The plaintiffs in error were charged in an information with an offense in that on or about the 22d of December, 1920, within the jurisdiction of the Eastern district, they did “unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly manufacture and possess for sale and for some time prior thereto sell a certain machine, contrivance, or still designated or intended for use in the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquors,” in violation of section 18 of title 2 of the Volstead Act (41 Stat. 313). At the end of the government’s proof, the plaintiffs in error moved to dismiss the information, which motion was denied. The plaintiffs in error offered no.evidence.
Two witnesses were called on behalf of the government. The first, a so-called prohibition enforcement agent, testified that he went to 8 Noll street, which was a factory building and had the name “S. Nosowitz & Son” upon it. He describes it as a two-story house, old-fashioned, with a factory on the parlor floor. In the factory he saw some galvanized open cans. He talked with Mr. Nosowitz whom he describes as the father, and asked him what he was making these vessels for, to which he replied, “You know.” The witness then said, “They can make whisky, you know,” and the reply was, “Yes.” He thereupon asked him to sell the witness one of them, and he said “No,” that he sold for wholesale only. That was all the conversation had. Whereupon a search warrant was issued and a seizure made, resulting in the prohibition agent taking some copper coils or pipe, screw caps, and some unfinished copper vessels, and they were placed in a warehouse.
The same witness visited the premises of one Grossman at 494 Ninth avenue, New York City, and there seized two alleged stills, one of which was produced in court and marked for identification. He was thereupon asked if that was the same type of vessel as was seized at the premises of Nosowitz, and he said it was. He then related a conversation had with the elder Nosowitz about these “stills.” In this last conversation, the witness told Nosowitz that the vessels were stills, and that he found two of them in Grossman’s premises on Ninth avenue, and further that Grossman told the witness that he had purchased them from Nosowitz, for which he said he had a check showing_ payment, and that Grossman had them in his store for sale, to which the elder Nosowitz replied that he sells them in lots to agents, and “they may be all over,” and “sold as well as in Grossman’s.” This plaintiff in error said he thought the law permitted him to make them, and he called them “vessels.” He was thereupon permitted to testify that the vessel seized from the plaintiffs in error and the parts “constituted the component parts of a still.”
Grossman testified that he was in the hardware and crockery business^at 494 Ninth avenue. He identified the vessel which was seized at his premises, and testified that he did not pay for the vessel before it was taken away from him; but he had a bill rendered him, with the name of the creditor thereon as “A. S. Nosowitz.” He did not know either of the plaintiffs in error and had never, seen them. He bought the can, he says, from some salesman who came to his premises. There appeared a label on the vessel “for storing gas and oils.” Upon this testimony, the jury were permitted to speculate as to an
[1] The name of Hyman Nosowitz (who has been found guilty) was not used or referred to in all the testimony adduced, and the witness refers to Nosowitz as the “elder Nosowitz,” and the only information 'that the record discloses of there having been any one else than the “elder Nosowitz” is the fact that the name of “S. Nosowitz & Son” was upon the door of the so-called factory. It might well be that Nosowitz had more than one son, and it is not shown that he even had a son. It-might also be a fact that the name is used as a trade-name, or was, in point of fact, a corporation. It was error to deny the motion to direct a verdict as against Hyman Nosowitz on the proof. It is apparent that the “elder Nosowitz,” who appears to be the plaintiff in error Simon Nosowitz, was engaged in manufacturing copper pails or vessels.
[2-6] Section 18, title 2, of the National Prohibition Law, provides that—
“It shall be unlawful to advertise, manufacture, sell or possess for sale any vessel, contrivance and machine, compound, tablet * * * designed or intended for use in the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquor.”
It has always been the law (unless otherwise prescribed by statute) that to convict one of crime requires the proof of an intention to commit a crime. This statute requires that it be shown that the still is “intended for use in the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquors.” There is no presumption created by the statute which presumes the possession of a vessel that might be used as a still or part of a still to be unlawful. The act of manufacturing must have coupled with it a specific intent to do the wrong denounced in the statute before the defendants may be said to be guilty. Such intent must be proved as an independent fact, or at least circumstances established from which it would be proper to permit a jury to find such intent. There was no proof that the plaintiffs in error intended to manufacture the stills to be used for the unlawful manufacture of liquor. Indeed, all the testimony offered, Grossman’s business, and the statements made by the plaintiff in error Simon Nosowitz, show the contrary. The fact that it was possible to use the vessel as a still or a part thereof, is not sufficient.
[7, 8] Unless there is substantial evidence of facts which exclude every other hypothesis but that of guilt, it is the duty of the trial judge to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the accused, and where all the substantial evidence is as consistent with innocence as with guilt, it is the duty of this court to reverse a judgment against the plaintiffs in error. Union Pacific Coal Co. v. United States, 173 Fed. 737, 97 C. C. A. 578; Isbell v. United States, 227 Fed. 788, 142 C. C. A. 312. It will be noted that the statute says the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquor. The National Prohibition Act permits of the manufacture of intoxicating liquor for specific purposes. We may not indulge in the presumption that these cans were possible of use for unlawfully manufacturing intoxicating liquor, for we cannot presume that men will do wrong. Although the description of the tins or pails
[9] The sentence of the court was a prison term of 30 days to the plaintiff in error Hyman Nosowitz and 1 day to Simon Nosowitz. The learned Assistant United States Attorney, with commendable frankness, called our attention, on the oral argument, to the absence of statutory authority in the National Prohibition Act to impose a prison term. Nowhere in the act is there a provision permitting imprisonment for the first violation of title 2, § 18, of this act. Section 29, title 2, of the National Prohibition Act, provides the penalty, which is, for the first offense, a fine of not more than $500; for the second offense, not less than $100 nor more than $1,000 or imprisonment for not more than 90 days; and for subsequent offenses, not less than $500 or imprisonment for not less than 3 months or more than 2 years. There is no evidence in the record showing that the plaintiffs in error had previously been convicted of any other offense.
It follows that the judgment of conviction is reversed.
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