Smoking opium is produced from crude opium by a process which we held in Marks v. United States, 196 Fed. 476 (decided April 8, 1912), constituted a manufacture within the meaning of the statute. It appears that, when smoking opium has been produced, it may be smoked more than once. That is to say, the residuum left after a first smoking may be simply heated and smoked again. If to this residuum (known as yen shee) some additional smoking opium is added, each time it is reheated the process of resmoking may be continued longer. We are of the opinion that the mere mixing of smoking opium with the residue of opium that has been smoked and heating the same is not a “manufacture of opium for smoking purposes” within the meaning of the statute. The manufacture which the statute contemplates is complete when from the crude opium there has been produced the smoking opium, with which alone, as defendant contended, he operated, in its unsmoked and smoked condition.
From an examination of the record it would seem that defendant was correct in contending that he used no crude opium, although occasionally a witness in answering some question uses the word “opium,” without qualifying it as “crude” or “smoking.” But if there was so much doubt on this point that it should have been sent to the jury to decide the question, then we think there was error in the refusal to charge that, if the jury found that defendant only mixed smoking opium with the residue which remains after smoking, his act was not a manufacture of opium for smoking purposes within the meaning of the statute.
The judgment is reversed.
NOYES, Circuit Judge, dissents.