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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
POTTER v. U S, 155 U.S. 438 (1894)
155 U.S. 438
POTTER
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 531.
December 17, 1894
Asa P. Potter, president of the Maverick National Bank, was
indicted for violation of the banking law. From a conviction (56 Fed.
83, 97), defendant brings error.
[155 U.S. 438, 439] By section 5208 of the
Revised Statutes, it is provided that 'it shall be unlawful for any
officer, clerk, or agent of any national banking association to
certify any check drawn upon the association unless the person or
company drawing the check has on deposit with the association, at the
time such check is certified, an amount of money equal to the amount
specified in such check.'
No penalty was imposed on the individual for a violation of this
section. But on July 12, 1882 (22 Stat. 166), it was enacted:
'Sec. 13. That any officer, clerk, or agent of any national
banking association who shall wilfully violate the provisions of an
act entitled 'An act in reference to certifying checks by national
banks,' approved March third, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, being
section fifty-two hundred and eight of the Revised Statutes of the
United States, or who shall resort to any device, or receive any
fictitious obligation, direct or collateral, in order to evade the
provisions thereof, or who shall certify checks before the amount
thereof shall have been regularly entered to the credit of the
dealer upon the books of the banking association, shall be deemed
guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall,' etc.
In May, 1892, the defendant was indicted in the circuit court of
the United States for the district of Massachusetts for a violation of
these sections. The indictment contained 88 counts. By demurrer and
nolle, the last 48 counts were disposed of before the trial, which
proceeded upon the first 40. In these 40 counts the unlawful
certification of 5 checks was charged; the first 8 counts relating to
one check, the next 8 to another, and so on. The case came on for
trial in February, 1893, and resulted in
[155 U.S. 438, 440]
a verdict of guilty on 15 counts,-3 in respect to the
certification of each check. A motion for a new trial having been
overruled, the defendant was sentenced to pay a fine of $1,000, and to
be imprisoned in jail for the term of 60 days. To reverse this
judgment the defendant has brought this writ of error.
The third count in the indictment, which was one of those upon
which the defendant was found guilty, after stating time and venue,
and that the defendant was president of the Maverick National Bank,
and authorized to lawfully certify checks, charged 'that said Potter,
as such president as aforesaid, did then and there, to wit, on said
twenty-third day of July, at Boston aforesaid, within said district,
and within the jurisdiction of this court, unlawfully, knowingly, and
willfully certify a certain check, which said check was then and there
drawn upon said association for the amount of twenty-four hundred and
fifty dollars by certain persons, to wit, Irving A. Evans, Austin B.
Tobey, and William S. Bliss, copartners, then and there doing business
under the firm name and style of Irving A. Evans & Company, and which
said check was then and there of the tenor following, that is to say:
Irving A. Evans & Co.
"BOSTON, Jul- 23, 1891, $2,450. No. 54493.
"Pay to the order of Hayward & Townsend $2,450, twenty-four
hundred & fifty dollars.
-by then and there writing, placing, and putting in and upon and
across the face of said check the words and figures following, that is
to say:
"Certified Jul- 23, 1891.
[meaning said Asa P. Potter, such president as aforesaid].
"_____ _____, Paying Teller.'
[155 U.S. 438, 441] 'That the said
persons, as copartners under the firm name and style as aforesaid,
by whom said check was then and there drawn as aforesaid, did not
then and there, to wit, at the time said check was so certified by
said Potter as aforesaid, have on deposit with said association an
amount of money then and there equal to the amount then and there
specified in said check, to wit, the amount of twenty-four hundred
and fifty dollars in money, as he, the said Potter, then and there
well knew,-against the peace and dignity of the said United States,
and contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and
provided.'
All the counts upon which the defendant was found guilty, both in
respect to this and the other checks, were, so far as any question is
involved in this case, substantially like the one quoted.
On the trial the books of the bank were presented, showing that at
the times these five checks were certified the account of Evans & Co.
was overdrawn in a large sum,-between $100,000 and $200,000. There was
testimony tending to show that upon each day that these checks were
certified, and prior thereto, Evans & Co. deposited in cash an amount
more than sufficient to cover the certifications. Thereupon, as the
bill of exceptions shows:
'The defense called the defendant, Mr. Potter, and offered to
prove by him an oral agreement between I. A. Evans & Co. and the
Maverick National Bank, in the early part of 1891, before June or
July, 1891, that Evans & Co. might have a loan by overdraft limited
to $200,000, with interest to be charged daily at the rate of six
per cent., against which collateral was to be put up, and further to
show that the overdrafts existing in June and July, 1891, were under
this agreement, and that collateral was actually deposited and kept
against it in the hands of the assistant cashier; that this
agreement was communicated to the executive officers of the bank,
and to a majority of the directors of the bank, who approved it, and
this offer was made in connection with the facts that appear in
evidence in relation to the books of the bank. Also, the defense
offered another conversation between
[155 U.S. 438, 442] Mr. Potter and Mr.
Evans in relation to the matter of certification of checks and
deposits connected with this certification, in which Mr. Evans
called his attention to the fact that a check had been refused
certification, and Mr. Potter told Mr. Evans that it was undoubtedly
because he had no deposit there, whereupon Mr. Evans said, 'But I
have a loan, as I understand it,' to which Mr. Potter replied
substantially: 'We cannot certify checks against a loan. If you are
going to have certified checks, you must have deposits in the bank
to certify them against,'-and that from that time forward the
deposits were in, to Mr. Potter's knowledge, from day to day after
this conversation with Mr. Evans, in which the defense claims that
the parties to the conversation understood distinctly that the daily
deposits were to be in for the very purpose of certifying checks.
'This whole offer was made by the defense as material matter of
substantive defense, as a part of the res gestae and of the
transaction, and as specifically bearing upon the question of
criminal intent upon the part of the defendant. The facts 'that
appear in evidence in relation to the books of the bank,' as
referred to in the above offer, and in connection with which the
offer is made, are heretofore fully stated in this bill of
exceptions.'
And in pursuance of this offer the defendant asked the witness
certain questions, for the purpose of showing a state of facts, as
indicated in the offer, but the testimony was rejected; the court
saying, in response to an inquiry of counsel as to whether 'a definite
agreement' was ruled out:
'Yes, sir; I rule out anything that does not appear on the books
of the bank in connection with this deposit. I think what was on
deposit and not on deposit, as the case now stands, must be
determined by what appears on the books of the bank,-as this case
now stands,-and the papers of the bank.'
Exceptions were duly taken to the action of the court in this
respect.
Among other instructions to the jury was the following:
'But upon some reflection, I have come to the conclusion
[155 U.S. 438, 443]
that notwithstanding Evans & Co. may have been
overdrawn on the morning of any particular day, and during the whole
of that day, yet if the bank did in fact receive a special deposit,
and set aside certain checks or other moneys, and hold them for the
purpose of covering the certified checks, that it would not be any
violation of the letter or policy of the statute, and would be a
defense. But I must say, gentlemen, that I am unable to see in this
case any evidence that anything of that sort was done. I am unable
to see in the case any evidence,-I do not mean to say evidence of
what was intended or agreed to be done, which is not essential to
this case, but any evidence that, as a matter of fact, any of these
checks deposited by Evans & Co. did not go into the general deposit
account, and were not absorbed the instant they passed into the
bank. Upon this branch of the case, I instruct you the burden of
proof is on the defense,-not proof beyond a reasonable doubt, but to
satisfy you by a preponderance of evidence. If the defense does
satisfy you, by the preponderance of evidence, that there was a
segregation in fact appearing upon or shown from the books and
papers of the bank,-a segregation, a setting apart, of certain
deposits, sufficient to cover the certified checks, and against
which the checks were certified,-it is a defense in this case.'
To the giving of which instruction the defendant at the time duly
excepted.
W. S. B. Hopkins and Henry D. Hyde, for plaintiff in error.
Asst. Atty. Gen. Conrad, for the United States.
Mr. Justice BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the court.
The only questions which we deem it material to consider are those
presented by the foregoing extracts from the record. The first is, was
the indictment sufficient?
It is objected that 'certification,' to constitute an offense
[155 U.S. 438, 444]
within the scope of the statute, must be such an act or
series of acts as creates a contract binding upon the bank; that a
mere writing of the word 'certified' on a check does not, until
delivery to some person, have any such effect; and that while an
indictment charging simply, in the language of the statute, that the
defendant wrongfully certified a check, might carry an implication
that the check was not only written upon, but also delivered so as to
complete the contract included in the word 'certification,' yet here
the pleader has limited the scope of those words by a particular
statement of what the defendant did, which statement does not include
the matter of deliverty. Every allegation made in the indictment
might, it is said, be satisfied by proof that the defendant, finding
on his table a check of the form described, wrote the words thereon as
charged, and then tore the paper up and threw it in the fire, or
disposed of it in some other way so as not to create any obligation
against the bank.
We think this is placing too narrow a construction on the
indictment. The offense charged is a statutory one, and while it is
doubtless true that it is not always sufficient to use simply the
language of the statute in describing such an offense (U. S. v. Carll,
105 U.S. 611 ), yet if such language is, according to the natural
import of the words, fully descriptive of the offense, then ordinarily
it is sufficient.
The word 'certify,' as commonly understood, implies that the check
upon which the words of certification have been written has passed
from the custody of the bank, and into the hands of some other party;
and when the charge is that the defendant 'did unlawfully, knowingly,
and willfully certify a certain check,' the import of that accusation
is not simply that he wrote certain words on the face of the check,
but that he did it in such a manner as to create an obligation of the
bank,-in such a way as to make an instrument which can properly be
called a 'certified check.' And the subsequent recital, 'by then and
there writing, placing, and putting in and upon and across the face of
said check the words and figures following,' etc., is not to be taken
as absolutely limiting the import of the word 'certified' to the mere
act of so [155 U.S. 438,
445] writing, placing, etc., but as simply descriptive of
the form of the certification,-of that which he personally did. It was
not necessary, to constitute the offense, that he should himself
deliver the check to some third party outside the bank, or even that
he should take any part in such delivery. His offense would be
complete if, after he had written the words of certification, as
stated, with the intent that they should be used to create a contract
on the part of the bank, the actual delivery had been made by some
clerk or other officer of the bank without his actual knowledge. The
full details of the transaction by which the words written by him upon
the face of this instrument became operative to make it a 'certified
check' were matters of evidence, rather than of allegation. An
unlawful certification is, in terms, charged, and the form of the
writing creating the certification is given.
It is generally true, as claimed, that, where an indictment is
unnecessarily descriptive, even the unnecessary description must be
proved as laid; but that proposition does not seem to be in point, for
it is not claimed that the testimony did not show just such a writing
as is charged to have been made by the defendant, and surely it cannot
be claimed that unnecessary matter of description must be proved
otherwise than as it is stated. While there is plausibility in the
contention of counsel, yet we think it would be giving an unnecessary
strictness to the language of the indictment to adjudge it
insufficient, or to hold that it failed to inform the defendant
exactly of what he was accused, or lacked that precision and certainty
of description which would enable him to always use a judgment upon it
as a bar to any other prosecution; and that, as we all know, is the
substantial purpose of a written charge.
The next question relates to the admissibility of the testimony
which was offered and rejected. The charge is of a willful violation.
That is the language of the statute. Section 5208, Rev. St., makes it
unlawful for any officer of a national bank to certify a check unless
the drawer has on deposit at the time an equal amount of money. But
this section carries with it no penalty against the wrongdoing
[155 U.S. 438, 446]
officer. Section 13 of the act of 1882 imposes the penalty,
and imposes it upon one 'who shall wilfully violate,' etc., as well as
upon one 'who shall resort to any device,' etc., 'to evade the
provisions of the act,' 'or who shall certify checks before the amount
thereof shall have been regularly entered to the credit of the dealer
upon the books of the banking association.' The word 'willful' is
omitted from the description of offenses in the latter part of this
section. Its presence in the first cannot be regarded as mere
surplusage; it means something. It implies on the part of the officer
knowledge and a purpose to do wrong. Something more is required than
an act of certification made in excess of the actual deposit, but in
ignorance of that fact, or without any purpose to evade or disobey the
mandates of the law. The significance of the word 'willful' in
criminal statutes has been considered by this court. In Felton v. U.
S.,
96 U.S. 699 , 702, it was said:
'Doing or omitting to do a thing knowingly and willfully implies,
not only a knowledge of the thing, but a determination, with a bad
intent, to do it, or to omit doing it. 'The word 'willfully," says
Chief Justice Shaw, 'in the ordinary sense in which it is used in
statutes, means, not merely 'voluntarily,' but with a bad purpose.'
[Com. v. Kneeland], 20 Pick. 220. 'It is frequently understood,'
says Bishop, 'as signifying an evil intent without justifiable
excuse.' 1 Bish. Cr. Law, 428.'
And later, in the case of Evans v. U. S.,
153 U.S. 584, 594 , 14 S. Sup. Ct. 934, there was this reference
to the words 'willfully misapplied':
'In fact, the gravamen of the offense consists in the evil design
with which the misapplication is made, and a count which should omit
the words 'willfully,' etc., and 'with intent to defraud,' would be
clearly bad.'
Now, it is not disputed that if the overdraft had in form been
canceled on the books of the bank, and a note taken for the amount
thereof, so that the obligation of Evans & Co. was evidenced only by a
note, and not left as an open account, this particular section of the
law would not be applicable, and any wrong done by the defendant in
making or continuing
[155 U.S. 438, 447] such a loan would have to be punished
by proceedings under some other section. If at the opening of the
account a note of $200,000 had been discounted, and the amount entered
to the credit of Evans & Co., the certifications complained of would
not have been in violation of this section, because the credit side of
the account would always have been in excess of the certifications; or
if, at the close of each day's business, a note had been taken for the
balance due the bank, and the open account canceled, the same result
would follow, because each morning, before any certification, an
amount in money was deposited larger than the total certifications of
the day. The testimony offered tended to show an agreement on the part
of the officers of the bank to treat this overdraft as a loan, drawing
interest and secured by collateral, and that such agreement was
carried into effect by the deposit of the collateral and the casting
up of interest. If the defendant, in good faith, supposed that this
arrangement was the equivalent of a loan by note, and that the
indebtedness of Evans & Co. was fully secured by collateral, it seems
to us that the jury would have a right to be informed of the fact, as
bearing upon the question whether he had 'willfully' violated the
statute. It cannot be that the guilt or innocence of the defendant,
under this indictment, turns upon the mere matter of bookkeeping.
While it is true that care must be taken not to weaken the wholesome
provisions of the statutes designed to protect depositors and
stockholders against the wrongdoings of banking officials, it is of
equal importance that they should not be so construed as to make
transactions of such officials, carried on with the utmost honesty,
and in a sincere belief that no wrong was being done, criminal
offenses, and subjecting them to the severe punishments which may be
imposed under those statutes. We must not be understood as holding
that this testimony established an absolute defense, and that by the
form of such an agreement the mandatory terms of section 5208 can be
evaded, but only that evidence of a positive agreement upon the part
of the officers of the bank that this overdraft account should be
practically treated as a loan from day to day, to be and in fact
secured by ample collateral, coupled with testi-
[155 U.S. 438, 448]
mony that for the checks certified each day there was
deposited in advance an ample amount of cash, should have been
submitted to the jury on the question of 'willful' wrongdoing. As
'willful' wrong is of the essence of the accusation, testimony bearing
directly on the question of willfulness is of vital importance, and
error in rejecting it cannot be regarded otherwise than as material,
and manifestly prejudicial.
The remaining question is in reference to the instruction as to the
burden of proof. We think that, so far as respects the particular
matter mentioned in the instruction quoted, the rule remains as in
other phases of a criminal trial,-that the burden of proof is on the
government, and the defendant is entitled to the benefit of a
reasonable doubt. It may be that certain presumptions follow from the
entries in the books, and accompanying testimony introduced by the
government. It may also be that those presumptions are conclusive, in
the absence of contradictory or explanatory testimony, and, in that
aspect of the case, that the defendant must introduce something to
weaken the otherwise conclusive force of such presumptions; but,
whenever testimony thus contradicting or explaining is introduced, it
becomes a part of the burden resting upon the government to make the
case so clear that there is no reasonable doubt as to the inferences
and presumptions claimed to flow from the books or other evidence.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.
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