1. Defendants were convicted in the District of Columbia upon an
indictment under § 215 of the Criminal Code, charging that,
having devised there a scheme to defraud a named corporation in
manner and form set forth, they did, for the purpose of executing
the scheme, place in a designated post office in Pennsylvania, to
be sent and delivered by the post office establishment to the
addressee thereof, certain accounts enclosed in an envelope
addressed to the company at a stated address in the District of
Columbia. The indictment did not allege specifically that they
caused the letter to be delivered by mail according to the
direction thereon.
Held that, against objection first made
by motion in arrest, and upon a record not containing the evidence
or instructions, the indictment should be sustained as charging an
offense committed within that district, because of the presumption
that the letter was delivered there. Pp.
285 U. S.
429-431. .
2. Proof that a letter properly directed was placed in a post
office creates a presumption that it reached its destination in
usual time and was actually received by the person to whom it was
addressed. And the fact that receipt of the letter subjects the
person sending it to a penalty does not alter the rule. P.
285 U. S.
430.
Page 285 U. S. 428
3. The rigor of old common law rules of criminal pleading has
yielded, in modern practice, to the general principle that formal
defect, not prejudicial, will be disregarded. P.
285 U. S.
431.
4. Rev.Stats. § 1025 does not dispense with the rule which
require that the essential elements of an offense must be alleged,
but it authorize the courts to disregard merely loose or
inartificial forms of averment. Upon a proceeding after verdict, at
least, no prejudice being shown, it is enough that necessary facts
appear in any form, or by fair construction can be found within the
terms of the indictment. P.
285 U. S.
433.
60 App.D.C. 335, 54 F.2d 446, affirmed.
Certiorari, 284 U.S. 614, to review the affirmance of a
conviction for use of the post office in pursuance of a scheme to
defraud.
Page 285 U. S. 429
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners were indicted in the Supreme Court of the District
of Columbia under § 215 of the Criminal Code, U.S.C. Title 18,
§ 338, which provides:
"Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or
artifice to defraud, . . . shall, for the purpose of executing such
scheme or artifice or attempting so to do, place, or cause to be
placed, any letter, . . . in any post office, . . . to be sent or
delivered by the post office establishment of the United States, .
. . or shall knowingly cause to be delivered by mail according to
the direction thereon, . . . any such letter, . . . shall be fined
not more than $1,000, or imprisoned not more than five years, or
both."
The indictment charges that petitioners devised and intended to
devise a scheme and artifice to defraud the Merchants' Transfer
& Storage Company out of its money and property in manner and
form set forth, and that,
"for the purpose of executing said scheme and artifice, on,
to-wit, April 19, 1927, did place and cause to be placed in the
Post Office at the City of Scranton, in the State of Pennsylvania,
to be sent and delivered by the Post Office establishment of the
United States of America to the addressee thereof three certain
accounts enclosed in a certain envelope addressed to Merchants'
Transfer and Storage Company, 920 E Street, N.W. Washington,
D.C."
Petitioners were arraigned, entered pleas of not guilty, and
went to trial without challenging the sufficiency of the indictment
or the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the case.
They were found guilty by a jury, and thereupon moved in arrest of
judgment upon the ground that the indictment failed to charge any
offense within the jurisdiction of the court. The motion was
overruled, and petitioners sentenced to pay a fine and
Page 285 U. S. 430
undergo a term of imprisonment. Upon appeal, the judgment was
affirmed by the court below. 60 App.D.C. 335, 54 F.2d 446.
The contention is that the indictment charges no offense
committed in the District of Columbia, but only an offense
committed in Pennsylvania; and, assuming this to be true, that the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia was without jurisdiction.
Undoubtedly the indictment is adequate to charge an offense
committed in Pennsylvania, but the question first to be considered
is whether, upon this record and upon a motion in arrest of
judgment, the indictment may be sustained as also sufficient to
charge an offense committed within the District of Columbia. The
record brought here does not contain the evidence or any of the
trial proceedings. We have before us only the indictment, the fact
that petitioners were arraigned, entered pleas, were convicted and
sentenced, the motion in arrest of judgment, and the order of the
court overruling it, together with the formal docket entries
relating thereto.
The defect said to exist is that the indictment fails to allege
specifically that petitioners did "cause [the letter] to be
delivered by mail according to the direction thereon." Obviously,
in this particular, the indictment does not precisely follow the
terms of the statute, but it does allege that the letter was
deposited in a post office so addressed as to constitute a
direction for its delivery to the addressee at a particular place
in the District of Columbia. The rule is well settled that proof
that a letter properly directed was placed in a post office creates
a presumption that it reached its destination in usual time and was
actually received by the person to whom it was addressed.
Rosenthal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 185,
111 U. S. 193.
And the fact that receipt of the letter subjects the person sending
it to a penalty does not alter the rule.
Id., p.
111 U. S. 194.
If the indictment had alleged actual delivery of the letter in
Page 285 U. S. 431
question, the case for the government in this particular would
have been made out by proof that the letter thus directed had been
placed in the post office for transmission. The burden then would
have been cast upon petitioners to show the contrary.
While, therefore, the indictment does not in set terms allege
delivery of the letter, a presumption to that effect results from
the facts which are alleged. In
Ball v. United States,
140 U. S. 118,
140 U. S. 133,
140 U. S. 136,
it was held that an indictment for murder which fails to allege the
time of the death is fatally defective, since to constitute murder
it is necessary that death shall occur within a year and a day from
the time of the fatal stroke. But it appearing that the indictment
then under consideration had been returned less than a year from
the day of the assault, the court did not consider the objection
fatal to the indictment in his particular, notwithstanding the
absence of an allegation of the time of death.
The rigor of old common law rules of criminal pleading has
yielded, in modern practice, to the general principle that formal
defects, not prejudicial, will be disregarded. The true test of the
sufficiency of an indictment is not whether it could have been made
more definite and certain, but whether it contains the elements of
the offense intended to be charged
"and sufficiently apprises the defendant of what he must be
prepared to meet, and, in case any other proceedings are taken
against him for a similar offense, whether the record shows with
accuracy to what extent he may plead a former acquittal or
conviction."
Cochran and Sayre v. United States, 157 U.
S. 286,
157 U. S. 290;
Rosen v. United States, 161 U. S. 29,
161 U. S.
34.
Section 1025, Revised Statutes (U.S.C. title 18, § 556)
provides:
"No indictment found and presented by a grand jury in any
district or other court of the United States shall be deemed
insufficient, nor shall the trial, judgment, or
Page 285 U. S. 432
other proceeding thereon be affected by reason of any defect or
imperfection in matter of form only, which shall not tend to the
prejudice of the defendant."
This section was enacted to the end that, while the accused must
be afforded full protection, the guilty shall not escape through
mere imperfections of pleading. We refer to a few of the many cases
where the provision has been applied.
In
Grandi v. United States, 262 F. 123, 124, the
indictment charged the defendant with the receipt and possession of
goods knowing they had been stolen from part of a shipment in
interstate commerce, but failed to charge that the goods were in
fact so stolen. A motion to quash had been denied on the ground
that the defendant could not have been misled to his prejudice. The
court said:
"The charge that defendant knew the goods to have been stolen
naturally implies that the goods had been in fact stolen. The
verdict should not be reversed on account of a defect so obviously
technical and unsubstantial."
An indictment under the Espionage Act, which denounces certain
acts when the United States is at war, has been upheld
notwithstanding a failure to allege that, when the acts were
committed, the United States was at war, on the ground that the
courts would take judicial notice of that fact.
Stephens v.
United States, 261 F. 590;
Bouldin v. United States,
261 F. 674. An indictment for seditious conspiracy under § 6
of the Criminal Code must charge that the conspiracy involved an
intent to use force, but where the overt act was alleged, with the
intent of engaging in armed hostility against the United States by
attacking with force and arms, the original intent was necessarily
implied, and the indictment was sustained notwithstanding the lack
of the specific allegation, since otherwise effect, fatal to the
indictment, would be given to a mere imperfection in matter of
form, not tending to the prejudice of the defendant.
Phipps v.
United States, 251
Page 285 U. S. 433
F. 879, 880. Omission from an indictment, drawn under the
section of the Criminal Code now under consideration, of a specific
allegation that the letter was "to be sent or delivered by the post
office establishment" was not considered prejudicial where the
indictment sufficiently alleged that the letter was placed in the
post office properly addressed.
Olsen v. United States,
287 F. 85, 90.
See also Cohen v. United States, 294 F.
488, 490;
Gay v. United States, 12 F.2d 433, 434;
Musey v. United States, 37 F.2d 673, 674.
It, of course, is not the intent of § 1025 to dispense with
the rule which requires that the essential elements of an offense
must be alleged, but it authorizes the courts to disregard merely
loose or inartificial forms of averment. Upon a proceeding after
verdict, at least, no prejudice being shown, it is enough that the
necessary facts appear in any form, or by fair construction can be
found within the terms of the indictment.
In the absence of the evidence and the charge of the court, we
are free to assume that every essential element of the offense was
sufficiently proved, and that the question as to the delivery of
the letter was submitted under appropriate instructions to the
jury. The contrary of neither of these propositions is asserted.
The indictment in the particular complained of is loosely and
inartificially drawn, and is not to be commended; but, upon the
record before us, and without deciding that the indictment would
not have been open to some form of challenge at an earlier stage of
the case, we are of opinion that, after verdict, it is not
vulnerable to the attack here made upon it.
Dunbar v. United
States, 156 U. S. 185,
156 U. S. 191
et seq. Compare Pierce v. Creecy, 210 U.
S. 387,
210 U. S.
401-402;
Ex parte Pierce, 155 F. 663, 665;
United States v. Barber, 157 F. 889, 891.
In view of this conclusion, it becomes unnecessary to consider
the further question whether the trial court had
Page 285 U. S. 434
jurisdiction to try the indictment, if construed as charging the
commission of an offense only in Pennsylvania.
Judgment affirmed.