United States v. Schuler

27 F. Cas. 978, 6 McLean 28
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Michigan
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 978 (United States v. Schuler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Schuler, 27 F. Cas. 978, 6 McLean 28 (circtdmi 1853).

Opinion

WILKINS, District Judge.

This Indictment contains two counts. The first charges the defendant with “being employed,” and the second with “aiding and assisting” in removing “timber from lands of the United States.” The description of the offense is in these words: “That George Schuler, late of the village of Muskegon, in the county of Ottawa, on the 20th of June, 1853, at the mouth of the river Muskegon aforesaid, was employed in removing from lands of the United States, a large amount of timber, to wit: one hundred thousand shingles and twenty cords of shingle bolts, the property of the United States, of the value of one thousand dollars.” The description in the second count, is in the same words, with the exception as “to aiding and assisting in removing,” instead of “being employed to remove.”

The act of congress of March 2, 1831 [4 Stat. 472], entitled “An act to provide for the punishment of offenses committed in cutting, destroying, or removing live-oak and other timber or trees reserved for naval purposes”—defines the offense as follows: “If any person shall cut, or be employed in cutting, or shall remove or be employed in removing, or aid and assist in removing any live oak or red cedar trees, or other timber, from lands of the United States, with intent to export, dispose of, use, or employ the same in any manner whatsoever, other than for the use of the navy of the United States, the person so offending, on conviction thereof, shall,' for every such offense, pay a fine not less than triple the value of the tree or trees, or timber so cut, destroyed, or removed, and be imprisoned not exceeding twelve months.”

Several reasons axe assigned as causes of demurrer. We will notice them in the order in which they have been presented in the argument.

I. It is objected that the offense is not described in either count with sufficient certainty and precision. This objection, especially, has reference to the locality of the trespass. It is not charged that the timber was removed from any designated portion of the public domain. The language is general, “from lands of the United States at the mouth of the river Muskegon aforesaid.” Where the locus in quo is so inseparably connected with the offense,—as in this statutory trespass upon the public lands,—such a description should be given, as would certainly protect the defendant from a second trial for the same offense, in which the indictment contained a more particular description as to township, range, section, or quarter section of land from which the logs were actually removed. It is not necessary to specify any of the political divisions of the state, merely as indicative of the jurisdiction of this court. It is sufficient to allege, that the trespass was committed within the district. Such an allegation is all that is necessary in most of the cases triable in the United States court. But this act of congress, (being part of the land law of the United States,) in the creation of this offense, had reference both to the naval reservation and the surveyed lands of the national domain, with the intention of preserving the timber on them from destruction, by the imposition of severe penalties. And the principal divisions and sub-divisions of the public surveys, being specially directed by statute, and of public record and notoriety, are unquestionably intended by the statutory language “other lands of the United States,” in contradistinction to “the lands reserved.” The usual fiction of “breaking the close” in actions or indictments, for trespass upon lands, or the necessary description in ejectment, is not designative of jurisdiction, but essentially descriptive of the particular property of the plaintiff on or concerning which the offense has been committed. The principle of the fiction is applicable to the indictment. The United States as a great land proprietor, for their preservation, protection, and sale, has had the public lands officially surveyed, and by various agencies and functionaries has had platted off and designated by fixed boundaries and sections, the national domain.

A description, then, omitting the material averment of the particular division from whence the timber was removed, is too vague and uncertain. A removal from a body of water, is not a removal from land. Such would not answer in an action for civil damages, much less then, in an indictment, which should be specially descriptive of the offense charged. An individual owning several parcels of land in the same township and county, must specify in his action, with distinguishing certainty, which one of his farms has been injured by the trespass for which he seeks reparation. It would not do, to describe the same generally as by county or townships, where such description would not specify, and where specification was necessary. The “mouth” of a river may embrace for many miles land on either side, and the land adjacent may comprehend more townships than one, it may be more or less extensive, and the lands on its banks or borders be varied as to ownership. In a case then, so seriously involving character, [980]*980property, and personal liberty, the defendant is entitled to a more specific accusation. The river Muskegon may water, and the county of Ottawa may comprehend a large extent of country, and such averment is no notice to a defendant, as to what particular tract of the lands of the United States, he is called upon to defend. It might as well be “the United States lands” in the county of Ottawa, or the “United States lands in the district of Michigan.” No doubt, other lands are held in the county,, and at the mouth of the river by individual owners, and so far, such description might generally distinguish the government lands from those entered at private sale. But the patent or deed, to an individual, of government lands, describes his purchase by the well known returns of survey, and the marks on the ground, and that which remains unsold is as well known and as easily ascertained. The defendant therefore' should be apprised by the indictment of the particular subdivision to which the alleged offense attaches. It is not a question of jurisdiction that the venue settles, but a matter of essential description.

A part of the statutory definition of the offense: material to be proved, and therefore material to be averred. 1 Stat. 465; 4 Stat. 472; 5 Hill, 401; 3 Blackf. 193; 1 Chit. Pl. 234; Cowper, 682; 3 Greenl. Ev. 12; U. S. v. Wilson [Case No. 16,730]. The case of U. S. v. Wilson [supra] does not conflict with this view.. The offense was robbing the U. S. mail in the Eastern district of Pennsylvania. Not necessary to prove and therefore unnecessary to aver particular locality, as 'essentially connected with the crime. But here the offense is not the destruction or removal of timber on wild land, not merely the removal of timber, belonging to the United States, but the destruction or removal of timber on and from the lands of the United States, and (with reference to prior enactments) from the surveyed lands of the United States.

II. But it is urged by the government, that the description of the offense is of sufficient certainty, because such description is in the very words of the statute. The words of the statute are, “employed in removing any live oak, or red cedar trees, or other timber, from any other lands of the United States.” The lands of the United States other than those designated and reserved for naval purposes, constitute the premises from which the timber is removed, being employed in which, comprises the offense defined in the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 978, 6 McLean 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-schuler-circtdmi-1853.