Coffin v. United States, 166 U.
S. 432, affirmed on the following points:
(1) That the offense of aiding or abetting an officer of a
national bank in committing one or more of the offenses set forth
in Rev.Stat. § 0209, may be committed by persons who are not
officers or agents of the bank, and consequently it is not
necessary to aver in an indictment against such an alder or abettor
that he was an officer of the bank, or occupied any specific
relation to it when committing the offense.
(2) That the plain and unmistakable statement of the indictment
in that case and this, as a whole, is that the acts charged against
Haughey were done by him as president of the bank, and that the
aiding and abetting was also done by assisting him in the official
capacity in which alone it is charged that he misapplied the
funds.
Instructions requested may be properly refused when fully
covered by the general charge of the court.
When the charge as a whole correctly conveys to the jury the
rule by which they are to determine from all the evidence the
question of intent, there is no error in refusing the request of
the defendant to single out the absence of one of the several
possible motives for the commission of the offense and instruct the
jury as to the weight to be given to this particular fact
independent of the other proof in the case.
The refusal to give, when requested, a correct legal proposition
does not constitute error unless there be evidence rendering the
legal theory applicable to the case.
When it is impossible to determine whether there was evidence
tending to show a state of facts adequate to make a refused
instruction pertinent, and there is nothing else in the bill of
exceptions to which the stated principle could apply, there is no
error in refusing it.
Several other exceptions are examined and held to be without
merit.
A bank president, not acting in good faith, has no right to
permit overdrafts when he does not believe, and has no reasonable
ground to believe, that the moneys can be repaid, and if, coupled
with such wrongful act, the proof establishes that he intended by
the transaction to injure and defraud the bank, the wrongful act
becomes a crime.
When the principal offender in the commission of the offense
made criminal by Rev.Stat. § 5209 and the aider and abettor
were both actuated by the
Page 162 U. S. 665
criminal intent specified in the statute, it is immaterial that
the principal offender should be further charged in the indictment
with having had other intents.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
Fifty-two requests for instructions were submitted on behalf of
the defendants to the trial court. The assignments of error are
sixty-two in number. The uselessness of this multitude of
assignments is demonstrated by the fact that but nineteen out of
the sixty-two were relied upon at bar. These nineteen are grouped
in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error under
Page 162 U. S. 666
twelve headings. We shall confine our examination to the
consideration of the matters embraced under these headings, and in
the order in which they are discussed by counsel.
I. Point 1 alleges that the court erred in refusing to give
instructions requested numbered 47 and 48.
No. 47 reads as follows:
"47. In the indictment in this case, it is charged that Theodore
P. Haughey, president of the Indianapolis National Bank, with
intent to injure and defraud the bank, willfully misapplied the
funds of the bank, and also that, with intent to defraud the bank
and to deceive an agent appointed or to be appointed to examine its
affairs, he made or caused to be made false entries upon the books
of the bank. The defendants Francis A. Coffin and Percival B.
Coffin are charged with having with like intent aided and abetted
said Haughey in said wrongful acts. In order to sustain this charge
of aiding and abetting against the defendants, the evidence must
show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants acted in the
matter with a like intent as that attending the action of Mr.
Haughey -- that is, it must be shown that the Coffins, charged as
aiders and abettors, stood in a similar relation to the alleged
crime as Mr. Haughey; that they approached it from the same
direction, and touched it at the same point. If, as matter of fact,
in any of the transactions charged as criminal in this indictment,
Mr. Haughey acted with one intent and the defendants acted with a
different and unlike intent, then, as to that transaction, they are
not guilty as charged in this indictment."
No. 48 is similar to No. 47, except that the words "stood in a
similar relation to the alleged crime," contained in the third
sentence of No. 47, are omitted in No. 48.
We held in our former opinion,
156 U. S. 156
U.S. 446, that the language of the statute fully demonstrated the
unsoundness of the contention then advanced, that no offense was
stated in the indictment against the aiders and abettors, because
in none of the counts was it asserted that they were officers of
the bank or occupied any specific official relation to it.
The ruling then made establishes the error of the foregoing
Page 162 U. S. 667
requests to charge, and hence practically disposes of the
questions arising under this heading. However, as counsel now
contend that their former position was misunderstood and was not
adequately met by the reasoning previously adopted, we add the
following considerations: the contention now advanced admits that
one not an officer of the bank may be, under some circumstances, an
aider or abettor, in violation of section 5209, Rev.Stat., but
urges that, in order to be such aider or abettor, the person so
charged, when not an officer of the bank, must stand in such
relation to the recreant bank officer, or have such interest with
him in other enterprises, "as that they may work together for the
hurt of the bank for a common purpose." In other words, the
argument substantially asserts that an essential element of the
offense of aiding and abetting is the existence of a common purpose
between the officer and the aider and abettor to promote or
subserve the joint interest of the wrongdoers in enterprises in
which they are mutually interested. But the statute nowhere
requires that there should be a "common purpose" on the part of the
principal and the aider and abettor to subserve their joint
interests by the misapplication committed. It only requires that
there should be a misapplication of the moneys of the bank, with a
joint intent to
"injure or defraud the association or any other 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."
It is clear that the statute has been violated if the one
charged with aiding and abetting is shown to have actually aided
and abetted the officer of the bank in misapplying its funds, no
matter whom the accused may have ultimately intended to benefit by
his misconduct, provided, of course, there existed the intent to
defraud enumerated in the act of Congress. In accord with this
view, the court properly instructed the jury that there must have
existed in the minds of both Haughey and the defendants the
wrongful intent stated in the law. The intent contemplated by
counsel in the requested instruction was evidently the other and
different one heretofore referred to -- namely, the beneficial
purpose to be subserved or common interest to
Page 162 U. S. 668
be promoted by the performance of the wrongful act. But, as we
have said, it is not essential that the intent should, in this
particular, have been coincident, provided there existed the intent
which the law ordains.
The proposition upon which reliance is mainly placed is that the
person charged as an aider and abettor "must stand in the same
relation to the crime as the principal, approach it in the same
direction, touch it at the same point." This language is taken from
the opinion in
State v. Teahan, 50 Conn. 92. In that case,
it was held that one who bought intoxicating liquors from another,
the sale being illegal, was not an aider and abettor of the offense
of unlawful selling within the meaning of a general statute which
provided that
"every person who shall assist, aid, counsel, cause, hire, or
command another to commit any offense may be prosecuted and
punished as if he were a principal offender."
The court said:
"The 'abetting' intended by it is a positive act in aid of the
commission of the offense -- a force, physical or moral, joined
with that of the proprietor in producing it. This is clear from the
context, where aiding is classed with assisting, causing, hiring,
and commanding. The abettor, within the meaning of the statute,
must stand in the same relation to the crime as the principal,
approach it from the same direction, touch it at the same point.
This is not the case with the purchaser of liquor. His approach to
the crime is from the other side. He touches it at wholly another
point. It is somewhat like the case of a man who provokes or
challenges a man to fight with him. If the other knocks him down,
he has induced, but in no proper sense abetted, this act of
violence. He has not contributed any force to its production. He
touches the offense wholly on the other side. The purchaser of
liquor, by his offer to buy, induces the seller of the liquor to
make the sale, but he cannot be said to assist him in it. The whole
force, moral or physical, that went to the production of the crime
as such, was the seller's."
Separated from the context in which the sentence was used
Page 162 U. S. 669
by the Connecticut court, it becomes meaningless and confusing.
The direction from which the parties must approach the transaction
-- that is, the intent to defraud -- is accurately specified in the
statute under consideration. The meaning which counsel affix to the
sentence which they excerpt from
State v Teahan, supra, is
illustrated by their assertion that it appears from the bill of
exceptions that Haughey, the president, had no interest in the
cabinet company for whose benefit the indictment alleges the
misapplications and false entries were made, nor any interest in or
relation to the defendants, and that neither the plaintiff in error
nor any other person connected with or interested in the cabinet
company, or any of the other companies, had any interest in the
bank or with Haughey of any kind whatsoever. Conceding this to be
so, the accused was nonetheless guilty of a violation of the
statute if he aided and abetted in the misapplication of the funds
of the bank with the intent specified in the law. The contention
that if Haughey, the president, intended to benefit the bank by the
transactions complained of, he therefore could not have had a
common purpose with the person receiving the money to defraud the
bank amounts simply to the assertion that if the proof showed that
there was no intent on the part of Haughey to defraud the bank, it
was the duty of the jury to acquit. However, the real premise upon
which the whole argument rests is that if the accused was guilty at
all, he was guilty as a principal, and not as an aider and abettor.
But it is not necessary to give much time to the consideration of
this claim in view of the clear intent of Congress as expressed in
the statute under review. It is evident that no matter how active
the cooperation of third persons may have been in the wrongful act
of a bank officer or agent, such third person is required to be
charged as an aider and abettor in the offense, and prosecuted as
such. The primary object of the statute was to protect the bank
from the acts of its own servants. As between officers and agents
of the bank and third persons cooperating to defraud the bank, the
statute contemplates that a bank officer shall be treated as a
principal offender. In every criminal offense
Page 162 U. S. 670
there must, of course, be a principal, and it follows that
without the concurring act of an officer or agent of a bank, third
persons cannot commit a violation of the provisions of section
5209. If therefore a violation of the statute in question is
committed by an officer and an outsider, the one must be prosecuted
as the principal and the other as the aider and abettor.
II. Under point 2, error is alleged to the refusal of the court
to give the following requested instruction:
"6. The fourth count of the indictment charges that Theodore P.
Haughey, as president of the Indianapolis National Bank, did, on
the 20th day of May, 1893, unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously
misapply certain moneys of said bank in said count specifically
named, to-wit, the sum of $3,272.29. The count does not charge that
the defendants aided or abetted said Haughey in misapplying the
same moneys which he is charged to have misapplied. Under these
circumstances, this count charges no crime against the defendants,
and on this count you should not convict the defendants."
The proposition embodied in this request rests on the assumption
that the aiding and abetting clause in the fourth count of the
indictment does not refer to the identical misapplication which
that count charges to have been committed by the president -- in
other words, that there is a want of identity between the offense
which the accused is charged to have aided and abetted and the
offense there averred to have been committed by the president. The
count charges the president with having, on the 20th of May, 1893,
misapplied a specific and enumerated sum by then and there
"paying, and causing said sum to be paid, out of the moneys,
funds, and credits of said association upon certain divers checks
drawn upon said association by the Indianapolis Cabinet Company,
which checks were then and there cashed and paid out of the moneys,
funds, and credits of said association, which said sum aforesaid,
and no part thereof, was said Indianapolis Company entitled to
withdraw from said bank, because said company had no funds in said
association to its credit."
The aiding and abetting clause charges that the accused did,
"on the 20th of
Page 162 U. S. 671
May, 1893, aid and abet said Theodore P. Haughey, as aforesaid,
to wrongfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and willfully misapply the
moneys, funds, and credits of said association, to-wit,"
specifying a sum identical in amount with that referred to in
the previous part of the indictment. The contention is that the
word "said" preceding, and the words "as aforesaid" following the
name of Haughey, president, do not refer to the sum previously
charged to have been misapplied, and therefore there is a want of
relation between the averred misapplication and the alleged aiding
and abetting. When this case was previously before us,
substantially the same general complaint was made against all the
counts of the indictment, the contention then being that the words
"said" and "as aforesaid" did not aver that those who aided and
abetted knew that Haughey was the president of the bank, and hence
the counts were bad. We said (p.
156 U. S.
449):
"Without entering into any nice question of grammar, or
undertaking to discuss whether the word 'said' before Haughey's
name and the words 'as aforesaid' which follow it are adverbial, we
think the plain and unmistakable statement of the indictment as a
whole is that the acts charged against Haughey were done by him as
president of the bank, and that the aiding and abetting was also
knowingly done by assisting him in the official capacity in which
alone it is charged that he misapplied the funds."
This reasoning is conclusive of the point now made. The words
"said" and "as aforesaid," which we then considered as sufficiently
referring to the capacity in which the act was averred to have been
committed in the first part of the indictment, also adequately
connected the acts charged against the aider and abettor with the
offense stated against the principal offender.
III. This point complains of the refusal to give the following
instructions:
"19. Evidence has been introduced upon the trial with reference
to drafts drawn by the Indianapolis Cabinet Company on the Tufts
Cabinet Company, and accepted in the name of the latter company,
and it is claimed on behalf of the government that there never was
any such organization
Page 162 U. S. 672
as said Tufts Cabinet Company, but that the same was wholly
fictitious. This evidence has been permitted to be introduced
before you for the purpose of throwing light upon the intent of the
defendants and of Theodore P. Haughey in connection with the charge
of wrongdoing by them in the various counts of the indictment. This
evidence can only be considered by you for this purpose, as there
is no charge in any count of the indictment based upon this
particular transaction, and the light it may throw upon the intent
of the defendants or either of them, or of said Haughey, must
depend upon all the circumstances shown to have attended the
transaction."
"43. As you have been already told, the government in this case
is prosecuting the defendants for particular transactions charged
to have been unlawful and criminal, as specifically set forth in
certain specific counts of the indictment. Evidence has been
introduced by the government of other transactions between the
Indianapolis Cabinet Company and the Indianapolis National Bank and
various other parties. This evidence has been allowed to go before
you solely upon the question of intent, and should be considered by
you only insofar as it may tend to illustrate the intent of Mr.
Haughey or of the defendants. Except for that purpose, you have
nothing to do with other transactions than those specifically
charged and prosecuted under this indictment. Except as
illustrating such intent, the question of the lawfulness or
unlawfulness of such other transactions is one with which you have
nothing to do."
We think the instructions here requested were properly refused,
because fully covered by the general charge of the court.
Northern Pacific Railroad v. Urlin, 158 U.
S. 271,
158 U. S. 277;
Grand Trunk Railway v. Ives, 144 U.
S. 408,
144 U. S. 433;
Erie Railroad v. Winter, 143 U. S. 74;
Ayers v. Watson, 137 U. S. 584,
137 U. S.
601-603.
Repeatedly in the instructions given the jury were told that
they could not find the defendants guilty unless they were
satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Haughey and the defendants
had committed the specific criminal acts alleged in the counts of
the indictment which were submitted
Page 162 U. S. 673
to them, with the intent therein charged. Thus, the court, in
the opening of its charge, said "You have nothing to do with the
other counts of the indictment, which are withdrawn from your
consideration." Again, in another portion of the charge:
"The particular acts of misapplication described in the several
specific counts of the indictment on trail before you must be
established by the proofs as therein respectively charged."
And yet further:
"You are not authorized to find the defendants guilty of any
other charge of aiding and abetting in the willful misapplication
of the moneys, funds, and credits of said bank, except those
specifically charged in the first twelve counts of the indictment
now on trial before you, and also on the specific charges elected
by the government, as above stated, under the thirteenth,
fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth counts of the indictment."
Having thus repeatedly called the attention of the jury to the
fact that they were confined in the determination of the guilt of
the accused to the specific matters submitted to them, the court,
on the subject of intention, also correctly instructed them that
for this purpose, and for this purpose alone, they might consider
the proof introduced as to other misapplications than those charged
in the counts which were before them. For instance, the court
observed:
"In determining whether they had the criminal intent to deceive
or defraud as charged, or whether they acted in good faith, you
should take into consideration the situation of the parties, the
course of business between them, as well as between the cabinet
company and the bank, and all the facts and circumstances in proof
before you."
We think there can be no doubt that the charge of the court as
given therefore left no question in the minds of the jury that they
could only find the defendants guilty upon the particular matters
specified in the counts submitted to them, and that they could not
find them guilty of a different misapplication from that charged,
whether or not there was proof establishing such other
misapplications.
IV. The fourth point alleges as error the refusal of the court
to give the following requested instruction:
Page 162 U. S. 674
"15. The intent on the part of Mr. Haughey in the alleged
misapplications of the moneys of the bank to injure or defraud the
bank is an essential ingredient of the offense charged against the
defendants. In determining the question, therefore, of Mr.
Haughey's intent, you should take into consideration the relation
he bore to this bank both as an officer and shareholder, and
whether the evidence shows any motive on his part for defrauding or
injuring the bank, and it is for you to say, in the light of all
the evidence, whether Mr. Haughey, in letting the cabinet company
have such moneys, did so with such intent. If the evidence does not
satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt of such intent, then the
government's case is not made out. In determining this question,
you may consider whether Mr. Haughey was in any way benefited, or
hoped to be benefited, by the loans or advances to the cabinet
company, and if you find from the evidence that there was no such
benefit or hope thereof on the part of Mr. Haughey, such fact may
be considered by you in determining whether there was any such
intent as is charged, and if the making of such loans and advances
was under such circumstances shown by the evidence as would injure
or tend to injure Mr. Haughey, that fact may be considered in like
manner and for the same purpose."
The complaint is made that nowhere in the charges given did the
court expressly inform the jury that they might consider, in
determining the question of criminal intent, whether the evidence
disclosed that the motive of personal gain induced Haughey to
commit the offense charged. But the instruction requested in the
particular mentioned was not upon the law of the case, but upon the
inferences to be drawn from the evidence -- a matter peculiarly
within the province of the jury. The court did charge that the jury
might look at all the proofs in the case in determining the
question of guilty intent, and, while it also instructed that it
was not necessary for the commission of this offense that the
officer of the bank who makes a willful misapplication should
derive any personal benefit or advantage from the transaction, the
court added that
"when the moneys, funds, or credits of the bank are
Page 162 U. S. 675
unlawfully taken from its possession and knowingly and willfully
misapplied by converting them to the use of any person or company
other than the bank with the intention to injure and defraud, the
offense described in the statute has been committed."
So also the court elsewhere in its instructions to the jury
said:
"If loans and discounts are made by the president of a national
bank in bad faith for the fraudulent purpose of giving gain or
advantage to some other person or company, and not in the honest
exercise of official discretion, the officer making them passes the
line dividing honesty and dishonesty, and his action is criminal if
done with intent to injure and defraud the banking association, and
it so results."
The accused could not properly single out the absence of one of
several possible motives for the commission of an offense, isolate
it in an instruction from all the other facts of the case, and
demand that the court instruct the jury as to the weight to be
given this particular fact, independent of all the other proof in
the case. The charge as a whole having correctly conveyed to the
jury the rule by which they were to determine from all the evidence
the question of intent, we think there was no error to the
prejudice of the defendant in refusing the request which he
asked.
V. This point alleges error in the refusal of the court to give
two instructions requested by plaintiff in error, one to the effect
that the allowance of mere overdrafts was not of itself sufficient
to show any criminal intent on the part of Haughey and the other
that, notwithstanding that the statute forbids loans to anyone
person in excess of ten percent of the capital stock, such loan,
although unlawful, was not for that reason alone criminal. The
first instruction referred to is, in substance, given in various
parts of the charge of the court. Thus, the court instructed the
jury:
"On the counts for willful misapplication, the questions for you
to determine are: did Theodore P. Haughey, as president of the
Indianapolis National Bank, knowingly and unlawfully, and with
intent to injure and defraud said bank in manner and in form as
charged, willfully misapply the moneys, funds, or credits of said
bank, by cashing, discounting, and paying for
Page 162 U. S. 676
the use and benefit of the said Indianapolis Cabinet Company,
knowing it to be insolvent, out of the moneys, funds, and credits
of the bank, without authority from its board of directors, any
notes, drafts, or bills of exchange drawn by and upon insolvent
persons, firms, and companies, knowing them to be insolvent, and
knowing such notes, drafts, or bills of exchange to be valueless,
in manner and form as charged in either count of the indictment? If
he did, he has committed the offense of willful misapplication, as
charged in the count or counts of the indictment now on trial
relating to that subject which you find to have been so
proved."
The court also said:
"If Haughey and the defendants withdrew moneys from the bank for
the use of the cabinet company by means of checks drawn by it on
said bank when it had no funds or moneys on deposit against which
to draw, if they acted in good faith, honestly believing that the
cabinet company would be able to repay the same when required, they
would not be guilty of the intent to defraud the bank as charged;
but on the other hand, if they acted in bad faith, and did not
believe, and had no reasonable ground to believe, that the cabinet
company could repay such overdrafts when required to do so, then
they had no lawful right to make such overdrafts or allow them to
be made."
We think the second requested instruction was also fully covered
in the charge actually given.
VI. The refusal to give the following instruction was assigned
as error:
"18. The counts of the indictment relating to misapplication
charge a misapplication of the moneys of the bank. These charges of
misapplication are not sustained by merely showing that the bank
gave to the cabinet company credit to which it was not entitled,
unless it is also shown that, as a result of such credit, the
cabinet company was enabled to and did withdraw from the bank
moneys of some kind, resulting in loss to the bank. Thus, evidence
of the giving by the cabinet company and the receiving by the bank
of renewal paper upon which nothing was withdrawn from the bank
would not sustain
Page 162 U. S. 677
the charge of criminal misapplication of the credits of the
bank."
There is no doubt of the soundness of the abstract principle
which this request embodied. If the money of a bank be misapplied
by paying it out on worthless paper, it is obvious that a
subsequent renewal of such paper upon which nothing was actually
obtained could not have misapplied the money of the bank. While
this is true in the abstract, the refusal to give, when requested,
a correct legal proposition does not constitute error unless there
be evidence rendering the legal theory applicable to the case.
Stryker v. Goodnow, 123 U. S. 527, and
authorities there cited.
The bill of exceptions contains the following statement relative
to the ninth count, to which it is asserted the instruction asked
related:
"Be it further remembered that there was evidence tending to
show that the transactions mentioned in the ninth count of the
indictment consisted solely of the taking up by the Indianapolis
Cabinet Company of two drafts theretofore drawn by it upon
customers and discounted by said bank, and which had not been paid
or accepted by the drawees, the aggregate amount of said drafts
being $3,467.23, by a new draft drawn by said Indianapolis Cabinet
Company on one of the drawees in the drafts taken up for the sum of
$3,467.23, and that there was evidence tending to show that the
drawee in said last-mentioned draft was, at the time the same was
drawn and accepted by said bank, solvent and indebted to the
cabinet company in an amount greater than the amount of said draft,
for which said company had a right to draw."
"There was evidence tending to show that the drawee in said
draft above mentioned was, at the time the same was drawn and
placed in said bank, insolvent, and said draft was never forwarded
for acceptance or collection, but was held by the direction of
Theodore P. Haughey in said bank, and that said defendant knew that
the drawee of said draft always refused to accept or honor drafts,
and that he made all his settlements either in cash or by note, and
that the indebtedness mentioned in said draft was afterwards
settled by the
Page 162 U. S. 678
note of said drawee, but was not turned over to said bank, but
was delivered by said defendant to other creditors. There was
evidence tending to show that the notes which were claimed to have
been given for said indebtedness were not executed until after the
failure of the bank, and that the disposition to the creditors was
made by Albert S. Reed."
From this statement it is impossible to determine whether there
was any evidence tending to show a state of fact adequate to make
the instruction which was refused pertinent, and there is no other
matter in the bill of exceptions to which the legal principle
stated could apply. It is true that counsel say that, by the bill
of exceptions, it "appears that other transactions were based upon
the renewals of paper merely, without in any way depleting the
funds of the bank." But the portion of the bill of exceptions which
is referred to as supporting this statement relates solely to the
evidence offered on the count alleging a false entry, and therefore
in no way involves the other counts of the indictment which charged
misapplication. We therefore find that error was not committed by
the refusal in question.
VII. The refusal to give the following instruction was assigned
as error:
"40. In order to warrant a conviction of the defendants as
aiders and abettors of Mr. Haughey in the making of false entries,
as charged in this indictment, it is not enough to show that the
entries were false and that Mr. Haughey made them with the criminal
intent charged, but it must also be shown by the evidence beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendants had knowledge of the making of
such entries, and that they did acts aiding and abetting Mr.
Haughey in making the same with like criminal intent. Proof of the
fact that the defendants presented the paper covered by the false
entry, and received credit for it, is not sufficient to warrant
their conviction for aiding and abetting the making of the false
entry on the books, unless some knowledge of or connection with the
making of such false entry is brought home to them."
This instruction is fully covered in the following portion of
the charge of the court, the giving of which is also alleged to
have been error:
Page 162 U. S. 679
"If you are satisfied that Theodore P. Haughey did knowingly and
purposely make or cause to be made the false entries as charged,
you cannot find the defendants guilty as aiders and abettors unless
you are satisfied that they with like intent unlawfully and
knowingly did or said something showing their consent to and
participation in the unlawful and criminal acts of said Haughey,
and contributing to their execution."
The instruction is not open to the objection that the expression
"unlawful and criminal acts," used in the last sentence, might have
been understood by the jury as relating to unlawful and criminal
acts of Haughey generally.
The court instructed the jury that an entry made knowingly and
purposely in the books of the bank, with the intent to deceive or
defraud, as charged, which represented as an actual transaction one
which did not exist, or an entry knowingly and purposely made with
the intent to deceive and defraud, which was false in a material
part, constituted a false entry within the statute. It appeared
that the entry, under the thirty-ninth count, related to six pieces
of paper which were brought to the bank on May 29, 1893,
aggregating the face value of $44,000, and the court instructed the
jury as to these notes that
"if the paper was never accepted or discounted by the bank, but
was simply left with the bank as a mere memorandum, and not as a
deposit, and for the fraudulent purpose of enabling fictitious
entries to be made on the books of the bank with the intent to
deceive and defraud, such entry on the books of the bank would
constitute a false entry."
In the light of these instructions, the expression "unlawful and
criminal acts" could only have been interpreted by the jury as
having reference to the acts of Haughey attendant upon and
connected with the making of the entry, such as the taking by him
of the paper to be used as the supposed bases of the false
credit.
VIII. This covers three assignments of error (Nos. 59, 60, 61),
which assert error in the giving of the following instructions:
"It is further shown by the evidence that large sums of money
were obtained from the bank by the Indianapolis Cabinet
Page 162 U. S. 680
Company by means of notes, drafts, and bills of exchange which
were wholly or partially valueless."
"It is also proven that various sums of money were obtained from
the bank by means of checks drawn upon it by the Indianapolis
Cabinet Company, which were presented to and cashed by the bank out
of its moneys and funds when said cabinet company had no moneys,
funds, or credits on deposit with said bank with which to pay said
checks."
"It is also shown that the cabinet company and the various
corporations affiliated with it organized by the defendants were,
during the whole period of time covered by the indictment,
insolvent."
It is claimed that these instructions assumed facts to have been
proven which were in dispute, and also indirectly stated to the
jury, as settled, propositions which were disputed, and were those
most earnestly contested in the case.
These criticized excerpts of the charge are contained in the
latter portion thereof, and were part of a brief resume of the
salient evidence in the case. To guard against the danger that the
jury might consider that there was a purpose to remove the facts
from their consideration or control their judgment thereon, the
court repeatedly instructed that the determination of the facts
was, by law, in them vested.
Thus, immediately following the criticized portion of the
charge, the court said:
"Carefully weigh all the evidence in the case, and from it,
under the rules of law which I have given you, determine the guilt
or innocence of the defendants. With you, and not with the court,
rests the responsibility of finding and determining the facts. The
views of the court on questions of fact are not controlling upon
you."
Again, in the opening paragraph of the charge, it was said:
"You are the sole judges of the facts, and of what is proved,
and any statements of fact made by the court are not controlling
upon you. Such statements are intended to invite your attention to
the matters of fact which the court deems important, and not for
the purpose of controlling your judgment."
In the earlier portions of the charge, it was especially left to
the jury, when considering whether or not an offense had been
Page 162 U. S. 681
committed, to determine whether the money had been obtained by
the cabinet company on worthless paper, or by payments made by the
bank on checks of the company when it was insolvent and its account
with the bank was overdrawn. The jury were also instructed at
length with reference to the charge contained in the indictment
that divers persons, firms, and corporations were insolvent. We
give an extract from the charge on this subject:
"If you are satisfied that the Indianapolis Cabinet Company, or
any other person, firm, or corporation alleged to have been
insolvent at the time charged, had not sufficient property or
assets to pay its debts in full when wound up, then such person,
firm, or corporation was insolvent, in manner and form as charged
in the indictment."
Keeping in mind the repeated cautions given by the court to the
jury, it is impossible to perceive how the language of the court in
the matter excepted to could have been understood by the jury as
binding them to accept as controlling the statements of the court
regarding the facts.
IX. The giving of the following instruction was assigned as
error No. 55:
"In order to make the defendants liable as aiders and abettors,
as charged in the indictment, it is necessary that they should be
proved to have done or said something showing their consent to or
participation in the unlawful and criminal acts of Theodore P.
Haughey, and contributing to their execution as charged in the
indictment."
It is complained that the instruction was erroneous because it
assumes that Haughey had committed a criminal offense and that the
defendants were liable as aiders and abettors if it was shown that
they either consented to or participated in the unlawful and
criminal acts of the president.
But prior to this portion of the charge, the court directly
instructed the jury that the guilt of Haughey was necessary to be
established by the government. Following the instruction above
quoted, the court also said:
"The burden of proving Haughey and the defendants
Page 162 U. S. 682
guilty as charged rests upon the government, and this burden
does not shift from it."
"Haughey and the defendants are presumed to be innocent until
their guilt in manner and form, as charged in some count of the
indictment, is proved beyond a reasonable doubt. To justify you in
returning a verdict of guilty, the evidence should be of such a
character as to overcome this presumption of innocence, and to
satisfy each one of you of the guilt of Haughey and the defendants
as charged, to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt."
It is not possible that the jury could have supposed that the
court intended, from the portion of the charge claimed to be
erroneous, that the acts of Haughey were "to be accepted and
treated by them as criminal acts."
So also, the jury could not have been misled by the use of the
disjunctive "or" into supposing that the court instructed them that
mere consent of the defendants to the unlawful and criminal acts of
Haughey would be sufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty. The
consent or participation was required to be such as "contributed to
the execution of" the unlawful and criminal acts of Haughey charged
in the indictment. From the entire context, it is clear that the
court required the jury to find participation as well as consent.
For instance, the court in its charge said to the jury:
"If you are satisfied that Theodore P. Haughey did knowingly and
purposely make or cause to be made the false entries as charged,
you cannot find the defendants guilty as aiders and abettors unless
you are satisfied that they with like intent unlawfully and
knowingly did or said something showing their consent to and
participation in the unlawful and criminal acts of said Haughey,
and contributing to their execution."
X. This alleges error in the following portion of the charge of
the court:
"If Haughey and the defendants withdrew moneys from the bank for
the use of the cabinet company by means of checks drawn by it on
said bank when it had no funds or moneys on deposit against which
to draw, if they acted in good faith, honestly believing that the
cabinet company
Page 162 U. S. 683
would be able to repay the same when required, they would not be
guilty of the intent to defraud the bank as charged; but, on the
other hand, if they acted in bad faith, and did not believe, and
had no reasonable ground to believe, that the cabinet company could
repay such overdrafts when required to do so, then they had no
lawful right to make such overdrafts or allow them to be made."
But this instruction should be read in connection with the
paragraph following, which is as follows:
"Every person is presumed to intend the natural and ordinary
consequences of his own acts. Hence, if the natural and ordinary
consequence of the acts of Haughey and the defendants, as shown by
the proofs, were to injure and defraud the bank as charged, you
would be authorized to find that such was their intent, if such
intent is in harmony with the other proofs in the case."
It cannot be disputed that a bank president not acting in good
faith has no right to permit overdrafts when he does not believe,
and has no reasonable ground to believe, that the moneys can be
repaid. And if, coupled with such wrongful act, the proof
establishes that he intended by the transaction to injure and
defraud the bank, the wrongful act becomes a crime.
XI. This embraces assignments of error Nos. 49 and 50, which
allege error in the giving of the following instructions:
"If, however, the entry truly represents an actual
bona
fide transaction, then it would not constitute a false
entry."
"But if the paper was never accepted or discounted by him for
the bank, but was simply left with the bank as a mere memorandum,
and not as a deposit, and for the fraudulent purpose of enabling
fictitious entries to be made on the books of the bank with the
intent to deceive or defraud as charged, such entry on the books of
the bank would constitute a false entry."
These sentences were contained in the following paragraph of the
charge of the court:
"An entry knowingly and purposely made on the books of the bank,
with intent to deceive or defraud, as charged, which represents as
an actual transaction one which does not
Page 162 U. S. 684
and did not exist, or an entry knowingly and purposely made,
with intent to deceive and defraud, as charged, which in a material
part falsely and untruly represents an actual and existing
transaction, would constitute a false entry, within the meaning of
the statute. If, however, the entry truly represents an actual
bona fide transaction, then it would not constitute a
false entry."
The objection to this portion of the charge is that it assumes
that an entry is false unless it represents a transaction entered
into in good faith and without fraud. It is contended that this
instruction is within the condemnation of this Court as expressed
in its former opinion, 156 U.S.
156 U. S. 463,
where it was said:
"The exception reserved to the charge actually given by the
court (on the subject of false entries) was well taken, because
therein the questions of misapplication and of false entries are
interblended in such a way that it is difficult to understand
exactly what was intended. We think the language used must have
tended to confuse the jury and leave upon their minds the
impression that if the transaction represented by the entry
actually occurred, but amounted to a misapplication, then its entry
exactly as it occurred constituted 'a false entry;' in other words,
that an entry would be false, though it faithfully described an
actual occurrence, unless the transaction which it represented
involved full and fair value for the bank. The thought thus
conveyed implied that the truthful entry of a fraudulent
transaction constitutes a false entry, within the meaning of the
statute. We think it is clear that the making of a false entry is a
concrete offense which is not committed where the transaction
entered actually took place, and is entered exactly as it
occurred."
The objection is not meritorious. The trial court carefully
distinguished between an entry based upon an actual discount of
paper and credit predicated thereon and a credit not representing
an actual deposit or discount. The expression
bona fide
was used in the sense of "real," and but emphasized the word
"actual." Nor is there force in the suggestion that the
instruction
"must have tended to confuse the jury, and
Page 162 U. S. 685
leave upon their minds an impression that if the transaction
represented by the entry actually occurred, but amounted to a
misapplication, then its entry exactly as it occurred constituted a
false entry."
It is claimed that under the proof, these instructions were
wholly irrelevant. Reliance is placed upon a statement in the bill
of exceptions
"that the evidence showed that all the paper upon which the
credit mentioned in said thirty-ninth count was based was retained
in said bank as a part of its assets until the same matured, when
it was renewed by other paper of the same kind, and again renewed
from time to time as it matured, until said bank failed, at which
time said paper, so renewed, was in possession of said bank as a
part of its assets, and passed as such into the possession of the
receiver, by whom it was held as a part of the indebtedness of the
cabinet company to said bank, secured by the mortgage executed (to
Haughey as trustee for said bank) by said cabinet company to secure
the indebtedness of said cabinet company to said bank."
But this is entirely consistent with the claim that the original
paper "was simply left with the bank as a mere memorandum, and not
as a deposit," etc. The fact that other notes were substituted for
this paper does not necessarily import that the original
transaction was an actual one if the notes were originally given to
the bank as a mere pretext to enable the false entry to be made,
and the subsequent renewals were equally unreal, and made for a
like purpose. The receiver was empowered, finding them in the hands
of the bank, to retain them as a part of its assets. Prior to the
statement in the bill of exceptions which we have quoted, the
following recital appears:
"It was claimed on behalf of the government, and evidence was by
it introduced tending to show, that the paper was not
bona
fide paper representing the value for which the same was
credited, or any substantial value, and that said paper was not
actually discounted by said bank or actually received as a genuine
deposit, but was only received as a memorandum deposit to serve for
the time being only, for the purpose of giving the Indianapolis
Cabinet Company an apparent credit upon the books of the bank,
which in fact
Page 162 U. S. 686
it did not have, and that said entries represented no actual
transactions whatever."
We think this extract clearly indicates that the charge as given
was relevant to the issue.
XII. This heading alleges error in overruling the motion in
arrest of judgment. We do not deem it necessary to consider it at
length. It is predicated on the assertion that six of the seven
counts upon which conviction was had were bad because it alleged
that the bank had been "heretofore" created and organized under the
laws of the United States. If we assume that the word should have
been "theretofore," in order to make it certain that, prior to the
finding of the indictment, the association had been incorporated,
and if we further assume that the allegation as to the
incorporation of the bank was material, the averment was only an
imperfect statement of that which the law implies to be true after
verdict. Wharton Crim.Plead.Ev. § 760. Under this heading, it
is moreover contended that the thirty-ninth count was defective
because the principal offender was charged with having made the
false entries with the intent to injure and defraud the bank, and
also with the intent to deceive any agent appointed, and any agent
or agents who might thereafter be appointed, by the Comptroller of
the Currency to examine the affairs of the association, while the
aiders and abettors were charged only with having had an intent to
deceive the agent appointed by the Comptroller. The answer is
self-evident. It was wholly immaterial that the principal offender
should have had several intents, provided the principal and the
aider and abettor were both actuated by the criminal intent
specified in the statute. The alleged additional intent on the part
of the principal offender might well have been treated as
surplusage. Besides, it appears from the recital in the bill of
exceptions that there was evidence tending to show that the purpose
of Haughey in causing the false entry to be made was to deceive any
officer who might be sent by the Comptroller of the Currency to
make an examination of the bank, and that the paper upon which the
entry was made, as stated in the count, was furnished by the
defendant Coffin at the request of Haughey, with a like intent.
Page 162 U. S. 687
This completes the review of all the very numerous grounds of
error which have been pressed upon our consideration, and the
result is that we find that they are all without merit.
The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.