On the trial of a person charged with feloniously receiving and
having in his possession with intent to convert them to his own use
postage stamps which had been feloniously stolen, taken, and
carried away from a post office by three persons named, although
the person so receiving them well knew that the same had been so
feloniously taken, stolen and carried away, the judgment convicting
the said three persons of stealing the said stamps was received in
evidence against the accused under the provision in the Act of
March 3, 1875, c. 144, § 2, that such judgment "shall be conclusive
evidence against said receiver, that the property of the United
States therein described has been embezzled, stolen or purloined."
The accused having been convicted, and the case brought here by
writ of error,
held that that provision of the statute
violates the clause of the Constitution of the United States
declaring that in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall be
confronted with the witnesses against him, and that the judgment
must be reversed.
The contention by the defendant that the indictment is defective
in that it does not allege ownership by the United States of the
stolen articles of property at the time that they were alleged to
have been feloniously received by him is without merit.
The objection that the indictment does not show from whom the
accused received the stamps, nor state that the name of such person
was unknown to the grand jurors, is not well taken.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error, Kirby, was indicted in the District
Court of the United States for the Southern division of the
district of South Dakota under the Act of congress of March 3,
Page 174 U. S. 48
1875, c. 144, entitled "An act to punish certain larcenies, and
the receivers of stolen goods." 18 Stat. 479.
The first section provides that
"any person who shall embezzle, steal or purloin any money,
property, record, voucher or valuable thing whatever of the moneys,
goods, chattels, records or property of the United States shall be
deemed guilty of felony, and on conviction thereof before the
district or circuit court of the United States in the district
wherein said offense may have been committed, or into which he
shall carry or have in possession of said property so embezzled,
stolen or purloined, shall be punished therefor by imprisonment at
hard labor in the penitentiary not exceeding five years, or by a
fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, or both at the discretion
of the court before which he shall be convicted."
By the second section it is provided that
"if any person shall receive, conceal, or aid in concealing or
have, or retain in his possession with intent to convert to his own
use or gain, any money, property, record, voucher or valuable thing
whatever, of the moneys, goods, chattels, records or property of
the United States, which has theretofore been embezzled, stolen or
purloined, such person shall, on conviction before the circuit or
district court of the United States in the district wherein he may
have such property, be punished by a fine not exceeding five
thousand dollars, or imprisonment at hard labor in the penitentiary
not exceeding five years, one or both at the discretion of the
court before which he shall be convicted, and such receiver may be
tried either before or after the conviction of the principal felon,
but if the party has been convicted, then the judgment against him
shall be conclusive evidence in the prosecution against such
receiver that the property of the United States therein described
has been embezzled, stolen or purloined."
18 Stat. 479.
The indictment contained three courts, but the defendant was
tried only on the first. In that count it was stated that Thomas J.
Wallace, Ed. Baxter, and Frank King, on the 7th day of June, 1896
at Highmore, within the jurisdiction of the court, feloniously and
forcibly broke into a post office of the United States, and
feloniously stole, took, and carried away
Page 174 U. S. 49
therefrom certain moneys and property of the United States,
to-wit, 3,750 postage stamps of the denomination of two cents, and
of the value of two cents each, 1,266 postage stamps of the
denomination of one cent. and of the value of one cent each, 140
postage stamps of the denomination of four cents, and of the value
of four cents each, 250 postage stamps of the denomination of five
cents, and of the value of five cents each, 80 postage stamps of
the denomination of eight cents, and of the value of eight cents
each, and also United States treasury notes, national bank notes,
silver certificates, gold certificates, silver, nickel, and copper
coins of the United States, as well as current money of the United
States, a more particular description of which the grand jury were
unable to ascertain, of the value of $58.19, and that the persons
above named were severally indicted and convicted of that offense,
and had been duly sentenced upon such conviction.
It was then alleged that the defendant, on the 9th day of June,
1896 at the City of Sioux Falls, the postage stamps
"so as aforesaid feloniously stolen, taken, and carried away,
feloniously did receive and have in his possession, with intent
then and there to convert the same to his own use and gain, the
said Joe Kirby then and there well knowing the said postage stamps
to have been theretofore feloniously stolen, taken, and carried
away, contrary to the form, force, and effect of the statutes of
the United States in such cases made and provided, and against the
peace and dignity of the United States."
At the trial of Kirby, the government offered in evidence a part
of the record of the trial of Wallace, Baxter, and King, from which
it appeared that Wallace and Baxter, after severally pleading not
guilty, withdrew their respective pleas, and each pleaded guilty,
and was sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary at hard labor
for the term of four years. It appeared from the same record that
King, having pleaded not guilty, was found guilty, and sentenced to
the penitentiary at hard labor for the term of five years.
The admission in evidence of the record of the conviction of
Wallace, Baxter, and King was objected to, upon the ground that the
above Act of March 3, 1875, was unconstitutional so
Page 174 U. S. 50
far as it made that conviction conclusive evidence in the
prosecution of the receiver that the property of the United States
described in the indictment against him had been embezzled, stolen,
or purloined. The objection was overruled, and the record offered
was admitted in evidence, with exceptions to the accused.
After referring to the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1875,
and to the indictment against Kirby, the court, among other things,
said in its charge to the jury:
"In order to make out the case of the prosecution, and in order
that you should be authorized to return a verdict of guilty in this
case, you must find beyond a reasonable doubt from the evidence in
the case certain propositions to be true. In the first place, it
must be found by you beyond a reasonable doubt that the property
described in the indictment, and which is also described in the
indictment against these three men [Wallace, Baxter, and King],
who, it is alleged, have been convicted, was actually stolen from
the post office at Highmore, was the property of the United States,
and of a certain value. Second. You must find beyond a reasonable
doubt that the defendant Joseph Kirby received, or had in his
possession, a portion of that property which had been stolen from
the post office at Highmore. Third. That he received or had it in
his possession, with intent to convert it to his own use and gain.
Now upon the first proposition -- as to whether the property
described in the indictment was stolen, as alleged in the
indictment -- the prosecution has introduced in evidence the record
of the trial and conviction of what are known as the principal
felons -- that is, the parties who, it is alleged, committed the
larceny. Now in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the
record is sufficient proof in this case upon which you would be
authorized to find that the property alleged in that indictment was
stolen as alleged -- in other words, it makes a
prima
facie case on the part of the government, which must stand as
sufficient proof of the fact until some evidence is introduced
showing the contrary, and, there being no such evidence in this
case, you will, no doubt, have no trouble in coming to a conclusion
that the property
Page 174 U. S. 51
described in the indictment was actually stolen, as alleged,
from the post office at Highmore. But I do not want you to
understand me to say that that record proves that the stamps that
were found in Kirby's possession were stolen property, or that they
were the stamps taken from the Highmore post office. Upon the
further proposition that the court has suggested, after you have
found, by a careful consideration of all the evidence, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the property alleged in the indictment was
stolen, then you will proceed to consider whether or not the
defendant ever at any time, either on the date alleged in the
indictment or any other date within three years previous to the
finding of the indictment, had in his possession or received any of
this property which was stolen from the post office at Highmore.
Now in order to find the defendant guilty of the offense charged in
the indictment, you would have to find beyond a reasonable doubt
from all the evidence that he either actually received a portion or
all of the property which was stolen from the post office at
Highmore, and that he received that property from the thief or
thieves who committed the theft at the Highmore post office, or
some agent of these thieves. The statute punishes, you will
observe, both the receipt of stolen property, knowing it to have
been stolen, with the intent described in the statute, and also the
having in the possession of such property, knowing it to have been
stolen, with the intent to convert it to the person's own use or
gain. If you find beyond a reasonable doubt that any of the
property which was stolen at the post office at Highmore was
actually received or had in the possession of the defendant, then
you cannot convict unless you further find that the defendant had
the property in his possession, or received it from the thief or
his agent, knowing at the time that it was stolen property. Now
upon the question of whether the defendant knew that it was stolen
property, you will, of course, consider all the evidence in the
case. You have the right to find that the person or the defendant
knew that it was stolen property, from the admissions he may have
made, if he made any, if there is such evidence in the case, or
from other circumstances that you would have the right to infer
Page 174 U. S. 52
that he did know. Now if a person received property under such
circumstances that would satisfy a man of ordinary intelligence
that it was stolen property, and you further find beyond a
reasonable doubt that he actually did believe it was stolen
property, then you have a right to infer and find that, at the time
of the receipt of the property, the person knew that it was stolen.
Now the next point in the case is in regard to the intent the
defendant had in regard to the use or disposal of the property. The
statute requires that this receipt of stolen property, knowing it
to have been stolen, must also be with the intent to convert it to
the use of the party in whose possession it is found. There are
statutes which simply punish the knowingly receiving of stolen
property. That was the common law. But this statute has added this
further ingredient -- that it must be done with the intent to
convert it to the party's own use and gain. It was probably put in
for the reason that the statute goes further than the common law,
making it punishable to conceal or aid in concealing, with intent
to convert it to his own use and gain. Now all these propositions
that I have charged must be made out by the prosecution, of course,
beyond a reasonable doubt, and in case you have a reasonable doubt
of any of these ingredients, it will be your duty to acquit the
defendant."
In response to a request from the jury to be further instructed,
the court, after referring to the indictment and to the second
section of the act of 1875, said:
"This indictment does not contain all the words of the statute.
This indictment charges the defendant with having, on the 9th day
of June, 1896, received and had in his possession these postage
stamps that were stolen from the United States at Highmore. Now if
you should find beyond a reasonable doubt from all the testimony in
the case, in the first place, that the postage stamps mentioned in
the indictment, or any of them, were stolen from the post office at
Highmore by these parties whom it is alleged did steal them, and
you further find beyond a reasonable doubt that these postage
stamps, or any portion of them, were, on the 9th day of June, 1896,
received by the defendant from the thieves or their agent, knowing
the same to have
Page 174 U. S. 53
been so stolen from the United States by these parties, with the
intent to convert the same to his own use and gain, or if you find
beyond a reasonable doubt that they were so stolen at the Highmore
post office, as I have stated, and that the defendant, on or about
the 9th day of June, had them in his possession, or any portion of
them, knowing the same to have been so stolen, with the intent to
convert the same to his own use and gain, and you will find all
these facts beyond a reasonable doubt, you would be authorized to
return a verdict of guilty as charged."
The jury returned a verdict of guilty against Kirby. The
exceptions taken by him at the trial were sufficient to raise the
questions that will presently be considered.
As shown by the above statement, the charge against Kirby was
that, on a named day, he feloniously received and had in his
possession, with intent to convert to his own use and gain, certain
personal property of the United States, theretofore feloniously
stolen, taken, and carried away by Wallace, Baxter, and King, who
had been indicted and convicted of the offense alleged to have been
committed by them.
Notwithstanding the conviction of Wallace, Baxter, and King, it
was incumbent upon the government, in order to sustain its charge
against Kirby, to establish beyond a reasonable doubt (1) that the
property described in the indictment was in fact stolen from the
United States, (2) that the defendant received or retained it in
his possession, with intent to convert it to his own use or gain,
and (3) that he received or retained it with knowledge that it had
been stolen from the United States.
How did the government attempt to prove the essential fact that
the property was stolen from the United States? In no other way
than by the production of a record showing the conviction under a
separate indictment of Wallace, Baxter, and King; the judgments
against Wallace and Baxter resting wholly upon their respective
pleas of guilty, while the judgment against King rested upon a
trial and verdict of guilty. With the record of those convictions
out of the present case,
Page 174 U. S. 54
there was no evidence whatever to show that the property alleged
to have been received by Kirby was stolen from the United
States.
We are of the opinion that the trial court erred in admitting in
evidence the record of the convictions of Wallace, Baxter, and
King, and then in its charge saying that, in the absence of proof
to the contrary, the fact that the property was stolen from the
United States was sufficiently established against Kirby by the
mere production of the record showing the conviction of the
principal felons. Where the statute makes the conviction of the
principal thief a condition precedent to the trial and punishment
of a receiver of the stolen property, the record of the trial of
the former would be evidence in the prosecution against the
receiver to show that the principal felon had been convicted, for a
fact of that nature could only be established by a record. The
record of the conviction of the principals could not, however, be
used to establish, against the alleged receiver, charged with the
commission of another and substantive crime, the essential fact
that the property alleged to have been feloniously received by him
was actually stolen from the United States. Kirby was not present
when Wallace and Baxter confessed their crime by pleas of guilty,
nor when King was proved to be guilty by witnesses who personally
testified before the jury. Nor was Kirby entitled of right to
participate in the trial of the principal felons. If present at
that trial, he would not have been permitted to examine Wallace and
Baxter upon their pleas of guilty, nor cross-examine the witnesses
introduced against King, nor introduce witnesses to prove that they
were not in fact guilty of the offense charged against them. If he
had sought to do either of those things -- even upon the ground
that the conviction of the principal felons might be taken as
establishing
prima facie a vital fact in the separate
prosecution against himself as the receiver of the property -- the
court would have informed him that he was not being tried, and
could not be permitted in any wise to interfere with the trial of
the principal felons. And yet the court below instructed the jury
that the conviction of the principal felons upon an indictment
Page 174 U. S. 55
against them alone was sufficient
prima facie to show,
as against Kirby, indicted for another offense, the existence of
the fact that the property was stolen -- a fact which, it is
conceded, the United States was bound to establish beyond a
reasonable doubt in order to obtain a verdict of guilty against
him.
One of the fundamental guaranties of life and liberty is found
in the Sixth Amendment of the constitution of the United States,
which provides that "in all criminal prosecutions, the accused
shall . . . be confronted with the witnesses against him." Instead
of confronting Kirby with witnesses to establish the vital fact
that the property alleged to have been received by him had been
stolen from the United States, he was confronted only with the
record of another criminal prosecution, with which he had no
connection, and the evidence in which was not given in his
presence. The record showing the result of the trial of the
principal felons was undoubtedly evidence, as against
them, in respect of every fact essential to show
their guilt. But a fact which can be primarily established
only by witnesses cannot be proved against an accused, charged with
a different offense, for which he may be convicted without
reference to the principal offender, except by witnesses who
confront him at the trial, upon whom he can look while being tried,
whom he is entitled to cross-examine, and whose testimony he may
impeach in every mode authorized by the established rules governing
the trial or conduct of criminal cases. The presumption of the
innocence of an accused attends him throughout the trial, and has
relation to every fact that must be established in order to prove
his guilt beyond reasonable doubt. "This presumption," this Court
has said,
"is an instrument of proof created by the law in favor of one
accused, whereby his innocence is established, until sufficient
evidence is introduced to overcome the proof which the law has
created."
Coffin v. United States, 156 U.
S. 432,
156 U. S. 459.
But that presumption in
Kirby's case was, in effect, held
in the court below to be of no consequence, for, as to a vital fact
which the government was bound to establish affirmatively,
Page 174 U. S. 56
he was put upon the defensive almost from the outset of the
trial, by reason alone of what appeared to have been said in
another criminal prosecution with which he was not connected, and
at which he was not entitled to be represented. In other words, the
United States, having secured the conviction of Wallace, Baxter,
and King, as principal felons, the defendant, charged by a separate
indictment with a different crime (that of receiving the property
in question, with knowledge that it was so stolen, and with intent
to convert it to his own use or gain), was held to be presumptively
or
prima facie guilty, so far as the vital fact of the
property having been stolen was concerned, as soon as the
government produced the record of such conviction, and without its
making any proof whatever by witnesses confronting the accused of
the existence of such vital fact. We cannot assent to this view. We
could not do so without conceding the power of the legislature,
when prescribing the effect as evidence of the records and
proceedings of courts, to impair the very substance of a right long
deemed so essential for the due protection of life and liberty that
it is guarded against legislative and judicial action by provisions
in the constitution of the United States and in the constitutions
of most, if not of all, the states composing the Union.
This precise question has never been before this Court, and we
are not aware of any adjudged case which is in all respects like
the present one. But there are adjudications which proceed upon
grounds that point to the conclusion reached by us.
A leading case is
Rex v. Turner, 1 Moody's Crown Cases
347. In that case, the prisoner was indicted for feloniously
receiving from one Sarah Rich certain goods and chattels
theretofore feloniously stolen by her from one Martha Clarke. At
the trial, before Mr. Justice Patteson, it was proposed to prove a
confession of Sarah Rich, made before a magistrate in the presence
of the prisoner, in which she stated various facts implicating the
prisoner and others as well as herself. The evidence was not
admitted, but the court admitted other evidence of what Sarah Rich
said
Page 174 U. S. 57
respecting herself only. The prisoner was convicted and
sentenced. The report of the case proceeds:
"Having since learned that a case occurred before Mr. Baron Wood
at York, where two persons were indicted together, one for stealing
and the other for receiving, in which the principal pleaded guilty
and the receiver not guilty, and that Mr. Baron Wood refused to
allow the plea of guilty to establish the fact of the stealing by
the principal, as against the receiver, the learned judge thought
it right to submit to the learned judges the question whether he
was right in admitting the confession of Sarah Rich in the present
case. The learned judge thought it right to add that the prisoner,
one Taylor, and Sarah Rich had immediately before been tried upon
an indictment for burglary and stealing other property in the house
of Mrs. Clarke on the night of the 22d of August, and that Taylor
and Rich had been found guilty, but the prisoner had been
acquitted; there being no proof of his presence. The learned judge
did not pass sentence upon Sarah Rich immediately, but a new jury
was called and the prisoner was tried as a receiver, so that either
party might have called her as a witness. In Easter term, 1832, all
the judges except Lord Lyndhurst, C.B., and Taunton, J., met, and,
having considered this case, were unanimously of opinion that Sarah
Rich's confession was no evidence against the prisoner, and many of
them appeared to think that had Sarah Rich been convicted, and the
indictment against the prisoner stated not her conviction, but her
guilt, the conviction would not have been any evidence of her
guilt, which must have been proved by other means, and the
conviction was held wrong."
In a later case,
Keable v. Payne, 8 Ad. & El. 555,
560, which was an action involving a question as to the admission
of certain evidence, and was heard in the Queen's Bench before Lord
Denman, Chief Justice, and Littledale, Patteson, and Williams,
Justices, Mr. Justice Patteson, referring to
Rex v.
Turner, above cited, said:
"On an indictment for receiving goods feloniously taken, the
felony must be proved, and neither a judgment against a felon nor
his admission would be evidence against the receiver. In such a
case, I
Page 174 U. S. 58
once admitted evidence of a plea of guilty by the taker, and it
was held that I did wrong."
A note in Starkie on Evidence, p. 367, is to this effect:
"In
R. v. Turner, 1 Moo.C.C. 347,
R. v.
Ratcliffe, 1 Lew.C.C. 112,
Keable v. Payne, 8 Ad.
& El. 560, it is stated that many of the judges (all the judges
except two being assembled) were of opinion that the record of the
conviction of the principal would not be evidence of the fact where
the indictment against the accessory alleged not the conviction,
but the guilt, of the principal. And on principle it would seem to
be evidence only when the indictment alleges the conviction of the
principal, and
simply to support that allegation."
The leading American case on the question is
Commonwealth v.
Elisha, 3 Gray 460. The indict ment was for receiving stolen
goods, knowing them to have been stolen. The court, speaking by
Metcalf, J., said:
"This indictment is against the defendant alone, and charges him
with having received property stolen by Joseph Elisha and William
Gigger knowing it to have been stolen. It is not averred, nor was
it necessary to aver or prove (Rev.Stats. c. 126, § 24), that they
had been convicted of the theft; but it was necessary to prove
their guilt, in order to convict the defendant. Was the record of
their conviction on another indictment against them only, upon
their several pleas of guilty to a charge of stealing the property,
legal evidence against the defendant that they did steal it? We
think not, either on principle or authority. That conviction was
res inter alios. The defendant was not a party to the
proceedings, and had no opportunity nor right to be heard on the
trial. And it is an elementary principle of justice that one man
shall not be affected by another's act or admission to which he is
a stranger. That conviction being also on the confession of the
parties, the adjudged cases show that it is not evidence against
the defendant.
Rex v. Turner, 1 Mood.C.C. 347; 1 Lewin's
C.C. 119; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 233; Rosc.Cr.Ev. (2d ed.) 50;
State
v. Newport, 4 Harring. (Del.) 567. We express no opinion
concerning a case differing in any particular from this, but
confine ourselves to the exact
Page 174 U. S. 59
question presented by these exceptions. Our decision is this,
and no more: the record of the conviction of a thief, on his plea
of guilty to an indictment against him alone for stealing certain
property, is not admissible in evidence to prove the theft on the
trial of the receiver of that property upon an indictment against
him alone, which does not aver that the thief has been
convicted."
To the same general effect are some of the text writers.
Phillips, in his treatise on the Law of Evidence, referring to the
rule as to the admissibility and effect of verdicts or judgments in
prosecutions, says:
"A record of conviction of a principal in felony has been
admitted in some cases, not of modern date, as evidence against the
accessory.
R. v. Smith, Leach Cr.C. 288;
R. v.
Baldwin, 3 Camp. 265. This has been supported on the ground of
convenience, because the witnesses against the principal might be
dead or not to be found, and on the presumption that the
proceedings must be taken to be regular, and the guilt of the
convicted party to be established. Fost.Disc. iii, p. 364, c. 2, s.
2, p. 364. But this is not strictly in accordance with the
principle respecting the admissibility of verdicts as evidence
against third persons. From the report of the recent case of
Rex v. Turner, it seems that a record of conviction of a
principal in the crime of stealing who pleads guilty would not now
be received as evidence of the guilt of the principal against the
receivers of the stolen property, or the accessory after the fact,
and it is said to be doubtful whether a record of the conviction of
the principal on his plea of not guilty would be admissible against
the accessory. As proof of the fact of conviction, the record would
be admissible and conclusive, but it seems not to be admissible
evidence of the guilt of the convict, as against another person
charged with being connected with him in crime, the record being in
this respect
res inter alios acta. It is evidence that a
certain person, named in the record, was convicted by the jury, but
not evidence as against a third person, supposed to have been
engaged with him in a particular transaction, as to the ground on
which the conviction proceeded -- namely, that the convict
committed the criminal act described in the record. "
Page 174 U. S. 60
2 Phillips' Ev. 3d ed. pp. 22, 23. Taylor, in his treatise on
Evidence, after stating that a prisoner is not liable to be
affected by the confessions of his accomplices, says:
"So strictly is this rule enforced that where a person is
indicted for receiving stolen goods, a confession by the principal
that he was guilty of the theft is no evidence of that fact, as
against the receiver (
R. v. Turner), and it would be the
same, it seems, if both parties were indicted together, and the
principal were to plead guilty (
id.)."
1 Taylor's Ev., 6th ed., § 826.
The principle to be deduced from these authorities is in harmony
with the view that one accused of having received stolen goods,
with intent to convert them to his own use, knowing at the time
that they were stolen, is not, within the meaning of the
Constitution, confronted with the witnesses against him when the
fact that the goods were stolen is established simply by the record
of another criminal case with which the accused had no connection
and in which he was not entitled to be represented by counsel. As
heretofore stated, the crime charged against Wallace, Baxter, and
King and the crime charged against Kirby were wholly distinct,
nonetheless so because in each case it was essential that the
government should prove that the property described was actually
stolen. The record of the proof of a vital fact in one prosecution
could not be taken as proof in the other of the existence of the
same fact. The difficulty was not met when the trial court failed,
as required by the act of 1875, to instruct the jury that the
record of the conviction of the principal felons was conclusive
evidence of the fact that the property had been actually stolen,
but merely said that such record made a
prima facie case
as to such fact. The fundamental error in the trial below was to
admit in evidence the record of the conviction of the principal
felons as competent proof for any purpose. That those persons had
been convicted was a fact not necessary to be established in the
case against the alleged receiver; for, under the statute, he could
be prosecuted even if the principal felons had not been tried or
indicted. As already stated, the effect of the charge was
Page 174 U. S. 61
to enable the government to put the accused, although shielded
by the presumption of innocence, upon the defensive as to a vital
fact involved in the charge against him by simply producing the
record of the conviction of other parties of a wholly different
offense, with which the accused had no connection.
It is scarcely necessary to say that, to the rule that an
accused is entitled to be confronted with witnesses against him,
the admission of dying declarations is an exception which arises
from the necessity of the cause. This exception was well
established before the adoption of the Constitution, and was not
intended to be abrogated. The ground upon which such exception
rests is that, from the circumstances under which dying
declarations are made, they are equivalent to the evidence of a
living witness upon oath;
"the condition of the party who made them being such that every
motive to falsehood must be supposed to have been silenced, and the
mind to be impelled by the most powerful considerations to tell the
truth."
Mattox v. United States, 146 U.
S. 140,
146 U. S. 151;
Cooley's Const.Lim. 318; 1 Phillips on Ev. c. 7, § 6.
For the reasons stated, it must be held that so much of the
above Act of March 31, 1875, as declares that the judgment of
conviction against the principal felons shall be evidence in the
prosecution against the receiver that the property of the United
States alleged to have been embezzled, stolen, or purloined had
been embezzled, stolen, or purloined is in violation of the clause
of the Constitution of the United States declaring that in all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall be confronted with the
witnesses against him. Upon this ground, the judgment must be
reversed, and a new trial had in accordance with law. But, as the
case must go back to the circuit court for another trial, it is
proper to notice other questions presented by the assignments of
error.
The accused contends that the indictment is defective in that it
does not allege ownership by the United States of the stolen
articles of property at the time they were alleged to have been
feloniously received by him. This contention is without merit. The
indictment alleges that the articles
Page 174 U. S. 62
described were the property of the United States when they were
feloniously stolen on the 7th day of June, 1896, and that the
defendant only two days thereafter, on the 9th day of June,
1896,
"the postage stamps aforesaid, so as aforesaid feloniously
stolen, taken, and carried away, feloniously did receive and have
in his possession, with intent then and there to convert the same
to his own use or gain, the said Joe Kirby then and there well
knowing the said postage stamps to have been theretofore
feloniously stolen, taken, and carried away."
The stamps alleged to have been feloniously received by the
accused on the 9th day of June are thus alleged to have been the
same that were stolen from the United States two days previously.
The larceny did not change the ownership, and it must be taken that
the United States had not regained possession of the stamps before
they were received by Kirby, and that the indictment charges that
they were out of the possession of the United States, and stolen
property when they came to the hands of the accused.
Another contention by the accused is that the indictment was
fatally defective in not stating from whom the defendant received
the stamps. This contention is apparently supported by some
adjudications, as in
State v. Ives, 13 Iredell 338. But,
upon a careful reading of the opinion in that case, it will be
found that the judgment rests upon the ground that the statute of
North Carolina, taken from an old English statute, made the
receiver of stolen goods strictly an accessory, and contemplated
the case of goods being received from the person who stole them. As
already stated, the act of congress upon which the present
indictment rests makes the receiving of stolen property of the
United States, with the intent by the receiver to convert it to his
own use or gain, he knowing it to have been stolen, a distinct
substantive felony, for which he can be tried either before or
after the conviction of the principal felon, or whether the latter
is tried or not. Under such a statute, the person who stole the
property might be pardoned, and yet the receiver could be indicted
and convicted of the crime committed by him. Bishop, in his New
Criminal Procedure, says that while some American cases have held
it to be
Page 174 U. S. 63
necessary in an indictment against the receiver of stolen goods
to state from whom he received the goods, "commonly, in England and
in numbers of our states, the indictment does not aver from whom
the stolen goods were received." Vol. 2, § 983. By an English
statute, 7 & 8 Geo. IV, June 21, 1827, c. 29, § 54, it was
enacted that
"if any person shall receive any chattel, money, valuable
security or other property whatsoever, the stealing or taking
whereof shall amount to a felony either at common law or by virtue
of this act, such person knowing the same to have been feloniously
stolen or taken, every such receiver shall be guilty of felony, and
may be indicted and convicted either as an accessory after the fact
or for a substantive felony, and in the latter case, whether the
principal felon shall or shall not have been previously convicted,
or shall or shall not be amenable to justice,"
etc. Under that statute, a receiver of stolen goods was
indicted. It was objected that one of the counts did not state the
name of the principal, or that he was unknown. Tindall, C.J.,
said:
"It will do. The offense created by the act of parliament is not
receiving stolen goods from any particular person, but receiving
them knowing them to have been stolen. The question therefore will
be whether the goods are stolen, and whether the prisoner received
them knowing them to have been stolen. Your objection is founded on
the too particular form of the indictment. The statute makes the
receiving of goods, knowing them to have been stolen, the
offense."
Rex v. Jervis, 6 C. & P. 156; 2 Russell on Crimes,
6th ed., 436. In
State v. Hazard, 2 R.I. 474, an
indictment charging the accused with fraudulently receiving stolen
goods, knowing them to have been stolen, was held to be good
although it did not set forth the name of any person from whom the
goods were received nor that they were received from some person or
persons unknown to the grand jurors. We therefore think that the
objection that the indictment does not show from whom the accused
received the stamps, nor state that the name of such person was
unknown to the grand jurors, is not well taken. If the stamps were
in fact stolen from the United States, and if they were received by
the
Page 174 U. S. 64
accused, no matter from whom, with the intent to convert them to
his own use or gain, and knowing that they had been stolen from the
United States, he could be found guilty of the crime charged even
if it were not shown by the evidence from whom he received the
stamps. This rule cannot work injustice nor deprive the accused of
any substantial right. If it appears at the trial to be essential
in the preparation of his defense that he should know the name of
the person from whom the government expected to prove that he
received the stolen property, it would be in the power of the court
to require the prosecution to give a bill of particulars.
Coffin v. United States, 156 U. S. 432,
156 U. S. 452;
Rosen v. United States, 161 U. S. 29,
161 U. S. 35;
Commonwealth v. Giles, 1 Gray 466; Rosc.Crim.Ev. (6th ed.)
178, 179, 420.
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded, with
directions for a new trial, and for further proceedings consistent
with law.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER did not participate in the decision of this
case.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN and MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissented.