Opinion
[Copyrighted Material Omitted] Austin Lewis, of Oakland, Cal., for plaintiff in error.
Robert C. Saunders, U.S. Atty., and Clarence L. Reames, Sp. Asst Atty. Gen., and Hinman D. Folsom, Jr., all of Seattle, Wash., for the United States.
Before GILBERT, ROSS, and HUNT, Circuit Judges.
GILBERT, Circuit Judge (after stating the facts as above).
Error is assigned to the admission in evidence of certain correspondence which was found in the defendant's office. The correspondence was in substance the following:
Schmidt wrote on April 6, 1918, to the defendant, sending his resignation as a member of the Socialist organization, expressing patriotic sentiments and disapproval of the attitude of the Socialist party, to which, on April 12, 1918, the defendant answered, stating that Schmidt was wrong in his attitude toward the Socialist party program and principles.
Maurer wrote to the defendant on May 9, 1917, referring scornfully to a patriotic parade which he had witnessed, and saying:
'They have the audacity to ask us to take a gun and defend this land of the free and the brave.'
To that letter the defendant replied on May 10, 1917, expressing similar sentiments in regard to patriotic parades.
On April 11, 1918, Salmon wrote to the defendant, stating that he had been sentenced to nine months in jail for refusing to answer the questionnaire, stating that he had appealed the case, and saying:
'The questionnaire is the first step in an extensive program to militarize America. If we oppose militarism in its inception, it cannot grow.'
On April 17, 1918, the defendant answered, stating that Salmon's cause was a worthy one.
All this correspondence was introduced for the purpose of showing the state of mind of the defendant and the intention with which he posted the printed circular which is set forth in the indictment. For that purpose they were clearly admissible.
The correspondence with Gast differs from the other correspondence, in that it occurred in February, 1917, before the declaration of war between the United States and Germany. Gast wished to have a circular printed and distributed to prevent enlistment in the army of the United States, which the government was then soliciting, and the defendant approved the scheme. We are unable to see that the admission of this evidence was error for which the judgment should be reversed. It also had its value as showing the mental attitude of the defendant at a time not too remote from the time when he committed the act which is the subject of the indictment.
Error is assigned to the admission in evidence of certain pamphlets found in the defendant's possession, copies of which he was shown to have distributed. One of them, entitled 'The Menace of Militarism,' refers to the mighty ones, the masters in the land, as having turned militaristic and developed a jingoism of their own, more vicious, because more unjustifiable, than that of the Germans, and speaks of 'the plutocratic oligarchy which controls the United States to militarism. ' Another was entitled 'Mental Dynamite.' On the front page it shows a picture of the hands of a soldier striking a bayonet through the hands of labor. It contains this sentence:
'The bayonet is a stinger made by the working class, sharpened by the working class, nicely polished by the working class, and then patriotically thrust into the working class by the working class, all for the employer class.'
Another pamphlet was entitled 'The Great Madness.' It contains many statements similar to the following:
'The entrance of the United States into the world's war on April 6, 1917, was the greatest victory that the American plutocracy has won over the American democracy since the declaration of the war with Spain in 1898.'
These pamphlets, like the correspondence above referred to, were admitted for the purpose of showing the state of mind and the intention of the defendant, and for that purpose they were admissible. The same may be said of the copies of receipts found in the defendant's office, receipts for money sent by various correspondents to pay for copies of the pamphlets above referred to.
Nor do we find error in the admission of the testimony of Black and Swale, each of whom testified to a conversation with the defendant after the entry of the United States into the war. These conversations were admitted expressly for the purpose of showing the intent of the defendant, and in instructing the jury the court carefully limited the testimony to the question of intent. It is true, as counsel for defendant urges, that the defendant was not being tried for his opinions or for being a pacifist, or for being a Socialist, but for publishing the circular described in the indictment with the criminal intent therein alleged. But the evidence to which exception was taken all tended to show the mental attitude of the defendant and had its bearing upon the question of his intent and was admissible for that purpose. Kettenbach v. United States, 202 F. 377, 120 C.C.A. 505, and cases there cited. In Kirchner v. United States (Bulletin No. 174) 255 F. 301, . . . C.C.A. . . ., the court, in answering a similar contention to that which is here made said:
'In admitting this evidence the trial court distinctly and more than once advised the jury that this testimony was admitted only as bearing on the intent of the defendant in making the statements set out in the indictment. The evidence in question does have a tendency to prove that the defendant, if he made the statements charged, made them with the intent charged.'
The defendant assigns error to the instruction of the court to the jury that the evidence of the purchase and circulation of other literature by the defendant, and his conversations and statements and correspondence, to show his condition of mind, had been permitted only for the purpose of indicating the trend of his thought with relation to the particular act charged in the indictment. This instruction is not open to the objection, which is now advanced, that it was a comment upon the evidence and tended to confuse the jury. Also without merit is the assignment of error to that portion of the charge in which the court said to the jury:
Page 605.
'It is immaterial what Lloyd George said during the Boer War, what William Pitt said during the Rebellion, what George Washington said with relation to legislation then pending, or what Jack London said, * * * or what Theodore Roosevelt has said prior to this time.'
It appears elsewhere that what was thus said by the court was in answer to an argument made on behalf of the defendant that the persons so named had been permitted to criticize their government. It cannot be seen that the defendant was in any way prejudiced by the instruction. What the court said was true, and was not improperly said.
The contention that the judgment is not supported by evidence cannot be sustained. There was no request for an instructed verdict for the defendant. Notwithstanding that fact, we have examined the evidence, and we find that, in addition to the contents of the posted circular which speak for themselves, the defendant, as state secretary of the Socialist party of the state of Washington, had charge of the office in which the circular was posted, and that during all the time between June 15, 1917, and May 6, 1918, the circular was posted upon a bookcase in the office, and that daily during that period the office was visited by a number of men between the ages of 18 and 45, many of them between the ages of 21 and 31 years, who were qualified and subject to duty in the military and naval forces of the United States. These facts, together with the evidence showing the intent of the defendant, were amply sufficient.
The judgment is affirmed.