Opinion
The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v. John Most, Appellant.
It seems that to uphold an indictment for an unlawful assembly under the Penal Code (§ 451, subd. 3), it must be proved ■ that three or more persons being assembled, united in attempting or threatening an act • ‘ tending towards a breach of the peace or an injury to person or property, or any unlawful act.” A threat made by one or two persons only, although in an assembly of many persons, would not be indictable.
It need not affirmatively appear, however, that other persons present when the threat was made uttered or repeated the same words; participation in the threat may be shown by the .adoption by others of the language used, exhibited by their conduct.
It is competent for the legislative power to create new offenses, and it may also extend common-law definitions of particular offenses, so as to include acts not punishable under and not embraced within the common-law definition.
Identity, therefore, in the name of offenses at common law and under a statute does not necessarily imply that the same precise constituents and no others enter into both.
Threats of personal violence made in an assembly in this state against residents of another state are within the statute. The legislature may prop, erly pass laws to punish plotters in this -state against the public peace of a sister state.
So, also, threats relating to acts not presently to be done, but to be performed at some future time, are within the statute.
M. was indicted under the Penal Code for participating in an unlawful assembly. The meeting in question took place the day before the hanging of the Chicago anarchists. It was attended by from eighty to one hundred people, mostly anarchists, in sympathy with M., who openly avowed himself to be one. When he entered, the persons present hailed him as their leader, and when he denounped the authorities as the murderers of their “ friends and comrades ” and threatened revenge, they applauded and cheered him. Held, that there was sufficient evidence of the requisite concurrence of the statutory number to go to the jury.
M., in his speech, denounced the government, the officers of the law and the judges concerned in the trial, advised his hearers to arm and. be prepared for the revolution “ not far distant,” and declared that they would avenge the blood of their comrades, and declared that the governor of Illinois would not be “ spared " in the general destruction. He referred to the “ police bloodhounds,” and exclaimed, " Cod help them if they ■are found in our socials.” The audience exhibited by their cheers and appearance warm approval -of these sentiments, and when, the speaker said the day of revolution was “ not far distant ” one of them said excitedly: “ Why not to-night, for we are ready and prepared.” Eeld, that the evidence was sufficient to warrant a finding by the jury that these utterances were used and understood as threats; and that such a finding was conclusive upon this court.
This court cannot review an exercise of the discretion of the General Term in granting or refusing a new trial in a criminal case.
(Argued June 8, 1891;
decided June 16, 1891.)
Appeal from judgment of the General Term of the Supreme Court in the first judicial department, entered upon an order made January 24, 1890, which affirmed a judgment of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace, entered upon the verdict of a jury, convicting him of a violation of subdivision 3 of section 451 of the Penal Code, which reads as follows: “Whenever any three or more persons, being assembled, attempt or threaten any act tending towards a breach of the peace, or injury to person or property, or any unlawful act, such an assembly is unlawful and every person participating therein by his presence, aid or instigation, is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The crime charged was predicated upon the proceedings of a meeting of anarchists held at a hall in rear of a saloon in East Seventh street in the city of New Yqrk, on the evening of the 12th of November, 1887, the day after Spies and others had been hanged in Chicago for the murder, by means of dynamite bombs and explosives, of a number of policemen. The meeting was addressed by the defendant. The evidence on the part of the prosecution of Ms utterances on that occasion is found in the testimony of two policemen, who were assigned by their superior officer to attend the meeting, and of a newspaper reporter who was also present. Their version of the speech was flatly contradicted by the defendant and ten or more witnesses called by him.
The witnesses for the people varied somewhat in their narration of the occurrences on the evemng in question, but they substantially agreed in regard to the most material points. It appears from the testimony that a similar meeting appointed to be held on the same evening, had been suppressed by the police authorities. There were present at the meeting addressed by Most, from eighty to one hundred people, who were, in the main, anarchists, and the defendant openly avowed himself to be one. When he came into the hall he was greeted by the assembly with the words: “ Here comes our leader, Father Most.” He soon commenced speaking and the following are among his utterances, as testified to by witnesses for the people: “ Brother anarchists, we were to have a meeting in Second avenue in Florence Hall, over our dead brethren, who were murdered in Chicago.” “ I have just received word that Captain • McCullagh and his bloodhounds • of police have stopped our meeting.” “ Let them beware; hereafter our meetings will be held in secret, and God help them if we catch them in our socials.” It was a shame, and that the police spies — the police hounds and the capitalistic press, their teeth were filed, were sharp, but that they would be blunted.”
The speaker then went on to extol the bravery of their brethern who had died on the gallows at Chicago. He also said: “ They were not properly hung; the weight was not heavy enough to break their necks, but their blood cries to heaven for revenge and we will revenge them.”
“ Our brethen in Chicago had not a fair trial; there was perjured evidence; there were capitalists on the jury; they held our brethern in prison until they could get perjured evidence to convict them.”
“If I had known the executioner who murdered, who strangled our brothers, I would never rest until he had shared their fate.”
“ The day of revolution will soon come. First of all will be Grinnell; then comes Judge Gary; then the Supreme Court of Illinois; then the highest murderers of the land, the Supreme Court of the Hnited States. The most cowardly of all Oglesby, the governor of Illinois. He must not think because he pardoned two of our brethern to a lingering death of life imprisonment, he will be spared.”
“ I again urge you to arm yourself, as the day of revolution is not far off ; and when it comes, see that you are' ready to resist and kill those hirelings of capitalists.”
“ What do we care for a few soldiers ? We have a weapon a hundredfold worse than theirs. They think they kill five of our brethern, but we will have a hundred or five hundred for every one they have murdered.” “ I am an anarchist, and am Avilling to die for its cause.”
And according to one of the witnesses he ended his harrangue AA-ith the exclamation: “ Eise Anarchy ! Long shall it lÍA-e! ” Grinnell referred to was the prosecuting officer who conducted the prosecution of the Chicago anarchists; Gary was the judge who presided at the trial and sentenced them. The Supreme Court judges of the state of Illinois were the judges avIlo had affirmed their conviction and sentence. The judges of the Supreme Court of the United States had denied their application for writs of error and supersedeas. Oglesby was the governor of the state of Illinois, who had commuted the sentence of two of the convicted anarchists and had refused pardon and commutation to five others.
At times during the course of the address the audience exhibited by their cheers and appearance gi’eat excitement and Avarm approval of the sentiments he expressed, and when the speaker said: “ The day of revolution is not far distant,” one of the audience rose and said excitedly : “ Why not to-night, for we are ready and prepared ? ”
During the course of the trial the district attorney sought, by offex’s of evidence (repeatedly made and ovexTuled), to get before the jury the fact that the defendant was the author of a book entitled “A.Manual of Eevoixxtion Warfare,” and the offers made embraced references to the contents. The conduct of the district attorney is criticized by the defendant’s counsel as unfair and was made a point on the application made to the trial judge for a new trial, which he denied.
It was claimed the evidence did not make out the offense charged in the indictment.
William F. Howe for appellant.
The alleged threats being against persons not residents, our Penal Code has no extra territorial effect, and, therefore, such threats could not constitute a violation of our statute. (People v. Mosher, 2 Park. 195; W. T. & C. Co. v. Kilderhouse, 87 N. Y. 430; Ormes v. Dauchy, 82 id. 443; People v. Merrill, 2 Park. 590.) The court erred in permitting the district attorney to interrogate each witness for the defense as to his religious belief, and in not stopping the district attorney in his summing up to the jury when he said that the jury, should not believe the defendant and his witnesses, because some of them testified that they did not believe in the Supreme Being. (Const. of N. Y. art. 1, §3.)
McKenzie Semple, Assistant District Attorney, for respondent.
[MAJORITY — Andrews, J.]
Andrews, J.
But three of the questions presented on the brief of the appellant’s counsel can be considered on this appeal. One of these questions is raised by the exception to the denial by the trial judge of the motion of the counsel for the defendant, made at the conclusion of the evidence on the part of the people, for an instruction to the jury to acquit the defendant on the ground that the evidence was legally insufficient to justify a conviction. An exception was taken to a question put to a witness for the defendant on cross-examinatian by the prosecuting officer, and which was allowed by the court, as to his belief in a Supreme Being. A third exception was taken to evidence offered by the prosecution and admitted, that the persons present at the meeting at Kramer’s Hall on the evening of November 12, 1887, were anarchists.
By the decision of the General Term, affirming the conviction and judgment of the trial court, questions as to the credibility of witnesses and the weight and preponderance of evidence are eliminated from the controversy, as well as every consideration hearing upon the propriety of granting a new trial in the exercise of judicial discretion, upon the ground that the jury were prejudiced by offers of evidence persistently made by the prosecuting officer, and repeatedly overruled,, which offers, as is claimed, were persisted in in order to bring before the jury irrelevant facts having no legitimate bearing" upon the issue to be decided. If, in the opinion of the General Term, for any reason appearing in the record, justice required a new trial, it had the power in its discretion to grant it. But this court, as a general rule, deals with questions of law only, and it cannot review an exercise of the discretion off the General Term in granting or refusing new trials in criminal cases.
The main question relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the charge in the indictment. In order to ascertain in what the offense of an unlawful assembly consists, reference must be had primarily to the statute which defines it. It was an offense well known at common law, and common-law definitions are a material aid in many cases in the interpretation of statute definitions of common-law offenses. But as it is competent for the law-making power to create new offenses not before known, so it may extend common-law definitions of particular offenses so as to include acts not punishable under the common law and not embraced within the common-law definitions of the offense. In other words, identity in the name of offenses at common law and under a statute, does not necessarily imply that the same, precise constituents, and no others, enter into each.
The third subdivision of section 451 of the Penal Code, under which the defendant was indicted, requires that in order tó constitute the offense of unlawful assembly, three or more-persons being assembled, should attempt or threaten any act “ tending towards a breach of the peace, or an injury to person or property, or any unlawful act.” The offense can only be committed when there is a concert or combination of three or' more persons who unite in the attempt or in the threat to do one or more of the things specified in the statute. A threat made by one or by two persons only, in which no others participated, would not be indictable under this statute, although made in an assembly of many persons. It was also the rule of the common law that three or more persons should be assembled and participate in the unlawful purpose, in order to constitute the offense of unlawful assembly, or the cognate .offenses of rout and riot. (4 Bl. Com. 146; 1 Russ. on Or. 288.)
Unless, .therefore, the jury were authorized to find that the .threat charged hi the indictment was made not only by the i defendant Most, but also at least by two other persons, on the occasion in-question, the offense was not made out. In determining whether others participated with Most in the threat alleged, it was not necessary that it should affirmatively appear that other persons present uttered or repeated the same words used hy Most. Their participation could be shown by an .adoption of his language, exhibited by their conduct. If the jury were authorized to find that the persons present were under the influence of similar sentiments, and that they (to the number of two or more) adopted his language as their own, then, the ithreats, although only uttered by him in words, were also those of the persons who by their conduct united in and assented to them. “ If any person,” said Mansfield, Ch. J., in Clifford v. Brandon (2 Camp. 370), “encourages, promotes or takes part in riots, whether by words, signs or gestures, or by wearing the badge or ensign of the rioters, he is himself to be considered a rioter.” Within this principle the requisite concurrence of the statutory number in the threats uttered by Most was shown, or at least there was sufficient evidence of that fact to go to the jury. The assembly had met under the excitement of the hanging of the Chicago anarchists the day before. It was in sympathy with Most, and when he entered the room the persons present hailed him as their leader. They applauded his utterances and cheered him when ho denounced the murderers of their “friends and comrades,” :and threatened revenge. But it is insisted that no threats were proved to have been made by Most, that what he said were prophecies of what would be likely to happen, and not threats .that he or others in sympathy with him would commit violence or murder to vindicate their “ murdered brethern.” It is unnecessary to recall the specific evidence upon this point. The language of Most would, under ordinary circumstances, be regarded as the ravings of a madman rather than the deliberate utterances of one who had formed the purpose of avenging supposed wrongs by murder and revolution. It was for the jury, however, to interpret the language used. The denunciations of the government and the officers of the law, with which Most’s speech abounded, his advice to arm and to be prepared for the revolution “ not far distant; ” his declaration that they would avenge the blood of their comrades; his references to the judges and the officials who were concerned in their trial, conviction and execution, and the declaration that Governor Oglesby, although he had commuted the sentences of two of the condemned, would not be “ spared ” in the general destruction; his reference to the “police bloodhounds,” and his exclamation, “ God help them if they are found in our socials,” presented evidence from which the jury had a right to say whether or not words, some of which were unmistakably in the form of threats, were in fact used and understood as such, and their finding upon this point adversely to the defendant is conclusive here.
Nor is it, we conceive, an answer to the indictment that the threats related to acts not presently to be done, but to be performed at some future time, when affairs were ripe for the revolution predicted. The main purpose of the common law and of the statute relating to unlawful assemblies, is the protection of the public peace. Incendiary speeches under the circumstances disclosed in this case, before a crowd of ignorant, misguided men, are not less dangerous because the advice to arm for the redress of grievances, and the threats of murder, are accompanied with the suggestion that the time is not quite come for action. This is illustrated in this case by the circumstance appearing in evidence. When Most said, “ The day of revolution is not far distant,” one of the audience rose and said excitedly, “Why not to-night? We are ready and prepared.” No one can foresee the consequences which may result from language such as was used on this occasion, when addressed to a sympathizing and highly excited audience.
The point that threats of personal violence made in this state against persons in another state, although made at an assembly here, are not within the statute, is untenable. The offense of an unlawful assembly of which the defendant was convicted was committed here. We are administering our own laws and not the laws of a foreign jurisdiction, and our state may properly pass laws to punish plotters here against the public peace of a sister state. We are of opinion on the main question that a case within the statute was made out for the jury. The common-law offense of unlawful assembly is defined to be “a disturbance of the peace by persons assembling together with an intention to do a thing which, if executed, would make them rioters, but neither executing it nor making a motion towards its execution.” (1 Russ. on Cr. 215.) It is unnecessary to decide whether the circumstances of the present case constitute the offense within this definition. They bring the case within the statute definition, and that is sufficient.
The exception to the question put to the witness on cross-examination as to his beliéf in a Supreme Being is frivolous.
The exception to the proof that the persons assembled at the meeting of ¡November twelve, were anarchists, is also without force. That they were in the main anarchists appears by other testimony. They were addressed by Most as “ brother anarchists,” and they saluted him as their leader. Moreover, proof that they Tvere anarchists was competent to aid the jury in determining, in connection with other circumstances, the point whether the meeting joined in the threats made by the defendant.
We discover no error in the record, and the judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.