Williamson v. United States

Decision Date05 March 1963
Docket NumberNo. 19382.,19382.
Citation311 F.2d 441
PartiesJack Marrin WILLIAMSON and Morris Lee Lowrey, Appellants, v. UNITED STATES of America, Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

James P. Coleman, Ackerman, Miss., for appellants.

H. M. Ray, U. S. Atty., Alfred E. Moreton, III, Asst. U. S. Atty., Oxford, Miss., for appellee.

Before RIVES, CAMERON and BROWN, Circuit Judges.

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

Williamson and Lowrey were convicted of possessing 179 gallons of whiskey in unstamped containers in violation of section 5604(a) (1), Title 26, United States Code. Williamson was also convicted of carrying on the business of a wholesale liquor dealer and willfully failing to pay the special tax required by law in violation of Section 569(a), Title 26, United States Code. The specifications of error claim (1) unlawful entrapment, (2) prejudicial argument of the United States Attorney, and (3) insufficient evidence of identity of each of the defendants. There was clearly sufficient evidence of identity of the defendants. The claimed prejudicial argument of the United States Attorney need not be discussed because we think that the judgments must be reversed on the issue of entrapment.

The circumstances of the claimed unlawful entrapment were developed in the deposition of Robert Harris Moye, a Government informer, taken by agreement between the Government and the defendants on March 31, 1961, several months before the trial. Moye had been released from a federal prison on September 12, 1960 after serving three years for violating the Internal Revenue laws relating to whiskey. Within a few weeks after his release, he contacted two investigators for the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division of the Treasury Department. Neither of these investigators testified as a witness in this case, and Moye's testimony as to the terms of his employment is not disputed. Because of its unusual nature, we quote at some length from Moye's deposition.

"MR. COLEMAN:

"Q. All right, now, sir, before we go into that, why did you call him, what was your reason for calling Mr. Rainer?
"A. Because I wanted to make some money, I had been in the penitentiary three years and not a bootlegger helped me one bit in the world and not a one of them paid me a nickel he owed me, or paid my wife.
"Q. So your proposal was that you would go to work for Mr. Rainer and them for pay?
"A. That\'s right.
"Q. Now then, did he come down and put you to work?
"A. He come down and Mr. Morris was the man that hired me.
"Q. But did Mr. Rainer come with him?
"A. Yes, sir, come down and introduced him.
"Q. How were they to pay you? Let me put it that way.
"A. How was he to pay?
"Q. Yes, sir, how were you to be paid, what was the agreement?
"A. I was to be paid $200.00 for Big Boy, $200.00 for James McBride, $100.00 for Hogie, he\'s Big Boy\'s half brother.
"Q. All right, sir.
"A. And $10.00 a day and my gas expenses.
"Q. You had a perfect right to make that trade with them, I\'m just trying to get the facts about it. Now what I want to know is about when was that trade made, Mr. Moye?
"A. Well, I couldn\'t say.
"Q. Had you been home two weeks?
"A. It was a couple or three weeks.
"Q. After you came home?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. In any event, it was before Mr. Jack Williamson was arrested, wasn\'t it?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. What did you agree to do with Mr. Rainer and Mr. Morris? What did they tell you they wanted you to do?
"A. They told me to give them the major violators and told me what they\'d pay for them.
"Q. For you to go out and catch them, in other words?
"A. If I could catch them.
"Q. And they agreed to pay you $200.00 as to Jack Williamson?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. You all called him Big Boy, I believe?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. And $100.00 as to his half brother, the Lowrey boy?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. When were they to pay you the money?
"A. Wasn\'t nothing said about when it was to be paid.
"Q. But in the meantime they would also pay you $10.00 per day to work as an undercover agent for them and for the government?
"A. That\'s right.
"Q. And they did pay you the $10.00 a day?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. After you had made this arrangement with Mr. Rainer and with Mr. Morris, was there any kind of a written agreement or anything on it?
"A. No, sir.
"Q. Just a verbal understanding with those two gentlemen?
"A. Yes, sir.
* * * * * * "Q. Did you get the $200.00 that had been promised to you for catching Mr. Williamson?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. Did you get the $100.00 that was promised to you for catching the other boy?
"A. Yes, sir.
* * * * * *
"Q. When was Jack Williamson\'s name first mentioned to you, Mr. Moye?
"A. When Mr. Rainer brought Mr. Morris to my house.
"Q. And who first mentioned his name?
"A. Mr. Rainer, I believe, told me, introduced us and says, `He wants to talk to you about Big Boy Williamson,\' says `Do you know him, do you know Big Boy Williamson?\' and I says, `Yes\', and he says, `How well do you know him?\' I says, `Well, well enough,\' so Mr. Morris started talking.
"Q. What did he say?
"A. Well, he just told me if I could catch him it would be $200.00, it would be $100.00 for Hogie, and $200.00 for little man, that\'s his twin brother."

A week or two later Moye traveled a distance of between 75 and 100 miles to Williamson's home. On Moye's first visit Williamson was not at home. Mrs. Williamson told Moye that her husband didn't have any whiskey. The following Sunday morning Moye returned with one Hubert Hocutt, a close friend of Williamson.

"A. I knew that Hubert knowed more about Big Boy than I did, and I knew if I carried Hubert there and Hubert told him that I was all right, that he was going to do business with me."
"A. I told him I wanted some whiskey, that I wasn\'t able to go in the woods, and I wasn\'t going in the woods any more for a while until I got in better shape than I was in, and he said he would have some and he would come to Greenwood and let me know, so he came and let me know and —
"Q. Just a minute now. What did he say about having any liquor on that particular occasion?
"A. Said he didn\'t have any.
* * * * * *
"Q. And then after you left there on Sunday, when did you next see Mr. Williamson?
"A. I believe it was on the next Friday, Thursday or Friday.
"Q. All right, sir, then what happened?
"A. Well, he come and told me he wouldn\'t pull less than 200 gallons, and I told him, I says, `Well, I wanted 150, but I will take the 200.\' And he says, `Mr. Bob, you know I want my money when I deliver the stuff.\' I says, `I have got your money,\' and I says, `Let me know so that I can get the money out of the bank,\' I says, `I have been robbed once,\' and he said he would do that, so he came to my house the night of the 14th — well, yes, the night of the 14th, but I would say it was about 2:00 o\'clock.
"Q. Over in the morning of the 15th?
"A. Yes, sir. And he said, `A highway patrol car is parked up the highway here,\' and says `I was scared to come by,\' says `I have got the whisky car stashed,\' and he says, `I want you to come go back by with me.\'"

Moye and an investigator named Robert E. Lee, who was on undercover assignment, accompanied Williamson to a point where Williamson blew the horn of his car, whereupon Lowrey drove from off the road a Mercury car loaded with 179 gallons of moonshine whisky. Lee "witnessed Bob Moye pay Jack Williamson $716.00 which I had given him earlier that night." Lee further testified:

"Q. * * * After this payment took place, Mr. Lee, what, if anything did you do?
"A. Well, Jack Williamson carried Bob Moye and I back to the residence of Moye in Greenwood, and on the way back of course it was just talking and Jack Williamson made the statement in my presence, he turned to Bob and said, Uncle Bob, you going to have to know who you sell to. He said, they send somebody up to try to make a buy off of me every month."

On April 11, 1961, several months before the trial in September, the defendants' attorney, on the basis of Moye's deposition, requested the court to rule as a matter of law that the defendants had been entrapped. The court reserved its ruling and thereafter at the close of the evidence denied the defendants' motions for judgment of acquittal. The court ruled that no defense of entrapment could be presented for Lowrey, but submitted the issue of entrapment as to Williamson on a full and fair charge to which defendant's counsel made no objection.

Under the law of entrapment as developed in prior decisions of the Supreme Court1 and of this Court,2 no reversible error would appear except for the evidence of employment of the informer Moye on a contingent fee basis.

The uncontradicted and unexplained testimony as to the terms of Moye's employment make it necessary that the judgments of conviction be reversed. It may possibly be that the Government investigators had such certain knowledge that Williamson and Lowrey were engaged in illicit liquor dealings that they were justified in contracting with Moye on a contingent fee basis, $200.00 for Williamson and $100.00 for Lowrey, to produce the legally admissible evidence against each of them. It may be also that the investigators carefully instructed Moye on the rules against entrapment and had it clearly understood that Moye would not induce them to commit a crime, but would simply offer them an opportunity for a sale. None of these facts or circumstances were developed in the evidence, though Moye's deposition had been taken months before the trial.

Without some such justification or explanation, we cannot sanction a contingent fee agreement to produce evidence against particular named defendants as to crimes not yet committed.3 Such an arrangement might tend to a "frame up," or to cause an informer to induce or persuade innocent persons to commit crimes which they had no previous intent or purpose to commit. The opportunities for abuse are too obvious to require elaboration.

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