Virgin Islands v. Brodhurst

148 F.2d 636, 2 V.I. 448, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4461
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1945
DocketNo. 8721
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 148 F.2d 636 (Virgin Islands v. Brodhurst) 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
Virgin Islands v. Brodhurst, 148 F.2d 636, 2 V.I. 448, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4461 (3d Cir. 1945).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of the Virgin Islands, Division of St. Croix, at Christiansted.1 The defendant was adjudged guilty of criminal contempt in a summary proceeding and sentenced to serve ten days in prison. The execution of the sentence was stayed by the District Court pending this appeal. To understand the questions raised by the appeal it will be necessary to detail some of the events which preceded the alleged contempt.

Harry Beatty, a white man, had been charged with murder in the second degree for having shot and killed Andrew Thompson, a Negro. The shooting took place on the island of St. Croix which has a population of twelve thousand people, approximately 95;% of whom are Negroes and 5% white. The case was one which aroused intense interest among the people of St. Croix and feeling regarding it ran very high in the community. Beatty waived his right to trial by jury. In spite of much public clamor the judge of the District Court did not order a jury trial but proceeded to try the case himself.2 The prosecution called two witnesses, white men who were friends of the defendant. The defendant testified on his own behalf. They all testified that Beatty was a game warden, that he attempted to take from Thompson an unlicensed shotgun with which he suspected Thompson had shot game unlawfully, that Thompson resisted and aimed his shotgun at Beatty and was about to shoot Beatty and that Beatty thereupon in self defense shot Thompson. It appeared further that the revolver with which Beatty shot Thompson was also unlicensed and that Beatty’s official position was not generally known. Since there were no witnesses to the shooting other than Beatty and his two friends their version of what occurred remained uncontradicted. The judge of the District Court, accepting the recited facts as established by the evidence, entered a judgment of acquittal on June 7, 1944. In rendering this judgment the judge delivered an opinion in which he discussed the evidence and his duty with respect to the case in a manner which reflects great credit upon his character and demonstrates his ability to administer the law impartially and justly in an atmosphere of intense public excitement and under circumstances,, which doubtless compelled him to subordinate his own natural feelings.3 The judge returned to St. [638]*638Thomas on June 7th. The islands of St. Thomas and St.. Croix are forty miles apart.

On June 12, 1944 the defendant published in his daily newspaper, The St. Croix Avis, in Christiansted the following unsigned letter:

“Editorial
“Correspondence
“Public Opinion
“Editor of St. Croix Avis
“Christiansted, V. I.
“Kindly insert the following in your paper:
“As the mass left the Court Room last Wednesday after having heard the decision of the case of Harry Beatty by Judge Moore, there were cries of discontent and indignation,
“What have we left they said? ‘Justice even is against us’. We are the masses of this island but we are trampled under heels of the Hitlerites and bribe and injustice rule out reason. Our legislators tax us, we pay willingly and gladly, but when jobs are available with any decent salary we are forgotten, and a white continental is either sent for, or given the job that a native could have taken and done better with.
“If we are hungry, and we fish in the sea (God’s sea) we are told by the Hitlerites ‘You Trespass’. If you shoot game, yes even with an old medieval gun, such as Rip Van Winkle used, and on your own property, you are shot as a dog and that’s nothing, even tho.ugh you are shot with an unlicensed gun. It’s fine. Our money is paid the chosen few in bulks, and only when a crime is committed, we know a man was a warden, and $200.00 or $300 or even $1000 a month to avoid shooting game and shoot human beings of this said masses. If that job is left off and one of the masses that are eligible applies for it, it will be dropped to may be $50.00 a month with more work added and no leisure attached.
“Our Nurses, Teachers, Policemen, Janitors, Street Cleaners, all have to toil doubly hard but they are of the masses, and must accept a pittance of a salary, and if they squawk for more they are automatically ousted. They justly deserve $200 or $300 or even $100.00 a month for they are over worked, and every civic need they are called upon for. Yet the fellows who have joined the Hitler gang get plenty of leisure, bigger salaries, they are not called upon for any extra duties of civic needs or war time sacrifice, and 10 to one they will be left out of being drafted on one pretext or the other, so that their lives may be preserved to go on oppressing their fellowmen.
“How long are we to stand this kind of thing here in St. Croix we do not know but we do know that all oppressed people have a day of liberation in their History. It seems as if we stand alone here and the surest thing would be to all get off the island and let these Carpetbaggers see who will fill their purses.
“If we do not pay our taxes promptly our property is sold on public auction but there are some of these Hitlerites who owe for years, yes generations, and this deficit in our Treasury is never mentioned; never even thought of. Why? Because they are things owned by the Minority who rules. It seems as if the only decent thing left for masses to do is to appeal to Washington for help either to rid us of these unwanted parasites and send people with just minds and if possible dissolve our Council.
“We have men who can stand for integrity and honor and who can do justice even though the heavens should fall but they are poor and silenced as they open their mouths and crushed out of the jobs [639]*639they hold or denied 100 and one rights of an American Citizen if they dare come forward.
“These Hitlerites retard progress in the island, for they want to monopolize everything and if other well-thinking people come here with plans to improve they are quickly chased back to the mainland, or told 1000 things that the Island hasn’t.
“Every progressive move they try to kill, ‘nothing’, they say, will work here. They do not say they are afraid of the people who may enter with progressive ideas and crush them out and so find hindrances one after another.
“This is not a race quarrel: those who are fair with us receive what they give. Oun- people here are known all over for their kindness and hospitality to all — but we have feelings too and like the Invaders of our Allies, can strike so sudden as to create lasting shock. Here in St. Croix the trend is Justice versus poverty.”

On his own motion on June 16, 1944 the judge of the District Court entered an order directing that the defendant be served with a citation to appear in the District Court at Christiansted on June 17, 1944 and show cause why he should not be punished for contempt for the publication of the article just quoted.

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Bluebook (online)
148 F.2d 636, 2 V.I. 448, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virgin-islands-v-brodhurst-ca3-1945.