1. Revised Statutes § 1044, providing that
"No person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any
offense, not capital, . . . unless the indictment is found, or the
information is instituted, within three years next after such
offense shall have been committed,"
applies to a prosecution for criminal contempt. P.
317 U. S.
416.
2. The act of inducing a federal court, through
misrepresentations by attorneys, to issue decrees effectuating a
corrupt settlement of litigation, including a distribution of
impounded funds, if assumed to be "misbehavior" in the "presence"
of the court within the meaning of Jud.Code § 268, is a
criminal contempt, and an "offense" against the United States
within the meaning of R.S. § 1044. P.
317 U. S.
416.
3. The time when the three-year limitation of R.S. § 1044
begins to run against a prosecution for a criminal contempt under
Jud.Code § 268 is the time when the act of misbehavior in the
presence of the court was committed, and, in a case of alleged
contempt committed by inducing the court by false representations
to order a distribution of impounded funds, effectuating a
fraudulent scheme, the offense was complete when the
misrepresentations were made,
Page 317 U. S. 413
and the three years are counted from that time. The bar of the
statute cannot be deferred upon the ground that the offense was a
continuing one, and was not complete until the litigation ended or
until further acts
dehors were committed in the execution
of the scheme. P.
317 U. S.
419.
128 F.2d 676 reversed.
Certiorari,
post, p. 608, to review judgments affirming
sentences for contempt. For opinions of the trial court,
see 35 F. Supp. 593,
39 F. Supp.
189.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners, together with one Street, now deceased, conceived
and executed a nefarious scheme in fraud of the federal District
Court and in corruption of the administration of justice. The short
of it was that petitioners, by fraud and deceit and through
misrepresentations by attorneys, induced the court to issue decrees
effectuating a corrupt settlement of litigation. It happened this
way:
Several insurance companies doing business in Missouri filed
with the Superintendent of Insurance an increase in insurance rates
which the Superintendent denied. The insurance companies filed over
130 separate injunction suits against the Superintendent and the
Attorney General
Page 317 U. S. 414
in the federal court to restrain the enforcement of certain
statutes of Missouri on the ground of unconstitutionality. A
three-judge court was convened which granted motions for
interlocutory injunctions on July 2, 1930, whereby the
Superintendent and the Attorney General were enjoined, pending
final decision, from enforcing the Missouri statutes -- on
condition, however, that the insurance companies deposit the amount
of increase in rates which was collected with a custodian of the
court to await the final outcome of the litigation. In September,
1930, a special master was appointed who held hearings. During this
time, the premiums impounded by the court accumulated until, by
1936, they amounted to almost $10,000,000.
The lure of this sizeable amount of other people's money played
an important part in the scheme which was hatched.
Street was in charge of the rate litigation for the insurance
companies. Pendergast was a "political boss." O'Malley was the then
Superintendent of Insurance. McCormack was an insurance agent. Of
these, only O'Malley was a party to the litigation. Street agreed
to pay Pendergast a "fee" of $750,000 to use his influence over
O'Malley and obtain a settlement of the litigation which would be
satisfactory to the insurance companies. O'Malley was agreeable.
McCormack was the go-between. Street made an initial payment of
$100,000 in currency which was divided $55,000 to Pendergast,
$22,500 to O'Malley, and $22,500 to McCormack. Thereafter, an
agreement was reached and reduced to writing in form of a
memorandum. O'Malley would approve, as of June 1, 1930, 80% of the
increase in rates which the companies had sought; the parties would
appear by their attorneys and join in seeking appropriate orders
for distribution of the impounded money; 20% was to go to the
policyholders, 50% directly to the insurance
Page 317 U. S. 415
companies, and 30% to Street and another as trustees for the
insurance companies. The latter were to account to the companies,
but not to the court or the Superintendent. The memorandum
agreement was not disclosed to the court. But, on June 18, 1935,
the insurance companies filed in each case a motion reciting terms
of settlement and praying for an order of distribution. On the next
day, the insurance companies and O'Malley filed stipulations
agreeing that the court should make the order of distribution.
Thereafter, on June 22, 1935, October 26, 1935, and January 24,
1936, hearings were held in open court on the motions, and briefs
were filed. Counsel, who were wholly innocent and acting in good
faith, assured the court of the honesty, fairness, and desirability
of the settlement. On February 1, 1936, the court, acting in
reliance on the representations and without a hearing on the
merits, entered a decree ordering distribution of the impounded
funds as prayed in the motions. It also dismissed the bills,
reserving jurisdiction, however, for certain purposes.
Petitioners then proceeded further with their corrupt plan.
About April, 1936, Street paid $330,000 in currency, of which
Pendergast received $250,000, O'Malley $40,000, and McCormack
$40,000. In the fall of 1936, Pendergast received another $10,000
in cash from Street. That left $310,000 of the $750,000 "fee"
unpaid. And, so far as appears, it was never paid, due to the
unraveling of facts which led to an exposure of the entire corrupt
scheme. For, about that time, an internal revenue investigation of
Street's income tax revenue disclosed that over $400,000 of the
funds for which Street was to account as trustee had been paid to
unknown persons. This was reported to the Court in February, 1939.
A grand jury investigation followed in which the rest of the sordid
story was unfolded.
See United States v.
Pendergast, 28 F. Supp.
601. The Department of Justice caused Pendergast
Page 317 U. S. 416
and O'Malley to be indicted for evasion of income taxes on the
amounts of money so received. They pleaded guilty, and were fined
and imprisoned late in May, 1939.
Id. On May 29, 1939,
O'Malley's successor filed a motion praying that the decrees of
February 1, 1936, be set aside on the basis of those disclosures,
and that the insurance companies be ordered to restore the funds
distributed to them. The court ordered the insurance companies to
make restitution, and they did. At the same time, the court asked
the district attorney whether contempt proceedings should be filed.
About a year passed, when the court on May 20, 1940, requested the
district attorney to institute contempt proceedings against
petitioners. An information was filed July 13, 1940. Motions to
abate and quash were overruled. 35 F. Supp. 593. Thereafter answers
were filed, and a hearing had. Petitioners were adjudged guilty of
contempt -- Pendergast and O'Malley being sentenced to two years'
imprisonment, and McCormack being sentenced to probation for two
years.
39 F. Supp.
189. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 128 F.2d 676. We
granted the petition for certiorari because of the importance in
the administration of justice of the problems raised. 317 U.S.
608.
Petitioners press several objections to the judgment below. The
chief of these are that the offense was not a contempt under §
268 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 385, as construed by
Nye v. United States, 313 U. S. 33, and
that, even though it was, the prosecution of it was barred by the
three-year statute of limitations contained in § 1044 of the
Revised Statutes, 18 U.S.C. § 582. We do not reach the first
of these questions, and need not express an opinion on it. For,
although we assume
arguendo that the Circuit Court of
Appeals was correct in holding (128 F.2d at 683) that the conduct
of petitioners was "misbehavior" in the "presence" of the court
within the meaning of § 268 of the Judicial Code, and
Page 317 U. S. 417
therefore punishable as a contempt, we are of the opinion that
this prosecution was barred by § 1044 of the Revised
Statutes.
That section provides:
"No person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any
offense not capital . . . unless the indictment is found, or the
information is instituted, within three years next after such
offense shall have been committed. . . ."
It would seem that the statute fits this case like a glove. If
the conduct in question was a contempt, there can be no doubt that
it was a criminal contempt as defined by our decisions.
See Nye
v. United States, supra, pp.
313 U. S. 41-43,
and cases cited. As such, it was an "offense" against the United
States within the meaning of § 1044. It was held in
Gompers v. United States, 233 U.
S. 604, that a willful violation of an injunction,
likewise punishable as a contempt under § 268 of the Judicial
Code, was such an "offense."
And see United States v.
Goldman, 277 U. S. 229.
Cf. Ex parte Grossman, 267 U. S. 87. It
was said in the
Gompers case that those contempts were
"infractions of the law, visited with punishment as such. If
such acts are not criminal, we are in error as to the most
fundamental characteristic of crimes as that word has been
understood in English speech."
233 U.S. at
233 U. S. 610.
That observation is equally pertinent here. Moreover, we can see no
reason for treating one type of contempt under § 268 of the
Judicial Code differently in this respect from others under the
same section. No such difference is discernible from the language
of § 1044. Because of that, and because of the further
circumstance that Congress classified them together in defining the
offense in § 268, we can hardly conclude that a distinction
between them for purposes of § 1044 should be implied.
Furthermore, the fact that this prosecution was by information, the
absence of which has been held not fatal under § 1044
(
Gompers v. United States,
Page 317 U. S. 418
supra, 233 U.S. at
233 U. S.
611-612) brings the case squarely within the language of
the section.
Certainly the power to punish contempts in the "presence" of the
court, like the power to punish contempts for willful violations of
the court's decrees, "must have some limit in time."
Gompers v.
United States, supra, p.
233 U. S. 612.
It is urged, however, that there is no limitation on prosecutions
for contempts in the "presence" of the court except as one may be
implied from the conclusion of the proceeding in which the contempt
arises. But, if we are free to consider the matter as open, no
reason for that different treatment of contempts in the "presence"
of the court is apparent.
Adams v. Woods,
2 Cranch 336, held that this statute of limitations was applicable
to an action of debt for a penalty. Chief Justice Marshall stated
that it would be "utterly repugnant to the genius of our laws" to
allow such an action to lie "at any distance of time."
Id.
p.
6 U. S. 342. That
observation is equally apt here. Proceedings like the rate
litigation out of which this prosecution arose might well continue
for years on end awaiting final disposition of all the funds. If
there is a contempt, it takes place when the "misbehavior" occurs
in the "presence" of the court. Statutes of limitations normally
begin to run when the crime is complete.
See United States v.
Irvine, 98 U. S. 450. Every
statute of limitations, of course, may permit a rogue to escape.
Yet, as Chief Justice Marshall observed in
Adams v. Woods,
supra, p.
6 U. S. 342, "not
even treason can be prosecuted after a lapse of three years." That
was still true at the time of this offense.
See R.S.
§ 1043, 18 U.S.C. § 581. There is no reason why this
lesser crime, punishable without some of the protective features of
criminal trials, should receive favored treatment.
But it is said that the contrary conclusion is to be inferred
from
Gompers v. United States, supra, because this Court
took pains to point out that its ruling was applicable
Page 317 U. S. 419
only to proceedings for contempt "not committed in the presence
of the court." 233 U.S. at
233 U. S. 606. But that reservation, made out of an
abundance of caution, also extended to "proceedings of this sort
only" (
id., p.
233 U. S. 606)
--
viz., proceedings where no information was filed.
Ex parte Terry, 128 U. S. 289,
128 U. S. 314,
sanctioned summary punishment for "direct contempts" committed in
the "presence" of the court. The question whether that procedure
could be followed "at a subsequent term, or at a subsequent day of
the same term" was specifically reserved.
Id., p.
128 U. S. 314.
That is a procedural problem peculiar to direct contempts in the
face of the court (
see Cooke v. United States,
267 U. S. 517) and
obviously has no relevancy to the problem of the statute of
limitations.
The prosecution contends, however, that the offense consisted in
the imposition of a fraudulent scheme upon the court, that
successful execution of the scheme required not only
misrepresentations to the court but continuous cooperation in
concealing the scheme until its completion, that the fraud on the
court would not be fully effected until 80% of the impounded funds
was distributed to the insurance companies and $750,000 paid by
Street and divided among petitioners. On that theory, the
fraudulent scheme, though commenced before the three-year period,
continued thereafter. Accordingly, it is argued, by analogy to such
cases as
United States v. Kissel, 218 U.
S. 601,
218 U. S.
607-608;
Hyde v. United States, 225 U.
S. 347,
225 U. S.
367-370;
Brown v. Elliott, 225 U.
S. 392,
225 U. S.
400-401, that the statute of limitations began to run
only after the latest act in the execution of the scheme. It is
true that the information was drawn on the theory of such a
continuing offense. But the difficulty with that theory lies in the
nature of the offense described by § 268 of the Judicial
Code.
That section, so far as material here, limits the power "to
punish contempts" to cases of "misbehavior" in the
Page 317 U. S. 420
"presence" of the court. If this was an ordinary criminal
prosecution brought under § 135 of the Criminal Code, 18
U.S.C. § 241, for "corruptly" obstructing "the due
administration of justice," quite different considerations would
govern. The fact that the acts were not in the "presence" of the
court would be immaterial. And we may assume that a fraudulent
scheme of the character of the present one would constitute a
continuous offense under that section. We may also assume that
certain "misbehavior" in the "presence" of the court might
constitute an offense under § 135 of the Criminal Code as well
as a contempt under § 268 of the Judicial Code, so as to give
a choice between prosecution before a jury and prosecution before a
judge. But the offense of "misbehavior" in the "presence" of the
court does not have the sweep of "corruptly" obstructing or
conspiring to obstruct "the due administration of justice."
Congress restricted the class of offenses for which one may be
tried without a jury. In the present case, as in prosecutions for
contempt for willful violations of injunctions (
Gompers v.
United States, supra, p.
233 U. S. 610)
each act "so far as it was a contempt, was punishable as such," and
therefore "must be judged by itself." As we have said, once the
"misbehavior" occurs in the "presence" of the court, the crime is
complete. It is conceded that, but for the misrepresentations made
to the court, there would have been no "misbehavior" in its
"presence" within the meaning of § 268 of the Judicial Code.
And it is not claimed that there were any misrepresentations made
to the court within three years of the filing of the information;
or if May 29, 1939, the date when the court directed the inquiry,
be deemed the important one (
Gompers v. United States,
supra, p.
233 U. S. 608)
there is no contention that any such misrepresentations were made
within three years of that time. It is not fraud on the court which
§ 268 makes punishable as a contempt, unless that fraud is
"misbehavior" in the "presence" of the court
Page 317 U. S. 421
or "so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of
justice." And, if the latter requirements are not met, the fact
that the fraud may be "misbehavior" is not sufficient. The mere
continuance of a fraudulent intent after an act of "misbehavior" in
the "presence" of the court does not make that "misbehavior" a
continuing offense under § 268. The misrepresentations to the
court made possible, of course, the consummation of this nefarious
scheme. But each subsequent step in that scheme did not constitute
a contempt unless, like the misrepresentation itself, it was
"misbehavior" in the "presence" of the court or "so near thereto as
to obstruct the administration of justice." No such showing has
been made here, and none has been attempted. The fact that the
scheme was fraudulent and corruptly obstructed the administration
of justice does not enlarge the limited power to punish for
contempt. It merely means that, if petitioners can be punished, it
must be through the ordinary channels of criminal prosecutions
under the Criminal Code. We are forced to conclude that any
contempt committed occurred not later than February 1, 1936, when
the court ordered the distribution of the impounded funds. It was
therefore barred by the statute of limitations.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY took no part in the consideration or
disposition of this case.
* Together with No. 186,
O'Malley v. United States, and
No. 187,
McCormack v. United States, also on writs of
certiorari,
post, p. 608, to the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Eighth Circuit.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting.
I do not agree that we should leave undecided the question
whether conduct of this sort constitutes punishable contempt. To
use bribery and fraud on the Court to obtain its order for
disbursement of nearly $10,000,000 in trust in its custody is not
only contempt, but contempt of a kind far more damaging to the
Court's good name and more subtly obstructive of justice than
throwing an inkwell
Page 317 U. S. 422
at a Judge or disturbing the peace of a courtroom. I would hold
the conduct of these petitioners to be "misbehavior" and within the
"presence" of the Court, and hence a contempt within the meaning of
the statute. I should not deflect what seems to be the course of
practical and obvious justice in this case by resort to
metaphysical speculations as to the effect of absence of the
schemers from the courtroom when attorneys whom also they had
deceived obtained the order from the Court.
Neither can I agree with the Court's conclusion that this
contempt expired with the setting sun, and the statute of
limitation then began its work of immunizing these defendants. The
fraud had as its object not merely to get the Court order, but to
get the money from the Court's custody. The contempt and the fraud
did not cease to operate so long as the money was being disbursed
in reliance upon it, and by virtue of its concealment.
Hence, I find no good reason for interfering with the effort of
the lower court to bring these men to account for their fraud on
it.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER.
I wholly agree with the conclusion of MR. JUSTICE JACKSON that
the petitioners' conduct constituted a contempt within the meaning
of Section 268 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 385. But I am
also compelled to conclude, for the reasons stated in the opinion
of the Court, that prosecution for such offense is barred by the
applicable statute of limitations, R.S. § 1044, 18 U.S.C.
§ 582