William A. Foster, Jr. v. United States

296 F.2d 65
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 2, 1962
Docket18898_1
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 296 F.2d 65 (William A. Foster, Jr. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William A. Foster, Jr. v. United States, 296 F.2d 65 (5th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Chief Judge.

This appeal attacks the conviction and sentence of appellant for violation of Title 18 U.S.C.A. § 111, dealing with forcibly assaulting, resisting, opposing, impeding, intimidating or interfering with United States officials while engaged in the performance of their official duties. The principal ground of the appeal is the contention that the government failed in its effort to prove that Special Agents William Johnson and Thomas J. Walsh, of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, were, when resisted and impeded and intimidated, engaged in the performance of their official, duties. The basis of this attack is the allegation by the appellant that when he did the acts complained of towards the agents they were illegally on his premises and were thus not, in legal contemplation, engaged in the performance of their official duty.

On the evidence introduced on the trial of the appellant, the jury was authorized to find that the following occurred on the night of February 10, 1959, near Jacksonville, Florida: The Special Agents, at 2:30 P.M., went to 8265 Hogan Road, Duval County, Florida, for the purpose of questioning Foster in connection with an official investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The agents parked their automobile facing outward on a roadway running alongside the house, but some distance from it. The automobile had Florida license plates and did not have any United States government identification. The two agents walked up on the front steps of the property of Foster’s parents for the purpose of questioning him. Although a man of thirty-five to forty-five years of age he stayed at his parents’ home when in Jacksonville; *66 His normal employment was as an engineer on board dredges and ships. The two agents were in business suits and ties and they were unarmed. They walked up to the front screen door to the porch of the house and stood on the steps while they rang the doorbell and knocked. The appellant came to the center of the porch and Agent Johnson asked him, “Are you Bill Foster?” Without answering the question, appellant answered, “Who the hell are you?” Johnson then gave his name and stated that they were Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. ^ Thereupon the appellant, with considerable profanity, ordered the agents to “get the hell from the property.” Mr. Johnson testified that he then stated to Foster that they only wanted to talk to him a couple of minutes. Whereupon appellant said, “Well, it’s not going to take that long for me to do what I am going to do,” and “I’ll teach you to come around and bother me.” The appellant immediately went to the living room from the porch and reached for a rifle and .. , , ,, ,. „ .., ■„ „ ... “racked the action of the rifle,” pointing .. ,. „ T . , , , lt m the direction of Johnson and Walsh. _ . . , One agent testified that it looked as ,, , ¿i ¿i-though it was pointed directly at his , i ■, x, ,, x ,, , head and the other testified that he was fearful for his life resulting from this „ , n x xt. x xt. threat. Walsh told appellant that they •x, xt tt n t i ca ■ t were with the F. B. I. and on official , . t , t xt. tt x x x business and asked the appellant to put . ,, »x xt.- ■ x -cr x > down the gun. At this point Foster’s . TTr.,,. a ttt x a x father, William A. Foster, Sr., came to ,, ttxtxxt x xj the porch, shouted to the son to put down . r ’ t t xt. x t. x xt. • the gun and asked the agents what their , . xt. x tj business was. Whereupon they told , . , xi , xt. x xt. x j him who they were and that they wanted , x tt x t • rm. tt x xt, to talk to his son. The appellant then xt xt -xi i 1 xt. j put down the rifle and came to the door, f xt xx x xc xt. t. telling the agents to get off the porch or he would kick or throw them off. Walsh told the appellant not to come through the door or “someone was liable to get hurt.” The appellant picked up the rifle the second time and ordered the agents off the property. Thereupon they turned their backs on the appellant and walked from the house to the automobile and drove off. The agents had no opportunity to show their credentials without, as they said, fearing that appellant would react violently to their reaching to their inside pockets. The entire occurrence took place within two or three minutes,

The same afternoon a federal warrant was issued for the arrest of appellant for violating Section 111 of Title 18, U.S.C.A. Johnson and Walsh, together with a number of other agents surrounded the house at 8:30 in the evening, arrested Foster and searched the house, The agents showed the warrant and their credentials at the time they arrested him. He was handcuffed, and in Spite of a vigorous struggle, the agents carried him from the property and plaeed him in an automobile and drove him to a county jail. The indictment ¿[id n0¿ charge any violation of the fed-era[ statute based on appellant’s belligerent actions at the time of or following his arrest. The only violation charged was the appellant’s actions during the afternoon appearance of agents Johnson an(j Walsh.

Appellant contends here that there could be no proper entry by the F. B. I. agents on the property of Foster’s parents for the purpose of interviewing him on February 10, 1959, after he had told them in October and November that he did not care to be questioned *67 further. In any event, appellant says the agents should have left the premises before Foster had occasion to threaten them with the gun. We agree with the trial court that the question whether at the moment of Foster’s threatening the agents they were engaged in a proper and legitimate function pursuing their official duties is a question of fact for the jury.

Appellant refers us to no decided case in which a court was held that a failure to depart the premises in a period of time as short as that which elapsed between Foster’s initial response to the agents’ inquiry and his threatening them with a gun converts what would otherwise be a justifiable act into a trespass. Nor is there cited any authority for the proposition that as a matter of law it would be a trespass for the agents to proceed to the front door of the Foster residence merely because Foster, Jr. had previously told other agents to leave the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
296 F.2d 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-a-foster-jr-v-united-states-ca5-1962.