United States v. Jerry M. Hughes and David Hoyle

441 F.2d 12
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 28, 1971
Docket29041_1
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 441 F.2d 12 (United States v. Jerry M. Hughes and David Hoyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Jerry M. Hughes and David Hoyle, 441 F.2d 12 (5th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

*14 GEWIN, Circuit Judge:

Each of the appellants Jerry M. Hughes and David Hoyle was arrested, indicted, tried by jury and found guilty on three counts of printing counterfeit obligations, possessing counterfeit plates and negatives, and possessing counterfeit federal reserve notes in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 471, 472, and 474. They contend on appeal that evidence introduced at the trial was obtained as a result of an illegal search and is, therefore, inadmissible. The evidence complained of includes: a printing press; approximately $250,000 in partially completed counterfeit twenty dollar notes; $30,000 in completed counterfeit $20.00 notes; counterfeit plates; sundry other implements of the printer’s trade; two sawed-off shotguns; and a pistol. In addition they object to the admission of the three weapons on the independent ground that they were prejudicial evidence of another crime. Finding no merit in either of these contentions, we affirm the judgment of conviction in all respects.

The factual background presents a rather bizarre picture. Most of the above mentioned items of evidence were taken from a locked room in a seven room brick house located on a 19 acre tract of land not far from Mansfield, Texas. The house was owned by Mrs. Anna Bell Egger, a 45 year old divorcee, and occupied by Mrs. Egger and her 21 year old son, Glevis Egger.

Mrs. Egger and the appellant Hughes met during August of 1967 in a “lounge” operated by Hughes in Grand Prairie, Texas. They began “going together” and eventually became intimate. Hughes, who was himself married, lived with Mrs. Egger in her house for several of the months prior to his arrest on March 29, 1969. Meanwhile, the tempestuous and often hostile amorous interests of Hughes in Mrs. Egger expanded into business interests. In December, 1968, the couple opened up the College Bar and Cafe, a Fort Worth lounge licensed in the name of and partially financed by Mrs. Egger. 1 It was at this bar that Mrs. Egger first met the appellant Hoyle and it was there that Hughes and Hoyle designed and planned their counterfeiting scheme.

In early February of 1969, Mrs. Egger, who was then unaware of the scheme, told Hughes of “a dream about this counterfeit stuff.” Dumbfounded, Hughes then showed her a picture of a $10 bill printed on the back of an old menu. At closing time three nights later appellants showed an apparent concern for the security of their secret. We quote from the direct examination of Mrs. Egger by the prosecuting attorney:

Q. All right. What was said at this incident, just tell us?
A. [Mrs. Egger] Jerry [Hughes] wanted to know if I told somebody about that picture.
Q. What picture are you talking about?
A. The $10 picture, and I said “No”.
Q. All right.
A. And he said, “I think you have told someone.” And I had not told anyone. And then he and David [Hoyle] said they were going to take me to the lake for a ride.
Q. All right. What happened then?
A. So we closed the place and went out to the car, and they [Hughes and Hoyle] had to put me in the car.
* * * * * *
Q. All right. Now, did you object to going with them on that occasion ?
A. I said, “I am not going to the lake to be killed.”
Q. What did they say?
A. They said, “we are taking you to the lake for a ride.”
* * * * * *
Q. All right. What happened after you were put in the car?
*15 A. We drove to Lake Arlington and we come to one of those roads that leads to a ramp where you can unload a boat. And all the way up there I had been punching Jerry [Hughes] and asking, “How can you think of this ?" And there wasn’t too much talking on the way out, and I started crying. And so we got out there, well, Jerry said, “what are you punching me for ?” And so they got out of the car and went around to the back to talk about it. And then—
* * * * * *
A. And then Jerry comes back. And he had a pistol on the steering column of his car, and he got that and he just says, “You were looking at that, wasn’t you?” And I was looking at it. So then they came over and got back in the car and we drove to my house and all three spent the night at my house that night.

Soon afterwards, a printing press appeared on the front porch of Mrs. Egger’s house. A few days later, on February 7, it was moved inside, without objection, to a room adjoining Mrs. Egger’s bedroom. The only access to this room was through this bedroom. The following morning Hughes added a padlock, taken from Mrs. Egger’s boat, to the door of the “press room”. When he asked her for the only key to this lock, she gave it to him; and when he demanded that her son Glevis be told to move out of the house, she acquiesced, 2 but testified that she was afraid to disobey the commands of Hughes.

Then, on the night of February 10, the day following Glevis’ expulsion, Mrs. Egger was seriously beaten by Hughes. In self-defense and retaliation, she moved out of her house to stay with friends, and went immediately to the local police department to report appellants’ planned counterfeiting activities and to seek help. The following morning she called the FBI and was referred to the Secret Service, to whom she promptly went and again told her story. The somewhat incredulous secret service agents agreed to go with her to see the counterfeiting apparatus at the house. Finding the press room padlocked as usual, they entered the room through an outside window known by Mrs. Egger to be unlocked. 3 The press was situated in plain view in the center of the room. The agents observed it, scratched their initials on it in an inconspicuous place and left through the window. No evidence was seized at this time.

No immediate action was taken to arrest appellants because it was apparent from the scene that the crime of counterfeiting had not yet been committed. It was decided that the house would be kept under surveillance until, with the help of information from Mrs. Egger, it was determined that actual *16 counterfeiting had taken place. It was agreed that Mrs. Egger would not be prosecuted. On February 12 Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
441 F.2d 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jerry-m-hughes-and-david-hoyle-ca5-1971.