The offense of false billing and representations specified in
the third paragraph of § 10 of the Act to Regulate Commerce,
as amended June 18, 1910, c. 309, 36 Stat. 549, applies to
consignees as well
Page 240 U. S. 606
as to consignors of interstate shipments, and where, as in this
case, false representations are made by the consignee in
liquidation of the amount payable for freight at destination, the
offense is wholly or in part committed at that place and the
district court of that district has jurisdiction of an indictment
charging the offense to have been therein committed by the
consignee.
The offense under the Act of June 18, 1910, is not analogous to
that of obtaining money under false pretenses, but may be committed
where the interstate transportation has already been completed and
the amount due therefor remains to be adjusted, and with the same
effect as though the false representations had preceded the
delivery of the goods to the carrier for interstate shipment.
The facts, which involve the construction of paragraph three of
§ 10 of the Act to Regulate Commerce as amended June 18, 1910,
and the jurisdiction of the district court of offenses thereunder,
are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error under the criminal appeals act of March
2, 1907 (c. 2564, 34 Stat. 1246), to review a judgment of the
District Court for the Southern District of Florida sustaining a
demurrer to an indictment for fraudulently misrepresenting the
weights of certain shipments of lumber, in violation of the third
paragraph of § 10 of the Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended
June 18, 1910 (c. 309, 36 Stat. 549).
* The demurrer
Page 240 U. S. 607
was sustained upon the ground that the statute, as construed by
the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in
Davis v.
United States, 104 F. 136, requires the prosecution to take
place in the district where the goods are billed by the shipper,
and the delivery for transportation takes place, which in this
instance was not in the Southern District of Florida, but in
Georgia.
The indictment contains ten counts, charging as many different
offenses. They are alike in form, and a summary of the first will
suffice. It recites that the South Georgia Railway Company was a
common carrier by rail, engaged in the interstate transportation of
yellow pine lumber for hire from Baden, in the State of Georgia, to
Greenville, in the Southern District of Florida, and had filed and
published schedules and tariffs showing the rate and charge for
transportation of such lumber under six inches in thickness in
carload lots between those points to be $7 for each carload lot of
the weight of 24,000 pounds, excess in proportion; that the
schedules and tariffs further provided that, when the actual weight
of a shipment was not ascertained at point of shipment or at
destination or in transit, the freight charges should be based upon
an estimated weight of 5,000 pounds for each 1,000 feet; that the
Union Manufacturing Company was and is a corporation engaged in
shipping said property from Baden to Greenville, and J. T. Prince
was its agent,
Page 240 U. S. 608
having general charge and control of the shipments and the
payment of freight charges therefor; that, on a date specified, and
while said schedules and tariffs were in effect, said railway
company transported from Baden to Greenville for the manufacturing
company a specified carload of yellow pine lumber under sic inches
in thickness, and delivered it at Greenville to the manufacturing
company; that the actual weight of said carload lot was not
ascertained at Baden, or at Greenville, or in transit; that the
manufacturing company thereafter unloaded the lumber from the car
and ascertained the number of feet thereof, and that the said
company, and Prince, acting as its agent, well knowing the number
of feet to be 9,074, then and there falsely and fraudulently
represented to the railway company that the number of feet was
7,200, in consequence of which the railway company charged and the
Union Lumber Company paid for the transportation of said lumber
less than the lawful charge provided in the schedules and tariffs,
and at a less rate than the lawfully established rate.
In our opinion, the court below misapplied the decision in
Davis v. United States, supra. In that case, which arose
under the act as it stood before the amendment of 1910 (March 2,
1889, c. 382, 25 Stat. 855, 1 Supp.Rev.Stat. 687), the
circumstances were very different from those now presented. The
acts charged were misrepresentations by false billing and
classification of certain property delivered by defendants to the
railway company at Cincinnati, Ohio, for transportation thence to
Dallas, Texas. The contract of carriage was made at Cincinnati,
where defendants resided and carried on business, and the bill of
exceptions showed that everything connected with the shipment of
the goods except the carriage and delivery took place in
Cincinnati. The court said (p. 139):
"We think that false billing or other misrepresentation of the
goods, as stated in the act, which
Page 240 U. S. 609
results in their being received by the carrier under a contract
of carriage thus fraudulently obtained is the obtaining of
transportation within the meaning of the statute. Then the
fraudulent conduct of the shipper has borne its fruit, and every
act and intent which constitutes the offense is complete."
It was accordingly held that the offense was indictable in the
Southern District of Ohio, and not in the Northern District of
Texas, within which was the destination of the goods. We are not
called upon to either concede or question the propriety of this
decision upon the facts that were there presented. General
expressions contained in the opinion are, of course, to be
interpreted in the light of those facts. Another case of the same
kind is
In re Belknap, 96 F. 614. These cases are not in
point with the present. In each of them, the fraud was that of the
consignor. Here, it is the consignee and its agent against whom
fraud is charged. (The fact that the consignee was also the
consignor is of no significance, since the fraud alleged was in
what it did as consignee.) There, the fraud inhered in the making
of the contract of carriage; here it had to do with the liquidation
of the amount payable for freight at destination.
The act, by its very terms, applies to consignees as well as to
consignors. But, as it applies only to interstate transportation,
the consignee is normally a resident of a different state, and
therefore of a different district, from that where the goods are
billed by the shipper and the delivery for transportation takes
place. To say, therefore, that the act contemplates an indictment
only in the district where the goods are billed by the shipper is
in effect to say that, in most cases, the consignee either may not
be indicted at all or else must be indicted in a district of which
he is not a resident, and which in many instances he may never have
visited. We hold that the offenses charged in this indictment were
"wholly or in
Page 240 U. S. 610
part committed" in the Southern District of Florida.
See
United States v. Freeman, 239 U. S. 117.
It is insisted in behalf of defendants in error that, since the
indictment shows that the transportation had been completed and the
lumber delivered to the consignee before the alleged fraudulent
representations were made, it cannot be said that the fraud charged
amounted to either
obtaining or attempting to obtain
transportation for the property at less than the established
rates. If the statute on which the indictment is based were
analogous to the familiar acts rendering criminal the obtaining of
money or other property by false pretenses, the argument would be
cogent. Under such statutes, it is commonly if not universally held
to be essential to criminality that the false pretense shall
precede the obtaining of the property.
People v. Haynes,
14 Wend. 546, 563-564,
rev'g 11 Wend. 557;
State v.
Church, 43 Conn. 471, 479;
State v. Moore, 111 N.C.
667, 674;
State v. Willard, 109 Mo. 242, 247;
Watson
v. People, 27 Ill.App. 493, 496.
The statutory provision with which we are dealing has a very
different purpose. It is not designed especially to protect the
property rights of the carrier, for the offense is made equally
punishable whether committed with or without the consent or
connivance of the carrier. It originated in the 1889 amendment to
the Act to Regulate Commerce (c. 382, 25 Stat. 855, 858, 1
Supp.Rev.Stat. 684, 687), and is but one of many provisions enacted
by Congress with the object of preventing discriminations and
favoritism as between shippers by requiring the publication of
tariffs and prohibiting any departure from them. The prohibitions
of the original Act of February 4, 1887 (c. 104, §§ 2, 3,
6, 10, 24 Stat. 379, 1 Supp.Rev.Stat. 529), were addressed to the
carrier alone. The 1889 amendment brought shipper and consignee
within the scope of the law, both by enacting that false billing,
etc., should be punishable criminally
Page 240 U. S. 611
and by providing similar punishment for inducing discriminations
by the payment of money or other thing of value, solicitation, or
otherwise. The 1910 amendment (c. 309, § 10, 36 Stat. 539,
549) extended the range of the prohibition to certain other
fraudulent practices by consignors and consignees committed for
like purposes.
In denouncing as criminal
"false billing, false classification, false weighing, false
representation of the contents of the package or the substance of
the property, false report of weight, false statement, or other
device or means"
employed in order to "obtain or attempt to obtain transportation
for such property at less than the regular rates then established,"
the lawmaker regarded not merely the physical transportation of the
property, but the entire transaction through which consignor or
consignee might seek to evade the policy of the act to subject all
interstate shipments to uniform rates of charge prescribed in
published tariffs. In a case where for any reason the payment of
the freight is not made prior to the delivery of the goods to the
consignee, but remains to be afterwards adjusted, the effort to
obtain an advantage not permitted by the schedules may still be
exerted through fraudulent representations influencing the
adjustment of the freight, with precisely the same effect as if the
representations had preceded delivery of the goods. When this is
accomplished, there is a fraudulent obtaining of transportation at
less than the established rate within the meaning of the
prohibition. Thus, it needs only that we interpret the statute
according to the plain meaning of the terms employed, in the light
of subject matter and context, in order to conclude, as we do, that
the acts set forth in this indictment are punishable criminally
under the act.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the
cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.
*
"Any person, corporation, or company, or any agent or officer
thereof, who shall deliver property for transportation to any
common carrier subject to the provisions of this act, or for whom,
as consignor or consignee, any such carrier shall transport
property, who shall knowingly and willfully, directly or
indirectly, himself or by employee, agent, officer, or otherwise,
by false billing, false classification, false weighing, false
representation of the contents of the package or the substance of
the property, false report of weight, false statement, or by any
other device or means, whether with or without the consent or
connivance of the carrier, its agent, or officer, obtain or attempt
to obtain transportation for such property at less than the regular
rates then established and in force on the line of transportation .
. . shall be deemed guilty of fraud, which is hereby declared to be
a misdemeanor, and shall, upon conviction thereof in any court of
the United States of competent jurisdiction within the district in
which such offense was wholly or in part committed, be subject for
each offense to a fine,"
etc.