United States v. Oriolo

146 F.2d 152, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2264
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1944
DocketNo. 8514
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 146 F.2d 152 (United States v. Oriolo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Oriolo, 146 F.2d 152, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2264 (3d Cir. 1944).

Opinion

BARD, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction under the White Slave Traffic Act, popularly called the Mann Act.1

Early in July of 1942 defendant met a young woman in Philadelphia and employed her to work for him as a prostitute in a hotel there. After several weeks the couple went by automobile to Atlantic City, New Jersey, for a day’s outing. There they were arrested and their automobile was held by the authorities. They returned to Philadelphia the following day by railroad, defendant purchasing the tickets. On the return trip, and while the train was still in New Jersey, defendant informed the woman that she would have to resume the business of prostitution in Philadelphia to enable him to pay the $500 fine that had been imposed in Atlantic City. Upon their arrival in Philadelphia the woman worked for defendant as a prostitute and turned over her earnings to him.

The indictment was based only on the return trip from New Jersey to Pennsylvania. Defendant demurred to the evidence and the trial court overruled the demurrer and adjudged the defendant guilty. The single question presented is whether this evidence was sufficient to sustain conviction.

Since the argument of this case before us the Supreme Court of the United States has decided the case of Mortensen v. United States, 322 U.S. 369, 64 S.Ct. 1037, 1039, upon facts almost strikingly similar to those here presented, so that our problem is narrowed to a consideration of whether there are any material differences between the two cases. In the Mortensen case, in which the defendants were indicted for violation of Section 2 of the Mann Act, the essential facts were succinctly stated by Mr. Justice Murphy as follows:

“The petitioners, man and wife, operated a house of prostitution in Grand Island, Nebraska. In 1940 they planned an automobile trip to Salt Lake City, Utah, in order to visit Mrs. Mortensen’s parents. Two girls who were employed by petitioners as prostitutes asked to be taken along for a vacation and the Mortensens agreed to their request. They motored to Yellowstone National Park and then on to Salt Lake City, where they all stayed at a tourist camp for four or five days. They visited Mrs. Mortensen’s parents and, in addition, the girls ‘went to shows and around in the parks’ and saw various other parts of the city. The four then returned in petitioners’ automobile to Grand Island; on arrrival they drove immediately to petitioners’ house of ill fame and retired to their respective rooms. The following day one of the girls resumed her activities as a prostitute in petitioners’ employ, while the other did not resume such activities for a week or ten days because of illness. Both girls continued to act as prostitutes for petitioners for a year or more after their return from Salt Lake City.

“It is undisputed that this was purely a vacation trip, with the two girls paying their own living expenses and petitioners bearing the expenses of transportation. One of the girls had offered to help pay for the transportation, but petitioners refused on the ground that the cost would remain the same even if the girls did not accompany them. No acts of prostitution or other immorality occurred during the two-week trip and there was no discussion of such acts during the course of the journey. Both girls testified that during the trip they gave no consideration to their work as prostitutes and made no plans to abandon such activities. There was also uncontradicted evidence that the two girls were under no obligation or compulsion of any kind to return to Grand Island to work for petitioners. They were free at any time before, during or after the vacation excursion to leave petitioners’ employ and engage in their own pursuits.”

On these facts petitioners were convicted of violating the Mann Act with respect to their return trip to Nebraska and the conviction had been sustained by the Circuit Court of Appeals. The Su-reme Court reversed the conviction on the ground that there was “a complete lack of relevant evidence from which the jury could properly find or infer, beyond a reasonable doubt, that petitioners transported the girls in interstate commerce ‘for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery* within the meaning of the Mann Act.” Mr. Justice Murphy, speaking for the majority of the Court,2 said at page 374 of 322 U.S., at page 1040 of 64 S.Ct.:

[154]*154“It may be assumed that petitioners anticipated that the two girls would resume their activities as prostitutes upon their return to Grand Island. But we do not think it is fair or permissible under the evidence adduced to infer that this interstate vacation trip, or any part of it, was undertaken by petitioners for the purpose of, or as a means of effecting or facilitating, such activities. The' sole purpose of the journey from beginning to end was to provide innocent recreation and a holiday for petitioners and the two girls. It was a complete break or interlude in the operation of petitioners’ house of ill fame and was entirely disassociated therefrom. There was no evidence that any immoral acts occurred on the journey or that petitioners forced the girls against their will to return to Grand Island for immoral purposes. * * * '

“The return journey under the circumstances of this .case cannot be considered apart from its integral relation with the innocent round trip as a whole. There is no evidence of any change in the purpose of the trip during its course. If innocent when it began it remained so until it ended. Guilt or innocence does not turn merely on the direction of travel during part of a trip not undertaken for immoral ends. If the return journey was illegal, so was the outgoing one since all intended, from the beginning, to end the journey where it began, at Grand Island. The outward leg of the trip was interstate transportation. Yet it was not charged, and could not well be, that proof of this part of the trip was a violation of the Act. It differed in no respect from the other part, except in the direction of travel. That is not enough to make the first part innocent, the last illegal. Criminal intent, and purpose must be grounded on something less ingenious than that which is necessary to sustain a finding of such a purpose in making the return interstate journey to Grand Island.”

There is one significant fact which, in our opinion, distinguishes the present case from the Mortensen case and presents sufficient evidence to sustain the conviction. That evidence consists of the fact that defendant was arrested and fined in New Jersey and his statement to the woman that she would have to return to Philadelphia and resume the business of prostitution to enable him to pay the fine. As will be noted from the excerpt from the majority opinion of the Supreme Court above quoted, much stress was laid on the fact that: “The sole purpose of the journey from beginning to end was to provide innocent recreation and a holiday for petitioners and the two girls. * * * There is no evidence of any change in the purpose of the trip during its course. If innocent when it began it remained so until it ended.”

In the case at bar there was evidence of a change in the purpose of the trip during its course.

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Bluebook (online)
146 F.2d 152, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-oriolo-ca3-1944.