United States v. Offutt, 8071.
Decision Date | 13 April 1942 |
Docket Number | No. 8071.,8071. |
Citation | 127 F.2d 336,75 US App. DC 344 |
Parties | UNITED STATES v. OFFUTT et al. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — District of Columbia Circuit |
John L. Laskey, Asst. U. S. Atty., of Washington, D. C., with whom Mr. Edward M. Curran, United States Attorney, was on the brief, for appellant.
Lawrence Koenigsberger, of Washington, D. C., with whom Messrs. Henry I. Quinn and Charles E. Ford, both of Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellees.
Before GRONER, Chief Justice, and MILLER and VINSON, Associate Justices.
The Government has indicted Offutt, a lawyer, and Sopourn, a registrant under the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, for conspiracy. The offenses against the United States which are said to be the object of the conspiracy were violations by Sopourn of the Selective Service Act.1 There is a demurrer to the indictment which was sustained, without opinion, by the trial court. The United States appeals.
The indictment stated:
The federal conspiracy statute2 makes it a crime for two or more persons to agree, inter alia, to commit any offense against the United States, and one or more of them to do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy. Thus there are three essentials in a conspiracy indictment: the agreement, the offense-object toward which the agreement is directed, and an over act. The agreement is the conspiring when it is to commit an offense against the United States. The offense-object need not be committed, for the crime is the agreement to do it.3 In that sense the crime of conspiracy is analogous to the offenses of "attempt." But if the offense-object is committed, the crime of conspiracy does not vanish or merge.4 The statutory crime differs from common-law conspiracy in that it requires an overt act.5 That is made an essential to give the conspirators a time, a place, and a chance to say that although we did agree, now that we are about to start, let's call it off.6 It also makes the indictment for, and the proof of, the illegal meeting of the minds more objective.
In this case the Government argues that the indictment is sufficient, and discusses very briefly some of the cases and principles on this issue. The appellees make five points: (1) The indictment, by stating that the designation to fill a call and the order to report for induction were prior to April 19th, does not state that they were in effect on the 14th when the alleged conspiracy is said to have begun, nor from the 14th to the 19th when the overt acts supposedly took place. (2) A conspiracy between two persons to cause one of them to neglect a duty is a legal impossibility because of the necessity of an overt act. (3) The allegation that the agreement was to cause one of them to evade service (b) is vague and uncertain. (4) The allegation that the agreement was to cause one of them to evade a requirement of the Selective Service Act (c) is more vague and uncertain. (5) The indictment is insufficient because the overt acts set forth could not have had or do not appear to have had any connection with the object of the illegal agreement.
Points (1), (2), and (5) go to the sufficiency of the indictment as a whole. Points (3) and (4) go to the sufficiency of two of the stated offense-objects. We will discuss the five points in order.
We regard point (1) as hypertechnical. The indictment states that Sopourn had been duly registered, classified, designated, and notified to fill a call on the 19th, and that knowing all of this, the conspiracy was entered into on the 14th, the object of which was to fail to report on the 19th, and that acts carrying out the object were done on the 14th to 19th, inclusive. Nearly everyone not a lawyer, and most lawyers, would believe that the recitation meant that the order to report for induction was in effect from the 14th to the 19th. While defendants are to be protected, indictments need not have the multiplicity of saying everything backwards, forwards, and sideways.
We hold point (2) unsound. The argument is a clever combination of the fact that an overt act is required, of the fact that only two conspirators are named, and of the fact that the object of the conspiracy was an offense of omission. Suppose we take the present statute. A is one required to register. A and B agree that A will not register. B locks A in X's time vault which is not expected to open until after the registration period. It would appear that A and B agreed or conspired to commit an offense against the United States, the offense being the failure of A to register. The act of locking A in X's time vault is certainly an overt act, and it certainly was intended to effectuate the conspirators' purpose of having A not register. The essentials of the statutory crime of conspiracy are all present.
We agree with appellees' argument under points (3) and (4), but that does not make the indictment bad A reading of the whole indictment with particular attention on the charging part shows a conspiracy to commit the offense of violating the Selective Service Act by failing to report for induction. A recognized statutory offense is charged, the violation of Section 11 of the Selective Service Act, and the to-wit (a), the failure to report for induction, with which the appellees have no quarrel, sufficiently details the type of violation. The to-wits (b), to evade service, and (c), to evade a requirement of the Selective Service Act, use generic phrases. These broad phrases embrace the failure to report for induction. If these generic terms were meant to include some offense-object in addition to the failure to report for induction, they would be insufficient. The offense-object of a conspiracy need not be charged with the same completeness as where an indictment for that crime is drawn, but the indictment, with some precision, must acquaint defendant with the nature of the offense-object.7 Standing alone, the phrases, to evade service, and to evade a requirement of the Act, would not do this. They are too much like stating that the offense-object is to violate some of the laws of the United States. This indictment, then, charges one specific offense-object, namely, the violation of Section 11 of the Selective Training and Service Act by failing to report for induction.
In respect of point (5), we cannot say, as these appellees do, that the...
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