1. Section 150 of the Criminal Code provides that
"whoever shall have or retain in his control or possession after
a distinctive paper has been adopted by the Secretary of the
Treasury for the obligations and other securities of the United
States, any similar paper adapted to the making of any such
obligation or other security, except under the authority of the
Secretary of the Treasury or some other proper officer of the
United States, shall be fined . . . ,"
etc.
Held, the words "similar paper adapted to the
making of any such obligation" embrace paper similar to, though not
identical with, the adopted distinctive paper and which is adapted
to the making of counterfeits of government obligations. Pp.
302 U. S. 545,
302 U. S.
551.
2. Possession by an unauthorized person of paper of practically
the same color, weight, thickness, and appearance of the
distinctive paper theretofore adopted by the Secretary of the
Treasury for obligations and securities of the United States, and
which was cut to the dimensions of genuine twenty dollar notes and
rattled like
Page 302 U. S. 541
genuine money, and upon the surface of which were designed red
and blue marks closely resembling the red and blue fibers embedded
in the distinctive paper,
held a violation of the Act. Pp.
302 U. S. 542,
302 U. S.
552.
3. There is nothing in the legislative history of § 150 of
the Criminal Code which requires that the words "similar paper
adapted to the making of any such obligation" be construed as
applying only to the distinctive paper adopted by the Government,
or to paper identical therewith. P.
302 U. S.
546.
4. A construction of a statute which results in an inconsistency
is not favored. P.
302 U. S.
547.
5. The construction here given § 150 of the Criminal Code
is not inconsistent with a grant of authority to certain officials
to permit possession of otherwise illicit paper. P.
302 U. S.
551.
6. The decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in
Krakowski
v. United States, 161 F. 88, holding that the Act prohibited
possession of the distinctive paper only, is unsound, and the fact
that Congress subsequently revised and codified the criminal laws
without change in this particular does not require that that
decision be followed. P.
302 U. S.
552.
7. One decision construing a statute cannot be regarded as a
well settled interpretation. P.
302 U. S.
552.
8. Penal statutes need not be given their narrowest meaning, but
may be given their fair meaning in accord with the evident
legislative intent. P.
302 U. S.
552.
89 F.2d 469 reversed.
Certiorari,
post, p. 667, to review judgments reversing
judgments sentencing two defendants after conviction upon an
indictment for an offense against the currency.
Page 302 U. S. 542
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondents were convicted in a federal District Court for
violating a provision of § 150 of the Criminal Code, [
Footnote 1] which reads:
"whoever shall have or retain in his control or possession,
after a distinctive paper has been adopted by the Secretary of the
Treasury for the obligations and other securities of the United
States, any similar paper adapted to the making of any such
obligation or other security, except under the authority of the
Secretary of the Treasury or some other proper officer of the
United States, shall be fined not more than $5,000, or imprisoned
not more than fifteen years, or both."
The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, [
Footnote 2] holding that the act did not prohibit the
possession of any except the distinctive paper adopted by the
Treasury, and that other paper was not prohibited, even though it
closely resembled the distinctive paper and was well suited for
successful counterfeiting. The court accordingly believed that the
evidence did not support a conviction.
The evidence disclosed that:
In 1928, the Secretary of the Treasury adopted a distinctive
paper for obligations and securities of the United States; this
paper was a high grade rag bond having a sharp rattle, very little
gloss, and short fine silk fibers distributed throughout; in 1936,
respondents had possession of paper of practically the same color,
weight, thickness, and appearance as this distinctive government
paper, and cut to the dimensions of $20 government obligations;
respondents' paper rattled like genuine money; it did not have red
and blue silk fibers throughout, but red and blue marks were so
expertly designed upon its surface that one judge, dissenting
below, after
Page 302 U. S. 543
a careful examination of these marks with a magnifying glass,
was still wholly uncertain whether they were actually woven in the
fabric or were traced on the surface.
Did respondents' possession of this paper violate the act?
The paper was not only perfectly adapted for counterfeiting, but
it is difficult to conceive of its use for any other purpose. The
history and language of the act are both of importance in
determining whether Congress intended to make it a crime to
possess, without authority, so close an imitation of the genuine
paper adopted by the Treasury.
1. The history of the law under which respondents were convicted
dates from a special session of Congress in 1837. That Congress was
called upon to pass legislation to meet emergency conditions
following crop failures, general business distress, unemployment,
and discontent. Urged to action by these conditions, Congress
authorized the issue of a then unprecedented amount of Treasury
notes. It had long been a criminal offense to make, utter, or pass
counterfeit money. Realizing that the protection of the currency
required more stringent laws against counterfeiters, [
Footnote 3] Congress made it a crime to
possess any plate, blank note, or paper to be used for
counterfeiting purposes. [
Footnote
4]
Page 302 U. S. 544
This early forerunner of the present act provided in part:
"If any person . . . shall have in his custody or possession
any paper adapted to the making of notes, and similar to the
paper upon which any such notes shall have been issued, with
intent to use such paper . . . in forging or counterfeiting any of
the notes issued as aforesaid . . . , such person . . . shall be
sentenced,"
etc.
This original provision prohibited the possession of "similar"
paper adapted to making "bank notes," but such "bank notes"
obviously were to be forged or counterfeit, not genuine. This first
act thus prohibited not the genuine, but counterfeit, paper,
intended to be made into counterfeit obligations, and its language
and meaning were substantially reenacted in 1847, 1857, 1860, 1861,
and 1862. [
Footnote 5]
Beginning December, 1860, Congress, to meet imperative needs,
again authorized great increases in government obligations. By
July, 1862, new issues of currency and unsettled conditions had so
stimulated counterfeiting that Congress made special funds
available to detect and punish those guilty of the crime. [
Footnote 6] Such action proved
inadequate to curb counterfeiters, and, in 1863, Congress
reenacted, strengthened, and strongly reinforced the 1837
prohibition against possession of paper for counterfeiting.
[
Footnote 7] The 1863 law made
it a crime to "imitate, counterfeit, make, or sell any paper such
as that used, or provided to be used, for the fractional notes."
Although the law had prohibited the possession of paper imitating
the genuine
Page 302 U. S. 545
since 1837, this 1863 amendment struck vigorously at all who in
any manner trafficked in such imitation paper.
By July, 1864, the government had outstanding approximately two
billion dollars in war obligations, and the counterfeiter had
become a still greater public enemy. Under these circumstances,
with more currency to be issued, and the necessity for protection
from counterfeiters greatly accentuated, Congress once more
reenacted the 1837 act, [
Footnote
8] and made it a more effective weapon against counterfeiters.
[
Footnote 9] The element of
intent was stricken from the offense, and the mere unauthorized
possession of imitation paper was made a crime. Congress also
combined the phrase "paper adapted to the making of bank notes"
with the phrase "similar to the paper upon which any such notes
shall have been issued." It is the phrase resulting from this
combination, "
similar paper adapted to
Page 302 U. S. 546
making such obligations," which was construed by the
court below to limit the prohibited paper to the genuine
Treasury-adopted paper. These phrases, carried in the law from 1837
to 1864, had obviously referred to any paper suitable for
counterfeiting. If the Congress of 1864 did intend, by combining
these phrases, to exempt from the act all who had possession of
imitation paper, it thereby deliberately weakened the chance of the
government to convict and punish counterfeiters. We do not impute
such a purpose to Congress. By the change made in 1864, Congress
undoubtedly intended to make the law a more effective weapon
against counterfeiters. Indeed, two days after this amendment was
passed, Congress authorized a special appropriation to detect and
punish counterfeiters. [
Footnote
10] It is beyond belief that Congress intended to relax the law
against counterfeiters at a time when the nation was engaged in
financing a war. Such a construction would be neither logical nor
reasonable. The section now under consideration is plainly the
culmination of a long series of legislative acts, each of which has
declared it to be a crime to have possession of paper,
counterfeiting the distinctive paper, and suitable to be made into
counterfeit obligations. Each change since 1837 was intended to
make the possession of counterfeit paper more dangerous for
counterfeiters.
Finding nothing in the history of this law which supports the
construction given it by the court below, we proceed to an
examination and analysis of the particular language believed to
justify that construction.
2. That particular language is the phrase "
similar paper
adapted to making such obligations." The word "similar" and
the phrase "adapted to making such obligations
Page 302 U. S. 547
or securities" both describe the type of paper the possession of
which is prohibited. The definitions given by the court below to
this word and this phrase are irreconcilable.
That court defined "similar" to mean "somewhat alike," "not
exactly alike," "like, but not exactly the same." "Similar paper,"
thus defined, cannot be identical with the distinctive paper
adopted by the government, because, while the two papers would be
"somewhat alike," they would not be "exactly alike" or "exactly the
same." Similarity is not identity, but resemblance between
different things. [
Footnote
11] Under this definition, "similar paper," the possession of
which is prohibited, is not identical with, but differs from, the
distinctive paper.
However, after giving this definition to similar paper (which is
prohibited by the act), the court below concluded that the phrase
"adapted to making such obligations" limits the prohibition of the
act to the distinctive paper. This conclusion is not consistent
with the determination that "similar," also describing the paper
prohibited, designates paper which is different from the
distinctive paper. A construction that creates an inconsistency
should be avoided when a reasonable interpretation can be adopted
which will not do violence to the plain words of the act and will
carry out the intention of Congress. [
Footnote 12]
There is no inconsistency in the act unless it is assumed that
the word "obligations" refers to genuine obligations only. Since
words that have one meaning in a particular context frequently have
a different significance in
Page 302 U. S. 548
another, [
Footnote 13] it
is necessary to consider the context of the words "such
obligations" in order to determine their significance. The
provision of law here construed is the last of seven separate
offenses set out in one paragraph of a chapter of the Criminal Code
entitled "Offenses against the Currency." The provisions of this
chapter were enacted to prevent and to punish counterfeiting. Six
closely connected companion offenses are set out in the same
section with the offense charged against respondents, and all
either penalize the possession of, or trafficking in, counterfeit
obligations of the materials and devices used to make such
obligations.
Examining the context of the words under consideration, we find
that the word "obligations" appears throughout the chapter relating
to offenses against the currency, and does not always apply to
"genuine" obligations, but may, and often does, refer to
"counterfeit" or "spurious" obligations. In order to distinguish
between counterfeit and genuine instruments, the provisions in some
instances specifically designate notes as "false, forged, or
counterfeited," as in § 149. On the other hand, § 152
makes it a crime for any person, without authority, to make tools
to be used in printing "any kind or description of
obligation
or other security of the United States now authorized or hereafter
to be authorized by the United States." Although these quoted words
are "any kind . . . of obligation . . . authorized by the United
States," the reference is not to genuine obligations, but to
counterfeit obligations, not only printed "without authority," but
printed with counterfeit tools made by the counterfeiter. It is
apparent from the context that, in this instance, the phrase
"obligation . . . authorized by the United States" refers to a
counterfeit
Page 302 U. S. 549
obligation. Both before and since the 1837 act, words such as
"bills," "notes," and "obligations" have been used as meaning
counterfeit instruments. [
Footnote 14]
The relative positions of the words we are examining are
important. The first word describing the prohibited paper is
"similar." Unless the paper possessed is "similar" to the
distinctive paper of the government, its possession is not
prohibited. Genuine obligations can only be made from the genuine
distinctive paper, with a genuine design; with genuine
lithographing, and with genuine signatures. Conversely, counterfeit
obligations would be the result of designs, lithographing,
signatures or paper -- not genuine,
Page 302 U. S. 550
but merely "similar" to the genuine. When, therefore, Congress
used the words "similar paper," it included within its prohibition
an imitation or counterfeit of the genuine paper. The effect was
the same as though it had prohibited possession of a government
obligation bearing a signature "similar" to the signature of the
Secretary of the Treasury. After the appearance of the word
"similar," subsequent words descriptive of the prohibited paper
require a construction that will give effect to the congressional
intent to prohibit the possession of paper which is an imitation or
counterfeit of that adopted by the government.
In
United States v.
Howell, 11 Wall. 432, this Court construed a
similar statute which, so far as pertinent, provided:
"That if any person . . . shall falsely make, forge,
counterfeit, or alter, . . . any note . . . issued under the
authority of this act, or heretofore issued under acts to authorize
the issue of Treasury notes or bonds, . . . or shall have or keep
in possession . . . any such false, forged, counterfeited, or
altered note . . . , [such person] shall be . . . guilty of
felony,"
etc.
The defendant indicted under that statute urged that the words
"such . . . note" referred back to those notes
Page 302 U. S. 551
that had been "issued under the authority of this act;" that
notes issued under authority of the act were genuine; that the act
therefore did not prohibit passing or possessing a counterfeit
note.
This Court gave credit for the plausibility of such an argument,
but said it was:
"at war with the common sense, which assures us that the purpose
of the act was to punish the making of counterfeits of the notes
and bonds described in the statute. . . . We are to give due weight
to all the words employed in describing the instrument. . . . So we
speak of a bank note. Now if the paper spoken of is a forgery, it
is not a bank note, which means an obligation of some bank to pay
money. But, here also, the mind supplies the ellipsis which good
usage allows, and understands that what is meant is a forged paper
in the similitude of a bank note, or which on its face appears to
be such a note."
P.
78 U. S.
436.
So, in this case, paper which was in the possession of an
unauthorized person, and which was merely similar to genuine
government paper, could not possibly be adapted to making genuine
government obligations. In this statute, the words "similar paper
adapted to making government obligations" imply that the similar
paper should be adapted to making obligations that purport to be
genuine and valid, but are not.
This construction is not inconsistent with a grant of authority
to certain officials to permit possession of the prohibited paper.
In this same chapter containing laws to protect the currency of the
United States, there are other similar grants of authority relating
to counterfeiting devices, and permission can also be granted to
possess the actual counterfeiting instruments or obligations.
The fact that Congress revised and codified the criminal laws
after the Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of
Krakowski v.
United States, 161 F. 88, held that the act only
Page 302 U. S. 552
prohibited possession of the distinctive paper does not detract
from the soundness of this conclusion. One decision construing an
act does not approach the dignity of a well settled interpretation.
[
Footnote 15] It is not
necessary to determine the effect of including this act in the
Revised Statutes and the Criminal Code.
We are not unmindful of the salutary rule which requires strict
construction of penal statutes. No rule of construction, however,
requires that a penal statute be strained and distorted in order to
exclude conduct clearly intended to be within its scope, nor does
any rule require that the act be given the "narrowest meaning." It
is sufficient if the words are given their fair meaning in accord
with the evident intent of Congress. [
Footnote 16] Certainly, if Congress had intended to
prohibit only the possession of distinctive paper, it would have
simply used the words "distinctive paper" instead of the
distinguishing words "similar paper adapted to making such
obligations."
The evidence does support the conviction of respondents. The
judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed, and the
judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Reversed.
* Together with No. 147,
United States v. Fowler, also
on writ of certiorari to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit.
[
Footnote 1]
18 U.S.C. § 264, 35 Stat. 1116.
[
Footnote 2]
89 F.2d 469.
[
Footnote 3]
Counterfeiting increases in periods of commercial distress,
unemployment, and poverty. Even prior to 1837, poverty contributed
to offenses against the currency,
see In re Halmagh
Ackerman, 5 N.Y.City Hall Rec. 140, and counterfeiters kept
paper in their possession which was used for making counterfeit
obligation,
Re Guy Johnson and William Johnson al. William
Price, John Strickland and Edward O'Melly, 5 N.Y.City Hall
Rec. 138. In 1837, the prospect of increased counterfeiting -- due
to distressed economic conditions and the fact that nonfederal
agencies, both public and private, had already put a large amount
of paper in circulation -- indicated the need recognized by
Congress in strengthening the law.
See Dewey, "Financial
History of the United States," Longmans, Green & Co. (N.Y.)
1915, p. 233.
See Knox, "United States Notes," Scribner's
(N.Y.) 1899, p. 40
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
Act of October 12, 1837, c. 2, §§ 10, 11, 5 Stat. 201,
203.
[
Footnote 5]
Act of January 28, 1847, c. 5, §§ 9, 10, 9 Stat. 118,
120; Act of December 23, 1857, c. 1, §§ 12, 13, 11 Stat.
257, 259; Act of December 17, 1860, c. 1, §§ 12, 13, 12
Stat. 121, 123; Act of July 17, 1861, c. 5, § 10, 12 Stat.
259, 261; Act of February 25, 1862, c. 33, §§ 6, 7, 12
Stat. 345, 347, 348.
[
Footnote 6]
Act of July 11, 1862, c. 142, § 5, 12 Stat. 532, 533.
[
Footnote 7]
Act of March 3, 1863, c. 73, § 8, 12 Stat. 709, 713.
[
Footnote 8]
Act of June 30, 1864, c. 172, §§ 10, 11, 12, 13 Stat.
218, 221, 222.
[
Footnote 9]
In the period preceding this enactment, there was again a marked
increase in counterfeiting.
"There is reported to be in circulation throughout the United
States at the present time over three thousand issues of
counterfeit, spurious, raised, and altered bank bills -- an average
of two issues to every bank in operation. Supposing each issue
would average one thousand bills, which is a moderate calculation,
there would be three million counterfeit bills in circulation, and
the cry is, still they come."
Reedy, "The Universal Bank Note, Draft, and Check Detector," New
Orleans, 1858, p. 15. This growth resulted in alarming injury to
the currency. "Annual Report, Assn. of Banks for the Suppression of
Counterfeiting," Boston, 1859. After 1860, counterfeiting increased
steadily.
Id., 1860;
id., 1862. "Specie payments
were suspended on December 28, 1861. The war was carried on chiefly
by the use of Treasury notes as a circulating medium." Knox,
supra, p. 84.
See Hepburn, "A History of Currency
in the United States." Mac-Millan (N.Y.) 1915, pp. 179-204.
However, by October, 1862, it was reported that counterfeiting was
widespread in America, and uneasiness was being felt among
Americans about the genuineness of the treasury and other notes
issued by the United States. "The Bankers Magazine," London, Vol.
XXII, p. 615 (1862). Improved means of preventing counterfeiting in
order to maintain public faith in the currency became of great
importance.
[
Footnote 10]
Act of July 2, 1864, c. 210, § 3, 13 Stat. 351.
[
Footnote 11]
Greenleaf v. Goodrich, 101 U.
S. 278,
101 U. S.
282-283.
See Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v.
Olney, 16 R.I. 184, 13 A. 118.
[
Footnote 12]
New Lamp Chimney Co. v. Ansonia Brass & Copper Co.,
91 U. S. 656.
[
Footnote 13]
Porto Rico Sugar Co. v. Lorenzo, 222 U.
S. 481;
Lamar v. United States, 240 U. S.
60;
Atlantic Cleaners & Dyers v. United
States, 286 U. S. 427.
[
Footnote 14]
As illustrative, the following extracts from cases involving
offenses against the currency refer to false or counterfeit
instruments:
"When a man has the possession of the number of notes alleged in
the indictment, with an intention of uttering and passing them for
the fraudulent purpose expressed, he has done all that, in words,
is necessary to constitute the offence."
Commonwealth v. Sylvanus Cone, 2 Mass. 132, at 134.
"Without mentioning any other differences, it is sufficient to
observe, that to constitute the crime described in the former, the
possession of
at least ten bills is necessary. . . ."
Murry Brown v. Commonwealth, 8 Mass. 59 at 71. "Bowdain
Brastow was indicted and tried for passing a
$10 bill of the
Merchants' Bank. . . ."
In re Halmagh Ackerman,
supra, 5 N.Y.City Hall Rec. 140.
"In the same place, they found a copper-plate press, a plate for
engraving
$2 bills on the Merchants' Bank, and under the
roller of the press, a bill of that description recently struck
off."
Re Guy Johnson and William Johnson al. William Price, John
Strickland and Edward O'Melly, supra, 5 N.Y.City Hall Rec.
138.
Cf. State v. Randall, 2 Aikens 89 (
cf. Baldwin v.
Van Deusen, where it is stated: "In reference to bank-bills,
bills of exchange, promissory notes and securities for money, the
natural and general, if not the universal, antithesis or opposite
of genuine, is
counterfeit.' Hence, we say of a bank bill it is
a genuine bill -- i.e., not a counterfeit bill."
37 N.Y. 487, at p.493). See Wiggains v. United States, 214
F. 970, at p. 971; "The bonds admittedly belonged to the
plaintiff in error." Forlini v. United States, 12 F.2d
631, at p.634.
"Appellant visited the basement while counterfeiting operations
were in progress, and participated in conversations as to the
appearance of the bills that were being made and the necessity of
putting more yellow in the coloring."
Nibbelink v. United States, 66 F.2d 178.
"One
bill was found in his clothes, and he volunteered
to show the officers where the rest were. . . . The sole issue was
as to whether, after Hatlen showed him the
bills, he
cooperated with him in disposing of them."
United States v. Gates, 67 F.2d 885. "The
obligations were described as United States notes and
identified by denomination, series number, and plate numbers."
Simon v. United States, 78 F.2d 454, at p. 455. The word
"banknote" may mean not a genuine, but a counterfeit, obligation.
Webster's New International Dictionary, Merriam, 1914, in defining
the word "counterfeit," uses as an illustration, "The banknote was
a
counterfeit."
[
Footnote 15]
For prosecutions under the act subsequent to the
Krakowski case,
supra, see the following cases:
United States v. Rosen (W.D.Tex.), February 14, 1931;
United States v. Regsich and Grubich (W.D.Pa.), December
16, 1920;
United States v. Marchetti (N.D.Ohio), June 18,
1924;
United States v. Maratea and Plocket (E.D.Pa.),
January 21, 1932.
[
Footnote 16]
United States v. Giles, 300 U. S.
41.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND, dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS, MR. JUSTICE BUTLER, and I have reached a
different conclusion.
The judicial function, as many times we have been told, does not
include the power to amend a statute. And
Page 302 U. S. 553
while penal statutes are not to be construed so strictly as to
defeat the obvious intention of the lawmaker, nevertheless,
"[b]efore one may be punished, it must appear that his case is
plainly within the statute; there are no constructive offenses."
United States v. Resnick, 299 U.
S. 207,
299 U. S.
210.
We think the opinion just handed down undertakes to import a
meaning into the pertinent statute at war with its words. That
statute requires the existence of four distinct elements before the
accused can be held guilty of violating it: (1) the adoption by the
Secretary of a distinctive paper for the obligation and other
securities of the United States; (2) possession or retention by the
accused of "similar paper;"(3) the paper to be "adapted to the
making of any such obligation or other security;" and (4) the
possession or retention not to be under the authority of the
Secretary of the Treasury or some other proper officer of the
United States.
The word "similar," it is true, generally indicates resemblance,
and not exact identity, although in some cases it may mean
"identical" or "exactly like."
Fletcher v. Interstate Chemical
Co., 94 N.J.L. 332, 334, 110 A. 709. The distinction is
illustrated by the decision of the Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts in
Commonwealth v. Fontain, 127 Mass. 452,
454, where it was held that the words "similar offense" meant an
offense identical in kind. The court said,
"The word 'similar' is often used to denote a partial
resemblance only. But it is also often used to denote sameness in
all essential particulars. We think the Legislature intended to use
it in the latter sense in the statute we are considering."
To determine the precise meaning of the word here, we must turn
to the statute. The crucial elements there disclosed are those
embraced by clause (2), requiring that the paper possessed or
retained be "similar paper"
Page 302 U. S. 554
to that adopted by the Secretary, and by clause (3), which
requires that the paper be adapted to the making of "such"
obligation or security. It is as necessary to give appropriate
effect to the latter clause as it is to the former. It is not
enough that the paper would be "similar" paper within the meaning
of clause (2), standing alone, for it does not stand alone, but is
associated with and qualified by clause (3). Nothing is better
settled in the law of statutory construction than the rule that
words by themselves may have a particular meaning, but that this
meaning may be enlarged or restricted when considered in connection
with other associated words. And this is more especially true where
the associated words supplement and qualify the preceding ones as
they do here.
In order to apply the rule, we must ascertain the meaning of
clause (3), since that adds the requirement that the similar paper
shall be adapted to the making of "such" obligation or security.
That is to say, we first must determine the import of the word
"such," and that is disclosed by clause (1), providing for the
adoption of distinctive paper for the obligations and securities of
the United States. This means, and can only mean, genuine
obligations and securities, since it cannot be supposed either that
the Secretary, by clause (1), is authorized to adopt paper for any
that are not genuine, or that his authority under clause (4) is not
alone to permit possession of paper adapted to making genuine
obligations, but extends to paper which resembles the adopted paper
only enough to make it adaptable for counterfeiting those
obligations. It follows necessarily that it is genuine obligations
and securities, and not counterfeits of them, that are embraced by
the word "such" in clause (3).
The provisions of the statute were not meant to cover
counterfeiting, or preparations antecedent to counterfeiting. Their
whole purpose was to penalize possession or
Page 302 U. S. 555
retention by unauthorized persons of the distinctive kind of
paper which the Secretary has adopted for the making of the
obligations of the United States, language which, as we have said,
necessarily imports genuine obligations, because, if not genuine,
they would not be obligations of the United States at all.
The government, however, takes the view that the statute extends
to the possession of paper suitable not for making genuine
obligations, but for counterfeiting them. And this view, as we
understand it, is also taken by the court in its present opinion.
The difficulty with that view, however, is that it requires the
introduction of an amendment so that clause (3), instead of reading
"adapted to the making of such obligations," etc., will read
"adapted to the making of
counterfeits of such
obligations," etc. Such an assumption of legislative power is
inadmissible.
That the paper here in question, even if in the hands of the
Treasury, was not adapted to the making of genuine obligations, is
beyond dispute. The distinctive feature of the paper adopted by the
Secretary is the presence of short, fine red-and-blue silk fibers
impregnated in and distributed throughout a high-grade rag bond
paper. These silk fibers are entirely absent from the paper here in
question, and, while it might have been used for counterfeiting
government obligations, it was not adapted to making the genuine
articles. The present decision brings within the reach of the
statute every stationer who has in his possession for sale any
high-grade rag bond paper if it is capable of being used for
counterfeiting government obligations. For the statute, it will be
observed, requires no criminal intent, and nothing beyond mere
possession or retention.
The view of the statute which we have expressed was adopted
thirty years ago by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit in
Krakowski v. United States,
Page 302 U. S. 556
161 F. 88. In the meantime, Congress has left the statute in its
original form. The government did not see fit to ask review of the
Krakowski case, but has apparently acquiesced in it for
all those years. This Court should not be expected to disregard the
established rules of statutory construction in order to remedy a
situation which Congress could have cured, and may still cure, by a
simple act of legislation. We think the well reasoned opinion of
the court below should be accepted, and its judgment affirmed.