United States v. Daugherty
Decision Date | 04 January 1926 |
Docket Number | No. 303,303 |
Citation | 269 U.S. 360,70 L.Ed. 309,46 S.Ct. 156 |
Parties | UNITED STATES v. DAUGHERTY |
Court | U.S. Supreme Court |
Mr. Assistant Attorney General Donovan, for the United States.
Mr. Anthony P. Nugent, of Kansas City, Mo., for respondent.
An indictment of three counts charged respondent with violating Harrison Anti-Narcotic Act, c. 1, 38 Stat. 785 (Comp. St. §§ 6287g-6287q), by making unauthorized sales of cocaine to three different persons on different days. Each count alleged a completed sale to the named individual on a specified day. The judgment below followed a plea of guilty:
It is by the court considered and adjudged that said defendant is guilty of the crime aforesaid, and that as punishment therefor said defendant be confined in the United States penitentiary situated at Leavenworth, Kansas, for the term of five (5) years on each of said three counts, and until he shall have been discharged from said penitentiary by due course of law. Said term of imprisonment to run consecutively and not concurrently.
He took the cause to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and there maintained:
(1) That the (trial) court erred in imposing a sentence of 15 years upon defendant, James Daugherty; that the court exceeded its jurisdiction in imposing a sentence of 15 years, which is 10 years above the maximum penalty prescribed for a violation of the Harrison Anti-Narcotic Act, Revenue Act of 1918, 40 Stat. 1130 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, §§ 6287g, 6287l).
(2) That each of the offenses charged, alleged, and set forth in the indictment constitute a single continuous act inspired by the same intent, which is equally essential to each of the offenses charged in the three counts of said indictment, and the court erred and exceeded its jurisdiction in imposing a sentence of 15 years upon defendant.
That court interpreted and affirmed the judgment.
It held that:
'The contention that each sale should be taken as resulting from one and the same criminal intent and therefore the three counts charge only one crime, is not sound; because criminal intent is not an element of the crime, and because each count charges a different sale to a different person and on a different day, and if the sales were made as charged they constituted three separate offenses.' Daugherty v. United States, 2 F.(2d) 691.
It further concluded that the sentence was for 5 years only and, in support of this view, said:
Mr. Justice Bradley's opinion in United States v. Patterson (C. C.) 29 F. 775, was cited and relied upon.
The cause is here by certiorari, granted upon petition of the United States, for whom counsel say:
The constitutionality of the Anti-Narcotic Act, touching which this court so sharply divided...
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