UNITED STATES tI. MALES.
41
UNITED STATES
tI.
MALES.
(DIBtrIct Court, D. Induina. June 15, 1892.) No. 4,605.
POII'I'
Rev. Bt. 58898, pUnishing the mailing of any "obscene, lewd, orlasclvtoul book,· etc., applies only to matters tending to excite impure and unchaste thoughts. and not to language which is merely coarse, vulgar, and indecent.
OI'ftOll-NONMAILABLB MATTER-INDBCBNT WRITING.
At Law. Indictment for mailing obscene matter. The objectionable writing was not set out in the indictment, and the question whether it came within the meaning of the statute arose on an objection to its introduction in evidence. The court directed a verdict of not guilty. Smiley N. Ohambers, for the United States. Herod & Herod, for defendant. BAKER, District Judge. This is a prosecution for sending obscene matter through the mail. The defendant wrote on the margin of a valentine the following: "You can keep tbis to wipe your dirty a- 011, and spend your money to pay your debts. or have your picture taken again in men's clothing. We can prove you sent them for slander." The valentine with this writing on it was inclosed in a sealed envelope addressed toone Cora Anderson, and was sent to her through the mail. The counsel for the defendant contend that the writing does not constitute a public offense. They insist that the use of merely coarse, vulgar, or insulting language, mailed in a sealed envelope, is not made criminal by the statute; and that to make the writing criminal it must have a tendency to corrupt the morals, or to excite unchaste desires and impure thoughts. On the other hand, the counsel for the government maintains that any writing which is vulgar or indecent, regardless of its tendency to corrupt the morals, or to excite impure desires, falls within the condemnation of the statute. The statute under which the indictment is drawn is as follows: "Sec. 3893. Every obscene, lewd, or lascivious book, pamphlet, picture, paper, letter, writing. print, or other publication of an indecent character, and every article or thing designed or intended for the prevention of concep, tion or procuring of abortion, and every article or thing intended or adopted for any indecent or immoral use, and every written or printed card, letter, circular, book, pamphlet, advertisement, or notice of any kind giving Information, directly or indirectly, Where or how, or of whom. or by what means, any of· the hereinbefore mentioned matters, articles, or things may be obtained or made, Whether sealed as first-class matter or nOL, are hereb)" declared to be nonmailable matter, and shall not be conveyed in the mails, nor nor by any letter carrier; and any person who delivered from any post shall knOWingly depOsit, or cause to be deposited, for mailing' or delivery, anything declared by this section to be nonmailable matter, lind any person who shall knowingly take the same, or cause the same to be taken, from the mails for the purpose of circulating or disposing of, or of aiding in the circulation Or disposition of, the same, shall for each and every offense be fined,
42
FED£RAL REPORrnR,
vol. 51.
upon conviction thereof, not m9re than five thousand dollars, or imprisoned at hard labor not more thai'lII'te'years, or bOth,at thti'discretioll of the court." 1 Supp. Rev. St. p. 621. ' ',' , Obscenity committed in certain ways was an offense indidable at common law, and the statutes enacted upon the sllbject only operate as an<,enlargemepltc;>fthe scope of the term, and detlneit .ulore specifically. They create no new offense. (Jom. v. Sharpless; 2 Sergo & R.lOl; COIn. v. Holmes, 17 MasS. 336; Reg. v. Bradlaugh, 2 Q. B. Div. 569,3 Q. B. Statutesagainstobscenityshould Div. 607; 1 Bish. receive a reas(jnable conl:ltruction, h;lving regard to the manifest object had in view in their enactment. The obvious' of their enactmentis to guard andpr.otect the public morals, by erecting barriers which the evil-minded arid may not with impunity. As the statute is highly penal, it ought not to be held to embrace language unless it is fairly within its letter and spirit. U. S. v. Gaylord, 17 Fed. Rep. 438; Thoma8v.State, 103 Ind. 419, 2 N. E. Rep. 808; Dillard v/State,41 Oa,.278; State, 1 Swan, 42; HenderBon v. State, 63 Ala. 193; State v. Toole, 106 N. C. 736, 11 S. E. Rep. 168. Obscenity.is such indecency as is calculated to promote the violation of the law and the general- 'corruption of morals. 2Whart. Crim. Law, § 1431. His applied to language spoken, written, or printed, or to pictol'ial productions, and includes what is immodest and indecent, and is calculatedcto exoite impure desires, or to corrupt the mind. U. S. v. Lojtw, 12 Fed. Rep. 671. The test is whether the tendency of the m8.tter is to deprave and corrupt the morals of those Whose minds are open tosuchinfluencElS, and into whose hands such matter may fall. The writing need not use words which are ill themselves obscene, in order to be obscene. Courts have regard to the idea conveyed by the wbrds used in the writing,and not simply to the words themselves. Obscenity is that form of indecency which is calculated to promote the general corruption ofmorals; "Lewdness" and "lasciviousness" are that form of immorality which has relation to sexual iill purity. U. S. v. Bennett, 16 Bbitehf. 362. The words "obscene," "lewd," and" lascivious," as used in the statute, have the same meaning as is given them at common Jaw :in."prosecutions for obscene libel. In excluding various articles from the mail of the congress has not been to interfere with the rightS of the people, but to refuse facilities for the distribution of matter deemed injurious to .the public morals. All that congress by. this 'act was that the mail should not be used to transport corrupting publicatiQnsorwritings, and that anyone who attempted to use it 101' that purpose should be punished. Ex parte Jackson, 06 U. S. 727. In Ex.parte.Doran, 32 Fed. Rep. 76, it is held that the purpose of thestahite was to preveut'the'mtj.ils from being qsedto circulate matter to corrupt thexnorals ofthe people·. It is said that the history of the legislation clearly shows that tbecongress determined to exclude from the mails writings of an impure and immoral character, and not such as were merelycoarse,rough,or vulgar. In U. S; v. Wightman, 29 Fed. Ren. 636. ita'held that a letter, although exceedingly coarse and vul-
UNITED STATES v; ltULES.'
43
gar, and grossly libelous, but which has no tendency to excite libidinous thoughts or impure desires, or to deprave and corrupt the morals of those whose minds are open to such influences, is not obscene, lewd, or lascivious within the meaning of the statute. It is held, and I think correctly, that the test of obscenity is whether the tendency of the matter is to deprave and corrupt the morals of those into whose hands it may Jall. Like the words" lewd" and" lascivious," with which it is associated, it implies something tending to suggest libidinous thoughts, or excite impure desires. In U. S. v. Clark. 43 Fed. Rep. 574, it was held that a letter containing indecent epithets, and matter of a highly reprehensible character,-that is, a letter of indecent character,-was not within the purview of the statute. It was held not to be within the statute because there was nothing of lewd or lascivious tehdpncy in the letter. U. S. v. Harmon, 45 Fed. Rep. 414, iR to the same effect. It seems to me that the &tatute under consideration was intended to prohibit the dissemination by the mails of printed or written matter or pictorial productions calculated to excite the animal passions, and to corrupt and debauch the mind, and not such as are merely coarse, vulgar, or indecent in the popular sense of those terms. U. S. v. Durant. 46 Fed. Rep. 753; U. S. v. Cltesman, 19 Fed. Rep. 497; Com. v. Landis, 8 Phila. 453; U. S. v. Davis, 38 Fed. Rep. 326; Bates v. U. S., 11 Biss. 70. 10 Fed. Rep. 92; U. S. v. Bott. 11 Biatchf. 346; U. S. v. One Case of Stereoscopic Slides, 1 Sprague. 467; State v. Brown. 27 Vt. 619; People v. Hallenbeck, 52 How. Pro 502; McNair v. People, 89 Ill. 441; Puller v. People, 92 lU. 183; Com. Y. Wright, 139 Mass. 382, 1 E. Rep. 411. The language used on the valentine is coarse, vulgar, anel indecent. Its tendency is to excite feelings of anger and contempt for its author. It would repel, rather than excite, feelings of an impure, licentious, or unchaflte character. In my judgment, the words in question are not "obscene," "lewd," or "lascivious," within the true construction of the statute. The iurv will therefore return a verdict of not guilty.
FJIlDUA.L REPOBTEB,
voL 51.
THE: Lon trEBLING
KEEFEB.
ec ale
t1. THE LUD KEEFED. 'l1.
KEEl:ER
et ale
WERLING et al.
Court of If
Third OWcuit. .Tune 8, 1899.)
is to be assumed that a pilot of a steam vessel, who is a licensed and sworll ilS a" seaman, to within the meaning of sectioDs 4520; 4521, Rev. St., and that his hiring in consequence must be by shipping articles, yet he oannot, under these statutes, ':reoover the highest rate of wagesl?aid to any seaman for a similar voyags dUring the three months preceding his hlrinK, unless his libel avers or his proofs shOw. that the vessel on which he was employed was of the burden of 50 tons or 49 Fed. Rep. 650, modified.,
WAGBS-SHIPPING ARTICLBS-PILO'l'-PLBADING.
Appeal from the District Court of the United States District of Pennsylvania. Decree modified. rf.elrrse a. WilBon, (David S. McCann, on the brief,) for appellants. M. A.Woodward, forappellee'3. ACHESON and DALLAS, Circuit Judges, and BUTLER, District Judge.' Circuit Judge. This was a suit in admiralty, brought by J,?hn and William S. Reno, pilots, against the steam tow,!:>oat forthe recovery of wages due them, respectively, for s.erviees !lB. pilots on said vessel on a trip from Pittsburgh to Louisville and back, Jl}ade in the month of June, 1891. The libel avers that the libelantS were hired by the master, who was also a part owner of the for a voyage on her from Pittsburgh, Pa., to Louisville, Ky., and PittsbUrgh, and that they performed their duties in that capacity on the boat on said voyage "without agreement as to wages and payment of services, but upon the implied understanding that they (these libelants) would ask, charge, be paid, and receive the rate of wages and compensation of the most expert and capable, as they were, of steamboat pilots" upon the rivers Monongahela and Ohio, for such trip, and that, having performed the trip, they" were entitled to, and have claimed and demanded, wages and compensation for said services of two hundred and fifty dollars each." The libel, it is to be noted, does not at all suggest that there was any express understanding with respect to the rate of compensation to be paid to the libelants, or either of them, but the contrary is distinctly averred. The libel is really framed as upon a quantum meruit. That there was no specific stipulation as to the rate of wages to be paid to either of the libelants is plain upon the proofs. Now, the evidence establishes that the sum of $150 was the highest ordinery rate of wages paid competent and skillful pilots on such a boat as the Lud Keefer for such a trip as the libelants made on her, and that at the time the voyage here in question was made it was the usual rate of wa-
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