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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
U S v. BRITTON, 108 U.S. 199 (1883)
108 U.S. 199
UNITED STATES
v.
BRITTON and another.
No. 409.
April 2, 1883
Section 5440 of the Revised Statutes declares:
'If two or more persons conspire ... to commit any offense
against the United States, ... and one or more of such parties do
any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all
[108 U.S. 199, 200]
the parties to such conspiracy shall be liable to a
penalty of not less than $1,000, and to imprisonment not more than
two years.'
Section 5209 of the Revised Statutes provides as follows:
'Every president, director, cashier, teller, clerk, or agent of
any' banking 'association who embezzles, abstracts, or willfully
misapplies any of the moneys, funds, or credits of the association,
... or who makes any false entry in any book, report, or statement
of the association, with intent in either case to injure or defraud
the association, or any company, body politic or corporate, or any
individual person, or to deceive any officer of the association, or
any agent appointed to examine the affairs of such association, ...
shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be imprisoned not
less than five years nor more than ten.'
The defendants were indicted under section 5440 of the Revised
Statutes. The indictment contained two counts. The first count
charged, in substance, as follows: That Britton was the president and
a director of the National Bank of the State of Missouri, in St.
Louis, a national banking association organized under the act of
congress, and that Bates was vice-president and a director of the same
association; that Britton and Bates, while president and
vice-president respectively, and directors of said association, did
conspire with each other to willfully misapply a large sum of money
belonging to and the property of said association, to- wit, the sum of
$87,500, by means of procuring to be made, on June 30, 1876, by the
said association, a dividend of 3 1/2 per centum on the capital stock
of the association, which said dividend was to be greater, in the sum
of $87,500, than the net profits of said association on hand after
deducting from said net profits the amount of the losses and bad debts
of the association existing on said thirtieth day of June.
The acts done to effect the object of the conspiracy were, in
substance, alleged as follows: That Britton falsely represented to one
Walsh, who, on June 30, 1876, was also a director of the association,
that the net profits of the association were on
[108 U.S. 199, 201]
that day sufficient in amount to warrant and permit the
declaration of said dividend, and did thereby induce the said Walsh to
assent to the declaration of said dividend, and to join, on said June
30th, as such director, with Britton and Bates, directors as
aforesaid, in the Declaration of said dividend, they, the said
Britton, Bates and Walsh, constituting a majority in number of the
directors of said association; that, to effect the object of said
conspiracy, Britton did further, upon the said June 30th, cause and
procure to be made by one Edward P. Curtis, in the record of the
proceedings of the board of directors of said association, the
following entry: 'St. Louis, June 30, 1876. Present, Messrs. Britton
and Walsh; Mr. Bates assenting on the 29th. Ordered that a dividend of
3 1/2 per cent. be declared payable on the tenth proximo, and that the
transfer books be closed till that date. Attest, Edward P. Curtis,
cashier;' that afterwards, on July 8, 1876, in further pursuance of
and to effect the object of said conspiracy, the said Britton and
Bates did each receive from said association, and convert to his own
use, a large sum of money,-the said Britton has sum of $5,397, and the
said Bates the sum of $ 4,112.
The second count was similar to the first, except that after
averring that said dividend so to be declared on said June 30, 1876,
was known to be false and fraudulent, it was added that there was on
said June 30, 1876, due and owing to said association certain debts,
specifying them, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $797,214.29;
that upon such debts there was owing to the association, then past due
and unpaid, interest for a period of six months; that said debts were
'not well secured and in process of collection,' and their aggregate
amount was largely in excess of the net profits and purported net
profits of said association then on hand, as said Britton and Bates
then well knew; and that said debts were bad debts within the meaning
of section 5204 of the Revised Statutes, as said Britton and Bates
then well knew.
The defendants demurred to the indictment. Upon the hearing of the
demurrer, the judges of the circuit court were divided in opinion upon
the following questions:
[108 U.S. 199, 202] (1) Whether, under
section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, it was
necessary to aver that the alleged conspiracy was entered into with
intent to injure and defraud; and whether the several counts in this
indictment not containing the said allegations are good and sufficient
in law.
(2) Whether it was necessary in this indictment, in addition
to the allegations charging the conspiracy to willfully misapply
certain funds and property of the association, by means of procuring
to be made by the board of directors a dividend, as alleged in the
indictment, to further allege that said dividend was in pursuance of
said conspiracy declared and made; and, if so, whether the same is
sufficiently charged therein, and whether it is also necessary to
allege that said dividend was fraudulent when declared, and also when
paid.
(3) Whether, under section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of
the United States, it was necessary in this indictment to charge that
the funds alleged to have been misapplied had been previously
intrusted to the possession of the defendants.
(4) Whether the indictment in this case alleges with
sufficient certainty that the bank had no net profits out of which to
declare and pay the dividend alleged to have been fraudulent.
(5) Whether the said defendants, as directors of the said
banking association, are liable to the penalties provided by the said
section 5209, upon proof that they, as such directors, willfully voted
for the declaration of a dividend, knowing that there were no net
profits out of which to pay the same; and, if liable, must the
indictment charge that such dividend was ordered or voted for with
intent thereby to defraud the association or other persons.
Asst. Atty. Gen. Maury, for the United States.
[108 U.S. 199, 204]
S. T. Glover, J. R. Shepley, and Chester H. Krum, for
Britton and Bates.
WOODS, J.
The offense charged in the counts of this indictment is a
conspiracy. This offense does not consist of both the conspiracy and
the acts done to effect the object of the conspiracy, but of the
conspiracy alone. The provision of the statute, that there
[108 U.S. 199, 205]
must be an act done to effect the object of the conspiracy,
merely affords a locus poenitentice, so that before the act done
either one or all of the parties may abandon their design, and thus
avoid the penalty prescribed by the statute. It follows as a rule of
criminal pleading that in an indictment for conspiracy under section
5440, the conspiracy must be sufficiently charged, and that it cannot
be aided by the averments of acts done by one or more of the
conspirators in furtherance of the object of the conspiracy. Reg. v.
King, 7 Q. B. 782; Com. v. Shedd, 7 Cush. 514.
The charge against the defendants is a conspiracy to willfully
misapply the funds of the association. It is alleged in the counts of
this indictment that they, being directors, with intent to defraud the
association, did conspire to willfully misapply its moneys and funds
by procuring to be declared by the association a dividend of its net
profits, when there were no net profits sufficient in amount to pay
it.
Such a dividend is forbidden by section 5204 of the Revised
Statutes, which declares as follows:
'No association, or any member thereof, shall, during the time it
shall continue its banking operations, withdraw or permit to be
withdrawn, either in the form of dividends or otherwise, any portion
of its capital. If losses have at any time been sustained equal to
or exceeding its undivided profits then on hand no dividend shall be
made, and no dividend shall ever be made by any association while it
continues its banking operations, to an amount greater than its net
profits then on hand, deducting therefrom its losses and bad debts.
All debts due to any association on which interest is past due and
unpaid for a period of six months, unless the same are well secured
and in process of collection, shall be considered bad debts within
the meaning of this section.'
We are, therefore, to inquire whether the conspiracy entered into
by and between the defendants to misapply the moneys of the
association by procuring the declaration by the association of a
dividend greater than the net profits of the association is a criminal
offense against the United States.
[108 U.S. 199, 206] There are no common-law
offenses against the United States, (U. S. v. Hudson, 7 Cranch, 32; U.
S. v. Coolidge, 1 Wheat. 415;) and section 5204 does not of itself
create any offense against the United States. But it is contended on
behalf of the United States that the procuring of a dividend to be
declared by the association when there are no net profits to pay it is
a willful misapplication of the moneys and funds of the association,
which is made an offense by section 5209 of the Revised Statutes, and
that a conspiracy to commit this offense is made punishable by section
5440. We think this construction of the statute is unwarranted, and
that the indictment is based on a misconception of its provisions.
The indictment having charged a conspiracy between the defendants
to misapply the moneys of the association, proceeds to aver by what
means the misapplication was to be effected, namely, by procuring to
be declared by the association a dividend when there were no net
profits to pay it. If procuring the declaring of such a dividend by
the association is not a willful misapplication of its funds by these
defendants, then the indictment charges no offense. The declaring of a
dividend by the association when there were no net profits to pay it,
is, in our judgment, not a criminal misapplication of its funds. It is
an act done by an officer of the association in his official and not
in his individual capacity. It is, therefore, an act of
maladministration and nothing more, which, while it may subject the
association to a forfeiture of its charter, and the directors to a
personal liability for damages suffered in consequence thereof by the
association or its shareholders, does not render them liable to a
criminal prosecution. The act belongs to the same class as the
purchase by a banking association of its own shares when not necessary
to prevent a loss on a debt due it, which, in case No. 406, just
decided,* we held not to be a criminal misapplication of the funds of
the association. If, therefore, the indictment had charged that the
defendants had misapplied the funds of the association by themselves
declaring a dividend, when there were no net profits to pay it, it
would not
* Ante, 512. [108
U.S. 199, 207] have charged a criminal act, much less
when it merely charges that they conspired to procure the association
to declare a dividend under like circumstances. So that it appears on
the face of the indictment that the conspiracy charged was not a
conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States.
We therefore answer the first branch of the fifth question
propounded to us by the judges of the circuit court in the negative.
Our opinion is that under this indictment the defendants are not
'liable to the penalties provided by section 5209, upon proof that
they, as such directors, willfully voted for the declaration of a
dividend, knowing there were no net profits out of which to pay the
same,' because this is not the offense with which they are charged in
the indictment. And as they are charged with a conspiracy to do an act
which is not an offense, we are of opinion that no penalties could be
inflicted on them under the indictment.
As the answer we have given to this question is fatal to the
indictment, it is not necessary for us to answer the other questions
sent to us by the judges of the circuit court.
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