United States v. Mitchell

58 F. 993, 8 Ohio F. Dec. 71, 1893 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 12, 1893
DocketNo. 826
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 F. 993 (United States v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Mitchell, 58 F. 993, 8 Ohio F. Dec. 71, 1893 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166 (N.D. Ohio 1893).

Opinion

HICKS, District Judge.

The defendant is the treasurer of the Mitchell & Rowland. Lumber Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Ohio, and on the 20th day of April, 1893, engaged in “a productive industry,” to wit, the manufacture of lumber and lath, in this district and division, and in the first supervisor’s district of Ohio. He is indicted under an act of congress approved July 6, 1892, which is “An act amendatory of an act entitled An act to provide for the taking of the eleventh census,’ ” for refusing and failing to make answers to certain questions propounded to him by David A- Alexander, a special agent of . the census office, who was duly employed, appointed, commissioned, and sworn to obtain information in the first supervisor’s district of Ohio from corporations engaged in any productive industry, which information was called for and specified in a special schedule, Ho. 5, approved by the secretary of the interior, in accordance with the provisions of the act of congress named.

The questions which the defendant so refused to answer are set forth in the indictment as follows: A question as to the name of the corporation of which said defendant was then and there the treasurer; a question as to when the establishment of which defendant was treasurer commenced operations; a question as to the kind of goods manufactured by said corporation; a question as to the capital invested in logging, in mill plant, and in live capital; a question as to labor and wages; a question as to material used; a question as to months in operation; a question as to the number of hours in the ordinary day of.labor; a question as to the power used in manufacture; a question as to the transportation of logs, how transported to mill, quantity transported during the year, cost of transportation, miles of logging■ railway used; a question as to number of acres of timbered land, or standing timber, owned by said corporation; a question as to what sawing machinery the.said corporation possessed; a question as to whether colored persons had capital invested in the establishment of which the defendant was treasurer. These are the material averments of the indictment, sufficiently set forth for the purpose of considering the questions now involved.

The first, defense interposed is that the acts of congress upon which the indictment is predicated .do not make it an offense for the president, or other officers named, of a corporation or firm engaged in any productive industry, to refuse to answer the inquiries contained in the schedules prepared by the census bureau, and propounded by the representatives of the census superintend-[995]*995ont. Congress unquestionably intended to impose upon such, officers the duty to answer such questions, and to prescribe a penalty for a refusal so to do. Do the acts impose such duty? The act of March 3, 1879, (1 Supp. Rev. St. p. 471,) under which the census for 1880 was taken, in section 14, required that the- heads of families, or, in their absence, any other member or agent, should, if thereto requested by the census enumerator, etc., “render a true account of every person belonging to such family, in the various particulars required by law,” and provided a punishment for a refusal or failure to do so. The second paragraph of the same section provided “that every president, treasurer * * * or managing director of every corporation from which answers to any of the schedules provided for by this act are herein required, who shall, if thereto requested, * « neglect or refuse to give true and complete answers to any inquiries authorized by this act * * * shall forfeit and pay,” etc. This was the first provision of law that seemed to contemplate compulsory answers from corporations to questions propounded by enumerators or other officers of the census bureau. The first paragraph above quoted not only required the census enumerators to obtain from heads of families, or from their agents or representatives, the information required by law, but imposed a duty upon such persons to give the information required, with a penalty for failing or refusing so to do; but the blank forms and schedules furnished by the secretary of the interior to enumerators for ascertaining statistics and facts concerning products of industry provided only for such information as the persons interested voluntarily imparted. The second paragraph, as already quoted, provided both a penalty and punishment for officers of corporations “from which answers to any of the schedules provided for by this act are herein required,” who shall, if thereto requested by the supervisor, enumerator, etc., refuse or fail to answer any inquiries authorized, etc. Section 17 of the same act extended the scope of the schedules used in the tenth census, and provided that the superintendent of the census shall require and obtain from every railroad, express, telegraph, life insurance, and fire and marine insurance company the facts specifically set forth in the law as to the business of each of said kind of public or quasi public corporations. This was the first provision of any legislative act authorizing a census to be taken, which contained a clause requiring the superintendent of census to obtain information of- the character indicated from such corporations. In a note by the editor and compiler of the supplement (volume 1) to the Revised Statutes, referring to this 'act, it is said:

“This act seems to supersede all the provisions of the Revised Statutes on the subject, retaining, hy section 17, the schedules set forth in Rev. St. § 2206.”

The only provision of law in force prior to the act of March 3). 1879, above referred to, relating to the compulsory answers to the questions of census enumerators, was section 2191 of Revised Statutes, which provided:

[996]*996"Every person more than twenty-one years of age belonging to any family residing in any subdivision and in case of the absence of the head and other members of any such family, then any agent of such family shall upon the request of the marshal or his assistant, render a true account to the best of his knowledge of every person belonging to such family, in the various particulars required herein, and the tables hereto subjoined; and for any refusal whatever to answer either of the inquiries authorized by law, such persons shall be liable to a penalty of thirty dollars, to be sued for and recovered in an action by the assistant marshal for the use of the United States.”

This provision of the statutes was substantially re-enacted in the first paragraph of section 14 of the act of March 3, 1879, and the second provision, as before quoted, was no doubt intended to provide a punishment for officers of corporations who refuse to comply with the law. The next legislation, in order of time, was the act of March 1, 1889, (25 Stat. 760.) In that act the second paragraph of section 14, last above referred to, is amended by the second paragraph of section 15, and extended as to the officers to be included, and repealing the penalty part of the punishment, and extending the latter to fine or imprisonment. This paragraph of section 15 was again amended by the act of July 6, 1892, (27 Stat. 86,) which reads as follows:

“An act amendatory of an act entitled ‘An act to provide for tbe taking of tbe eleventh census.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 F. 993, 8 Ohio F. Dec. 71, 1893 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mitchell-ohnd-1893.