On a direct appeal from an order quashing an indictment, this
Court assumes the correctness of the meaning affixed to the
indictment by the court below and determines only whether the
statute was correctly construed.
Section 29 of the Penal Code is practically a reproduction of
§ 5421, Rev.Stat., which in turn represents § 1 of the
Act of March 3, 1823, c. 38, 3 Stat. 771, and this Court follows
the construction already given by this Court to the last named
statute to the effect that it embraces fraudulent documents as well
as those that are forged or counterfeited.
United
States v. Staats, 8 How. 41.
The enumeration of certain classes of forged and false documents
in § 5421, Rev.Stat., does not exclude other fraudulent
documents which might be used to perpetrate the wrong which it is
the purpose of the statute to prevent.
The facts, which involve the construction of §§ 28 and
29 of the Penal Code (§§ 5421 and 5479, Rev.Stat.), are
stated in the opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 186
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The indictment charged the defendants under Penal Code, §
37 (Rev.Stat. § 5440), with a conspiracy to commit offenses
against the United States -- that is, to violate §§ 28
and 29 of the Penal Code. These sections, leaving
Page 231 U. S. 187
aside additions irrelevant to this case, are reproductions of
§§ 5421 and 5479, Revised Statutes, in force in 1909 when
the acts charged were committed. All the overt acts concerned the
making or use of false affidavits and documents, in support of a
fraudulent claim for land under Rev.Stat. §§ 2304 and
2307, giving honorably discharged soldiers of the Civil War the
right to make an additional entry under the circumstances stated in
the statutes, and the privilege also conferred upon the widow of
such honorably discharged soldier to make a claim for land as
therein provided. In passing on demurrers, the court treating all
the counts as relating solely to the making and use of documents
which were merely false and fraudulent, but not forged, and
construing §§ 5421 and 5479, Rev.Stat., and Penal Code,
§§ 28 and 29, as embracing only documents which were
forged and counterfeited, held that none of the counts charged acts
embraced by the provisions in question, and therefore the
indictment was quashed because it stated no offense against the
United States. On this direct appeal, we assume the correctness of
the meaning affixed to the indictment by the court below, and come
only to determine whether the statute was correctly construed. This
duty is narrowed by a concession made in argument by the government
to the effect that the construction given by the court to the
statute was correct except as to the last paragraph of § 5421,
and that, even if, as to that paragraph, it be held that the court
below was wrong, and that the terms of the paragraph include
affidavits, documents, etc., which were merely fraudulent, and not
forged, only the fourth count would in that contingency be within
the section. This consequently confines the issue to a
consideration of the third paragraph of the section. For
convenience of reference, the entire section is in the margin.
*
Page 231 U. S. 188
Coming to the text of the third paragraph, we think it is at
once apparent that its provisions are so comprehensive as to
prevent us from holding that they include only documents which are
forged or counterfeited, and hence exclude all other documents,
however fraudulent they may be. The all-embracing words
"any deed, power of attorney, order, certificate, receipt, or
other writing in support of or in relation to any account or claim
with intent to defraud the United States, knowing the same to be
false, altered, forged, or counterfeited"
leave room for no other conclusion. The context of the section
reinforces this view, since the contrast between the narrow scope
of the first two paragraphs and the enlarged grasp of the third
shows the legislative intent, after fully providing in the first
two paragraphs for forged and counterfeited documents, instruments,
etc., to reach by the provisions of the third paragraph any and all
fraudulent documents, whether forged or not forged, and thus
efficiently to deter
Page 231 U. S. 189
from committing the wrong which it was the purpose of the
section to prohibit. It is not, however, necessary to fix the true
meaning of the provision by a resort, as an original question, to
its text, since its significance has been authoritatively
determined contrary to the construction adopted by the court below.
The section represents the first section of the Act of March 3,
1823, 3 Stat. 771, c. 38, the title of which, "An Act for the
Punishment of Frauds Committed on the government of the United
States," manifests the purpose which Congress had in mind in
enacting it. As long ago as 1850, in
United
States v. Staats, 8 How. 41, the Court was called
upon to determine whether an indictment charging the transmission
of a false (but not forged) affidavit touching a claim for pension
was sustainable under the third clause of the section. The Court
fully analyzed the statute, and while conceding that other clauses
of the act dealt with forged instruments in a technical sense,
concluded that the case was within both the letter and the spirit
of the act, and therefore that the acts charged in the indictment
constituted an offense within the provisions of the law. When,
then, the question before us is determined in the light of the text
of the third paragraph and the context of the section, especially
as elucidated by the ruling in the
Staats case, we think
it clearly results that the court below was wrong in the
construction which it gave the statute, and therefore its judgment
must be reversed. In saying this, we do not overlook the fact that,
in the argument for the defendant in error, it is insisted that,
even although it be found that the construction which the court
below gave was an erroneous one, nevertheless its judgment should
be affirmed because, from other points of view, the statute, if
rightly construed, would exclude the possibility of holding that
the facts charged in the indictment were within its terms. But,
without going into detail on this subject, we content ourselves
with saying that, in our opinion, all the propositions
Page 231 U. S. 190
relied upon to sustain this result are so obviously unsound, or
so plainly concern the construction of the indictment, as not to
call for particular notice.
Reversed.
*
"SEC. 5421. Every person who falsely makes, alters, forges, or
counterfeits, or causes or procures to be falsely made, altered,
forged, or counterfeited, or willingly aids or assists in the false
making, altering, forging, or counterfeiting, any deed, power of
attorney, order, certificate, receipt, or other writing for the
purpose of obtaining or receiving, or of enabling any other person,
either directly or indirectly, to obtain or receive from the United
States, or any of their officers or agents, any sum of money;"
"or who utters or publishes as true, or causes to be uttered or
published as true, any such false, forged, altered, or
counterfeited deed, power of attorney, order, certificate, receipt,
or other writing with intent to defraud the United States, knowing
the same to be false, altered, forged, or counterfeited;"
"or who transmits to, or presents at, or causes or procures to
be transmitted to or presented at any office or officer of the
government of the United States, any deed, power of attorney,
order, certificate, receipt, or other writing in support of or in
relation to any account or claim with intent to defraud the United
States, knowing the same to be false, altered, forged, or
counterfeited, shall be imprisoned at hard labor for a period of
not less than one year nor more than ten years, or shall be
imprisoned not more than five years, and fined not more than one
thousand dollars."