United States v. Interstate Engineering Corporation

288 F. Supp. 402, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8873
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 20, 1967
DocketCrim. 6773
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 288 F. Supp. 402 (United States v. Interstate Engineering Corporation) 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. Interstate Engineering Corporation, 288 F. Supp. 402, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8873 (D.N.H. 1967).

Opinion

*407 WYZANSKI, Chief Judge.

CHARGE TO THE JURY

Mr. Foreman and members of the jury, we have reached what yesterday Mr. Phinney referred to as the penultimate stage of the case. I do not know whether he intended a pun implying that I would write out my Charge. In any event, my Charge is oral and not written, for though I realize how difficult some aspects of this case are my principal object is to talk to you so that you may clearly understand your obligations and the applicable rules of law.

If at any stage you have thought that I have expressed an opinion upon the facts in this case or upon how you should decide this case I assure you you have misunderstood my intention. Neither previously, nor now, nor hereafter do I intend in any way to indicate how you should decide this case.

This has been a very long case. We began a month ago yesterday and this is our 17th day. It is not the longest case that I have ever tried. One ran for five years but fortunately did not involve a Jury. Nonetheless, I am aware that it has been a considerable burden upon you as well as upon the parties and their counsel, and also upon the court reporter, the clerk and many other people in attendance here during this summer session. But the ease is one of very great importance. In a real sense every case is important to the parties, and a criminal case is particularly important because, as was pointed out to you in argument, there are at stake precious interests, such as possibly the liberty of the persons involved, and certainly their honor, reputation and pride, and also there is the great interest of the society, of the United States of America and of the people in having justice administered equally and fairly.

Now my Charge is necessarily going to be a long one. It won’t be as long as one that I heard a month ago in England. After 42 days of trial Mr. Justice Lawton delivered, as they call it, a summing up, which lasted three days. I hope that mine won’t take three hours. However, I have received perfectly properly voluminous requests for instructions, and I want to cover at least in substance most of the principal points that counsel were good enough to draw to my attention and such additional points as have occurred to me.

I am sure that you have felt, as I have, that counsel on all sides have demonstrated great skill and ability, and that their experience and judgment have been of considerable assistance to you as well as to me in bringing this case to this point.

My Charge, I said, will be long, and because it will be long I am going to do a rather unusual thing at the outset by telling you to pay particular attention whenever I talk about the burden of proof, that is the obligation of *408 the Government to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt as to every essential element, and I want you to note the emphasis that I place upon the three-branched aspects of this case. With respect to the duty of the Government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt with respect to a defendant, before that defendant can be convicted, that he personally, or, in the case of a corporation, an authorized individual acting for the corporation, was a party to a scheme to defraud, that he or the authorized corporate officer or representative personally specifically intended that the mails should be used in connection with that scheme and, third, that he, or in the case of a corporation, the authorized corporate representative specifically intended to defraud, that is to act in a wicked manner.

Now I will say a great deal more about each of those branches of the case but what I have said initially is intended in a way as a sort of headnote or set of red markers so that you will pay particular attention to what seems to me the outstanding aspects of the questions which will come before you.

In a trial of this kind the Judge gives instructions with respect to the law. You are required to follow what the Judge says is the law. A Judge, not least this Judge, makes mistakes with respect to the law. But whenever a Judge makes a mistake with respect to the law, those who believe he has made a mistake among the lawyers at the table have a right to call it to his attention, and if he doesn’t correct the mistake they have a right of appeal to the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, sitting in Boston, and in some appropriate cases ultimately to the Supreme Court of the United States, but you are not to correct any error I make with regard to the law.

The law assumes that you are at least as likely to be mistaken with respect to any attempted correction of law as you are likely to be right and, moreover, we could not tell if you were making an error of law because you would not be making it on the record the way I am at every moment.

You are the judges of the facts in the case and that is a sufficiently burdensome duty. That is to say, it is you, not the Judge and not the lawyers, who are to make up your mind what was the evidence, how much of it was credible, that is to say believable, and it is up to you to determine ultimate questions and preliminary questions of fact.

Anything that counsel have said or anything that I have said or may say about the facts you are entirely free to disregard. I told you the other day how impressed I was by a statement made by Mr. Justice Lawton, when he was addressing a Jury and reminding them that on questions of facts they were not in any way to defer to a Judge merely because the Jury thought a Judge had more experience and therefore might be a wiser fellow with respect to the facts.

There is no reason to believe that a Judge is a wiser man with respect to facts than a juror, and there are many reasons to believe that one Judge is less wise than 12 jurors. 12 jurors represent different points of view. They have different backgrounds. And particularly, let me say, in a case where there is an out-of-state Judge presiding over a Jury drawn from what is called the vicinage, the neighborhood, the Jury is in a much better position than the Judge to determine the credibility of the local witnesses and indeed to form opinions with respect to questions of fact of every kind.

Another famous English Judge, not Mr. Justice Lawton, but Lord Devlin, has said that a Jury is a parliament, a little parliament or Congress. Now if that phrase means that the Jury is representative of the community in formulating standards, there is a great deal of truth in that. Of course, the Jury is not to formulate standards contrary to the written law or the common law. But within certain areas, and particular *409 ly, I am inclined to say in the area of determining whether conduct is fraudulent or not, the Jury is a small legislative body.

But let me warn you that in formulating your views of the facts you are not to bring to bear anything except the evidence you have heard in this and the earlier courtroom. You are not to take into account any gossip, if you have heard any, about this company, or these companies, or these defendants, individual or otherwise.

You are to ignore anything you may have seen in the newspapers, or on television, or heard on the radio, or in any way learned about except what you learned here in court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 F. Supp. 402, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-interstate-engineering-corporation-nhd-1967.