United States v. Stevens

27 F. Cas. 1312, 2 Hask. 164
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedNovember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 1312 (United States v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Stevens, 27 F. Cas. 1312, 2 Hask. 164 (circtdme 1877).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge

(charging jury). The counsel on both sides of this cause have dwelt with some force upon its great importance, and I feel that it is not inappropriate for me to reaffirm that proposition. I apprehend that however many causes you may any of you have been engaged in as jurors, there never has been one in which there was really a greater interest and greater questions involved than in the present cause. I know that during the experience that I have had in this place, I have had none come before me in which I felt there were more important matters involved than I feel that there are in the present cause which is now to be determined by you. It is of vital importance to these defendants, because it involves punishment both of fine and imprisonment in ease they are found guilty. Therefore, gentlemen, in their behalf I invoke of you a most careful and candid consideration of the testimony, that no wrong be done to them by you in your deliberations. It is also of the greatest importance to the government and to the public at large. “

You are well aware that the constitution of the United States has delegated to the United States government the control and direction of the mails. When the government was formed, it was deemed of so great importance, the management of this great department, that it was decided that it should not be committed to the various states, but that the general government for the general public welfare should control and regulate the management of the mails. And probably each one of you, on reflection, will come to the conclusion that there is no department of the government in which the public at large have so great an interest and derive so much benefit from as they do from the post office. Think one moment what the consequences would be if the mails should be destroyed for a single day that are passing merely in this state of Maine—how many sufferers there would be.

The government of the United States, therefore, having had committed to it by the constitution the control of the mails, has seen fit to legislate upon the subject, and has done so fully for its protection. It has declared that it shall be an offense to knowingly and wilfully obstruct the mails. It has also declared that there shall be such an offense as amounts to conspiracy, by the combination of two or more persons to violate the law of the United States, and, having thus combined, by doing some act in perfecting the violation. It has been stated to you what the punishment is in the one case, and what the punishment is in the other, and it is a fact that the law provides a more severe punishment, decidedly more severe, for a conspiracy to violate this provision of the law by knowingly and wilfully obstructing the mails than it does for the mere simple act of one person committing the crime.

You may ask yourselves why the government has seen fit, why congress has seen proper to impose a heavier punishment for the conspiracy than for the crime itself; probably a moment’s reflection will satisfy you that it is quite right that there should be this distinction. The crime can be committed by a single person; generally speaking conspiracies are much more substantial than that. The moment there is this combination of purpose to violate the law, there is that element of force brought to bear upon the law which is much more difficult to contend with than the act of a single individual. Here is this combination of men in one case, while in the other there is the single individual. You can all, in a moment, see that where large masses of people are concerned in resisting the law, the law itself has much more to contend with than it would if each one of them stood alone without any combination; that it is much more difficult to resist a mob and escape danger that the law may be put down and the courts be overcome, than in the case of the single individual, where there is not this concert of action. Therefore, it seems to me, it was wise that congress should declare that, while we punish the one man merely for the commission of the offense, if a body of men get together and say we will stand against the law and we will resist and break the law, we will punish these men because they come with more force to resist the law and with more power to overcome the court; that it is right and just and proper that there should be this difference made in punishment.

Now, therefore, gentlemen^ if these men have violated the law, let them take the consequences of it; if they have not violated the law, it is your duty and no doubt it will be your pleasure to say that they are not guilty. You will remember, that the presumption of innocence is a presumption which the law makes in all cases, even when a party has been indicted by the grand jury of the country. The indictment is simply to put the party upon trial, to subject him to inquiry. You are not, from the mere fact of the indictment having been found, to find that he is guilty of the offense with which he is charged. This presumption remains till you are satisfied of his guilt, and you must be satisfied of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. What is meant by a reasonable doubt? I refer you to the language of the Chief Jus--tice of the United States in one of the Ku Klux Cases, where he was called upon to-[1314]*1314explain tlie meaning of reasonable doubt. He says:

“The burden of proof, gentlemen, is upon the government. It is a wise maxim of the law in favor of life and liberty, that every man is presumed to be innocent until he is proven guilty, and this presumption is to continue with you, sitting as jurors, until it has been overcome by the testimony beyond a reasonable doubt. But a reasonable doubt is something more than a captious doubt, a mere vague notion that possibly the accused may be innocent. It must be a doubt for which a reason may be assigned. It need not be a reason sufficient to convince another, but it must be such as may properly influence the mind of one who is honestly endeavoring to perform his solemn duty as a juror.” U. S. v. Butler [Case No. 14,700].

That is the language of the chief justice of the United States of America, which I am bound to receive as law, and so declare to you. You are bound, both in civil and criminal cases, to receive as the law whatever the court may declare it to you to be. There must be some tribunal which shall determine what the law is; the law must be fixed and stable and permanent and not dependent on the notions of men who are called occasionally to examine it; and therefore, it has been wisely determined that the court shall declare the law and that the jury shall determine the facts. It is therefore your province to determine ail the facts, to believe such witnesses as you see fit; you have no right to disbelieve a witness upon mere prejudiced assumptions without there is something in the appearance of the witness or in his testimony in conflict with other testimony. You should deal fairly and justly with witnesses, and, unless there is some good reason for you to disbelieve them, you should believe their testimony. But the whole is for you; you are to draw your own inferences and pass upon the whole case and determine what is proved to your own satisfaction; you will not be governed in regard to that matter either by the statements of court or counsel. The counsel in the ardor of conflict may miss-recollect or misstate testimony; the court may misapprehend the testimony. So that, after all, if from any source whatever there is a statement made in regard to testimony, which according to your recollection is incorrect, you must be governed by your own recollection and not by such statement, no matter whence it came.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 1312, 2 Hask. 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stevens-circtdme-1877.