United States v. Schafer

254 F. 135, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 723
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1918
DocketNo. 89
StatusPublished

This text of 254 F. 135 (United States v. Schafer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Schafer, 254 F. 135, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 723 (E.D. Pa. 1918).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

The reasons for a new trial in this case number 49 in all. Some of them are necessarily what may be characterized as formal. Many of the others indicate in their statement whether they are well or ill taken, and call for no discussion. This leaves for discussion three questions, two of which bear upon the course of the trial as affecting all of the defendants, and one as affecting two or possibly Three of them.

[ 1 ] One of the questions presented may be thus stated: It goes to the proposition of charging a defendant with one offense and convicting him of a different offense, and one with which he has not been charge.d in accordance with legal forms. As a hasis for the reason for a new trial advanced, the assertion is made with respect to certain counts in the indictment (those which may be called “false news” counts) that the theory upon which the indictment was framed is that a news dispatch emanated from a certain source and place, as, for illustration, an associated press dispatch from Berne or Amsterdam, and that the defendants altered this dispatch so as to change its meaning. The falsity is thus charged to have consisted in this alteration.

Another basis for the reasons for a new trial advanced is the further assertion that there was no proof of either the sending, receipt, or alteration of any such dispatches, and the inference is drawn that there [136]*136could be no lawful conviction of guilt of that charge in the absence qf evidence to support it.

With respect to tire evidence which was introduced, the further assertion is made that it was confined to what might support a charge that the defendants had published a false report, but was wholly barren of anything which would support the charge as made.

The basis for these assertions is the fact that the newspaper office from which the publication issued received no dispatches of any kind. The paper frequently contained what purported to be dispatches from the different news centers of the world, and they were so published as to present the appearance of being news which had come to the office by cable or otherwise. Their real origin was this: Newspapers printed in English and other languages came to the office. Those who had to do with the publication of the newspaper of the defendants made free use of the contents of other papers. In newspaper parlance, they “lifted” the news from other papers.

The real gravamen of the offense of which they were guilty, in so far as they were guilty, without regard to any of its purely legal aspects, was that they changed the news which they had thus “lifted” so as to give it a tone which would afford comfort and encouragement to the enemies of the United States, or would be injurious to our cause. It will thus be seen that in no aspect did the act which was committed differ in substance from the act which was charged. Whether it did so differ in the'strictly legal view depends wholly upon what the indictment means by the phrase “original dispatch.”

The thought entertained by the learned counsel for the defendants, and sought to be impressed upon the trial judge, and now re-expressed, is that the indictment charged a specific offense and charged it in the narrow sense of being the act of falsifying a dispatch which had emanated from a news collecting agency, and that the dispatch so changed was one which in fact had been received by the defendants.

The logical outcome of this thought is that the only evidence which would support such a charge would be the testimony of some one connected with such a news agency that such a dispatch had been sent to the defendants, followed by evidence of its contents, and further evidence that the dispatch had been published in a falsified form.

The trial judge refused to put this narrow construction upon the charge as laid in the indictment, hut read it as expressive of a charge of the substantial offense of disseminating false statements which tended and were put out with intent to promote the success of the enemies of the United States.

The charge thus made would emphatically embrace the act of taking a news dispatch from another paper and so changing it as to malee it serve a disloyal purpose. The dispatch so changed would be an “original dispatch” within the meaning of the indictment.

To give emphasis to the distinction sought to be expressed, we are of opinion although there is nothing in this case to require us to go so far, that the charge in substance would have been supported by proof that the defendants had wholly faked a dispatch, so that it had [137]*137no other origin than an emanation from the brain of the person who faked it.

The question as now presented is wholly an appellate question, and we take the view, as above expressed, because we deem it to be in line with the command of Rev. St. § 1025 (Comp. St. 1916, § 1691). As we view it, the motive for that command is a very practical one. A very short experience in the trial of causes, criminal or civil, brings out with cameo-like clearness two methods of trial. When one method is resorted to, procedure questions are given such prominence that the substantial questions of fact or of substantive law are wholly or almost lost to view. When the other method is employed counsel and parties by an agreement, tacit or expressed, join in presenting the substantial issues which arise in the case, and as the phrase is, agree to try the case on its merits without regard to- form.

The injunction of Rev. St. § 1025, was laid upon the courts with the contrast between these two systems of trial practice in the mind of Congress, and the command is that no indictment shall be held to be insufficient or effect be refused to a verdict if the indictment and trial be such as that a trial may be had and the trial is had in accordance with the second method described. This, as we understand it, is what Congress means in saying that the test of every question of this character which is raised is whether or not there has crept into the indictment or the trial anything which has worked to the prejudice of the defendants. There is a class of distinctions with which highly trained and bright intellects love to deal which may fitly be characterized' as metaphysical. As an intellectual exercise, discussion of them is always pleasurable and may have a high didactic value, but the practical affairs of life cannot be made to await the end of the discussion.

We adhere to the view entertained by the trial judge that the indictment charged and the evidence supports the offense defined by the Espionage Raw relating to the making of false reports, etc.

The second of the points remaining for discussion in the cause arises out of that part of the charge which dealt with the distinction between treason and the acts condemned by the Espionage Raw (Act June 15, 1917, c. 30, 40 Stat. 217) as criminal. As has often been observed, a charge to a jury should always be read in the atmosphere of the trial in which it was delivered. One of the functions of the charge is to enable a jury to comprehend the issues of a cause as presented to them by the evidence and the arguments of counsel. The cause which they have in their minds as the one to be determined by them is the cause as thus presented, and it would only work confusion if the trial judge did not shape the charge accordingly. There was evidently, as the charge itself indicates, some occurrence of the trial which prompted the comment of which complaint is now made.

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254 F. 135, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-schafer-paed-1918.