United States v. Montgomery

26 F. Cas. 1296, 3 Sawy. 544
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedDecember 28, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. Cas. 1296 (United States v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Montgomery, 26 F. Cas. 1296, 3 Sawy. 544 (D. Or. 1875).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge,

(charging jury). , The indictment in this 'ase is founded upon section 5470 of the Revised Statutes, which, among other things, provides that any person who shall receive, or conceal, or aid in concealing, any article of value, knowing the same to have been stolen or embezzled from the mail of the United States, shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $2,000, and by imprisonment at hard labor not more than five years.

The reason and necessity of such a statute [1297]*1297is apparent. The post-office is one of the principal departments of the government. Upon the security, and celerity with which the mails are carried and delivered throughout the country depend to a great extent the preservation of the business and social relations of the people. Upon the long-established maxim that “a receiver is as bad as a thief,” the statute has alsc provided for the punishment of persons whG assist others in stealing of embezzling from the mails by receiving the stolen property, or concealing it, or aiding in concealing it, substantially in the same manner as the thief himself.

By this indictment the defendant is accused in different modes or counts, of. receiving, concealing, and aiding in the concealing, of three cans of gold dust, of the aggregate value of $1,830, the same having been stolen from the mails of the United States, to the knowledge of the defendant, in October, 1S74, near Canyonville. But these seventeen counts only charge one crime, that of receiving, concealing, and aiding in the concealing, of the stolen dust, under the circumstances stated, and the proof of receiving, concealing, or aiding in concealing, is sufficient to establish the guilt of the defendant. To this indictment the defendant has pleaded not guilty, and the effect of this plea is to put in issue or controvert all the material allegations of the indictment. This being so, the burden of proof is upon the United States, to prove to your satisfaction each of such allegations, before it can ask a verdict of guilty at your hands.

The defendant stands before you as a person charged with the commission of a grave crime, and the fact that she is also a woman and a mother does net change the rules of law or the duties of jurors in such cases. In determining the question of her guilt or innocence, - you are not to be swerved by any sympathy for her sex or condition, but you are to say truly whether she is guilty or not as charged, irrespective of such considerations or the consequences to her or others that may follow yom verdict. Of course, the fact that the defendant is a woman may be more or less material in judging of her conduct and motives in fleeing the country as she did with Harmison, the party who appears to have stolen this dust and had it in his possession. In considering their relations and intimacy, upon the question of whether this stolen dust was received or concealed by her, or her aid, you may properly consider the fact of the difference in their sex—that they were traveling and cohabiting together as man and wife, with trunks and other traveling gear in common. The indictment charges that the defendant and Harmison both committed this crime, without alleging whether it was done jointly nr severally, and counsel for defendant now insists that neither party can be found guilty of a separate receiving under such a charge. Waiving the consideration of that precise question, as not being material to the present aspect of the case, the fact being that Harmison has been discharged from this indictment upon his plea of autrefois convict, the defendant is now being tried upon it alone, and may be found guilty under it of committing the crime therein charged, separately.

Before the defendant can be found guilty of the charge in the indictment the United States must show that the gold dust in question was stolen or embezzled from its mails. The record of Harmison's conviction in this court of the crime of stealing three similar cans of gold dust from the mails, has been introduced in evidence. This is sufficient evidence of the fact until the contrary appears, it being also shown or proven to your satisfaction that the property mentioned in the two indictments is the same. It must also be shown that the defendant, knowing it to have been so stolen or embezzled, received it from the thief, or concealed, or aided the thief or some one else in concealing it. To constitute a guilty receiving of stolen property by the defendant, it must appear that she voluntarily took it into her control and possession, or voluntarily had it in her possession and control, with intent to prevent the larceny or the thief from being discovered, or the property from being reclaimed by the true owner or for his benefit; but it need not appear that she received it with intent to make any gain or profit thereby to herself.

A guilty concealing also implies that the defendant voluntarily secreted this dust, or put it out of the way,' or in some manner disposed of it ■with a like intent as in the case of receiving. To aid in concealing stolen property a party must do some act with intent to assist the thief or other person, then in the guilty possession of .the property, in concealing it, or furtively disposing of it, with a like intent as in the case of receiving. The possession of property by the defendant for which the stolen gold dust was exchanged— as for instance, gold coin for which it may have beefl exchanged by Harmison at the Philadelphia mint—will not support the charge in the indictment. The possession of such coin would not be the possession of the stolen property, and would not of itself tend to prove the defendant guilty of the charge in the indictment. But if the stolen dust was made into coin this circumstance would not change its identity and the possession of such coin would be the possession of the stolen property.

But this cannot be a material question in this case because it is admitted that if this dust was changed into or for coin by Harmi-son, it was done at the Philadelphia mint. Now the defendant cannot be convicted of the crime charged in the indictment upon proof of receiving, concealing, or aiding in concealing, this dust or the coin into which it may have been changed beyond ibis district—without the state of Oregon. Evidence has been given to you in regard to the conduct and declarations of Harmison and the defendant be[1298]*1298yond this district, during tlieir journey to Texas and back again, but only for the purpose of throwing light upon' their acts and conduct while in this district. It being incumbent on the United States to show that this dust was stolen from the mails, instead of introducing the record of Harmison’s conviction of the theft, in the first instance, the prosecution saw proper, as it had the right to do, to go into the original proof of the fact. In so doing the acts and declarations of Har-mison, both within and without this state, tending to prove that the larceny was committed by him, have been given to you. But you are to remember that this evidence was only received for the purpose of proving the theft of the property, and that the defendant Is not to be affected by the acts or declarations of Harmison, only so far as it appears the former were known to her or the latter were made to her, or íd her presence and assented to by her.

Although you should find that the defendant knew from Harmison, or otherwise, that this dust had been stolen from the mails, that itself is not sufficient to convict her of the crime charged.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 1296, 3 Sawy. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-montgomery-ord-1875.