1. Under the Act of September 24, 1917, amended September 24,
1918, cc. 56, 176, 40 Stat. 291, 966, authorizing the Secretary of
the Treasury to borrow money and to issue therefor at such price or
prices and upon such terms and conditions as he might determine,
war savings certificates in amounts of not more than $100 to any
one person at any one time, and of which no one person at any one
time should hold more than $1,000, and further providing that the
Secretary might issue stamps, under such regulations and upon such
terms and conditions as he might prescribe, to evidence payments
for or on account of the certificates, the Secretary was empowered
to issue nontransferable certificates valid only when bearing one
or more such stamps and when endorsed with the name of its owner.
Pp.
257 U. S. 39,
257 U. S.
41.
2. War savings certificates and war savings certificate stamps,
issued pursuant to the act and the regulations, are obligations of
the United States within the meaning of §§ 148 and 151 of
the Criminal Code. P.
257 U. S.
40.
3. One who tears war savings certificate stamps from a war
savings certificate issued to another, with intent to use them
apart from the certificate bearing the purchaser's name, alters the
obligation with intent to defraud (the United States) in the sense
of Criminal Code § 148, since the purposes of the Act of
September 24, 1917,
supra, and the conditions provided to
insure them, will thus be fraudulently defeated. P.
257 U. S. 42.
4. Possession of part of such certificate and attached stamps,
with intent to defraud the United States as above, is a violation
of Criminal Code § 151. P.
257 U. S. 42.
Reversed.
Page 257 U. S. 38
Writ of error under the Criminal Appeals Act to review a
judgment quashing an indictment.
See post,
257 U. S. 42.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents for consideration an indictment in three
counts for the violation, respectively, of §§ 148 and 151
of the Criminal Code of the United States, as dependent upon the
construction of an act of Congress to which we shall refer.
The first two counts charge that Sacks did,
"with intent to defraud, altered an obligation of the United
States, to-wit, a war savings certificate of the United States of
the series of 1918, in that he did tear from the face of said war
savings certificate two war savings certificate stamps of the
United States of the series of 1918, thereto attached."
The third count charges Sacks with having in his possession with
intent to defraud the United States, and with intent to pass and
sell the same, an altered obligation of the United States, to-wit,
a portion of a war savings certificate of the United States of the
series of 1918, with three war savings certificate stamps thereto
attached, in that the portion which he had and kept in his
possession had been torn from a whole war savings certificate.
The indictment is illustrated by having examples of the
certificates attached. They certify, subject to the terms and
conditions expressed thereon, that the owner will be entitled to
receive January 1, 1923, in respect to each
Page 257 U. S. 39
stamp of the series of 1918 then affixed thereto, the amount
indicated thereon as then payable, or at his option, will be
entitled to receive at an earlier date a lesser amount indicated by
a table thereon.
Among the terms and conditions are the following:
"(1) This certificate is not a valid obligation unless a United
States war savings certificate stamp of the series of 1918 is
affixed hereto. (2) This certificate is of no value except to the
owner named hereon, and is not transferable. (3) Not more than 20
United States war savings certificate stamps, and only such stamps
of the series of 1918, may be affixed hereto. . . . (6) The law
provides that no one person shall at any one time hold war savings
certificates to an aggregate amount exceeding one thousand
dollars."
The names of the owners are indorsed on the certificates, and
their addresses.
The indictment was quashed on Sack's motion on the ground,
recited in the judgment, that the indictment was not
"authorized under any construction of the act of Congress upon
which it is alleged to be predicated, to-wit, the Act of Congress
of September 24, 1917, and § 6, and as amended by the Act of
Congress of September 24, 1918, § 2 thereof and §§
148 and 151 of the Criminal Code of the United States, or under the
construction of any other statute of the United States now in
force."
The judgment and the action of the court are assigned as error.
The construction of the sections of the Criminal Code and the act
of Congress referred to is necessarily involved: Section 148 makes
an offender "whoever, with intent to defraud, shall falsely make,
forge, counterfeit, or alter any obligation or other security of
the United States; . . ." § 151 makes an offender "whoever,
with intent to defraud, shall pass, utter, publish, or sell" or
attempt to do either act,
"or shall keep in
Page 257 U. S. 40
possession or concealed with like intent any falsely made, . . .
counterfeited, or altered obligation or other security of the
United States. . . ."
Section 147 of the Criminal Code defines obligations and
securities of the United States to be evidences of indebtedness,
and adds to a specific enumeration the comprehensive words "stamps
and other representatives of value, of whatever denomination, which
have been or may be issued under any act of Congress."
Section 154 makes dealing in the false and counterfeited
obligations of either section an offense.
The Act of Congress of September 24, 1917, authorizes the
Secretary of the Treasury to borrow from time to time on the credit
of the United States such sum or sums as in his judgment may be
necessary, and to issue therefor at such price or prices, and upon
such terms and conditions as he may determine, war savings
certificates of the United States on which interest to maturity may
be discounted in advance at such rate or rates and computed in such
manner as he may prescribe. Further detail of the act is not
necessary except to say that the amount of certificates sold to any
one person at any one time shall not exceed $100, nor shall any one
person at any one time hold more than $1,000. And it is provided
that the Secretary of the Treasury may upon such terms and
regulations as he may prescribe, issue or cause to be issued stamps
to evidence payment for or on account of such certificates.
It will be observed from this statement of the provisions of the
law that, to sustain the indictment, there must be the fact of an
alteration of an obligation of the United States, or having in
possession an altered obligation with intent to pass and sell the
same. It is contended by Sacks that such was not the condition. and
to sustain the contention. two propositions are urged: (1) that
neithre the certificate nor the stamps was an obligation
Page 257 U. S. 41
of the United States; (2) that the removal of the stamps was the
destruction of the certificate, not its alteration. The purpose of
§ 148, it is contended, is to prevent the utterance and
passing of spurious instruments and the alteration of genuine ones,
either by changing their form or increasing or decreasing their
obligation. In development and illustration of the contention, it
is asserted that the government received full value for the stamps,
and its liability thereon was fixed when the stamps came into
Sacks' possession, and continued the same no matter how many times
the stamps changed hands. "The owner of the stamp could affix it to
or remove it from the card [certificate] without changing the
obligation of the United States." And further,
"the definition to be given the word 'alteration' is no
different in the case of a government obligation than the
alteration of a private obligation. If the alteration does not
prejudice the rights of the obligor, the act of alteration will not
constitute a crime."
Cases are cited in support of the contentions.
The contentions are based on a misapprehension of the act
providing for the certificates and the necessary relation of the
sections of the Criminal Code to the purposes of that act. Whether
the certificates or the stamps be considered individual or
composite obligations of the United States, necessarily the
alteration of both or either is within § 148 of the Criminal
Code. Their purpose is defeated, and perhaps perverted, by
alteration. They are but instruments of the law, and the law is to
be considered. It provided an opportunity of investment for persons
of small means, and the power to prescribe ways adequate to the
purpose was given to the Secretary of the Treasury. In other words,
details of execution were committed to him, with power to give to
the certificates and the stamps such character, quality, and legal
effect that he should consider to be efficient. And, exercising the
power, he included
Page 257 U. S. 42
as a condition to the validity of the certificate as an
obligation of the United States the affixing of a stamp thereto,
and that not more than 20 stamps of the series of 1918 might be
affixed, and that no one person could at any one time hold
certificates of an aggregate amount exceeding $1,000.
These conditions were defeated, and intended to be defeated, by
the action of Sacks in tearing from the face of the certificate two
stamps. Such action constituted an alteration of the certificate
and the stamps with intent to use the same without the remainder of
the certificate signed by the purchaser, and thus to defraud the
United States by defeating the purposes of the law of September 24,
1917, and the circulars of the Secretary of the Treasury empowered
to be issued under that law, and the terms and conditions indorsed
on the certificate, and the court's decision to the contrary was a
misconstruction of the Act of September 24.
There therefore was a violation of § 151 as charged in the
third count of the indictment, Sacks having in his possession, with
intent to defraud the United States, an altered obligation of the
United States.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings
in conformity with this opinion.