudent and firm officer of the law, while in the discharge of his legal dutjq well calculated to intimidate him, and make him desist from further effort to execute the mandate of the law, if they are unsuccessful, constitute the offense of an attempt to obstruct, hinder, or resist the execution of legal process.

As such threatening words do not constitute the gist of the offense, they need not be set forth with particularity and accuracy in an indictment. The substance and purport will be sufficient. A general allegation of verbal threats of personal injury would be sustained by proof of any words of the defendant calculated to show a purpose of immediate violence if the unlawful demands of the wrong-doer are not complied with by the officer.

There are many eases where a wrongful act is alleged in an indictment, and the evidence relied on to prove the criminal intention of the wrongdoer consists of a series of facts of a kindred nature, constituting but one offense. It is not necessary, in such cases, that each fact should be-[29]*29specifically set forth and described, for a general description, reasonably including the series, will be sufficient, as certainty to a certain intent in general is all that is required in an indictment in such cases.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 F. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ford-ncwd-1888.