Ader v. United States

284 F. 13, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1922
DocketNos. 2935, 2937
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 284 F. 13 (Ader v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ader v. United States, 284 F. 13, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332 (7th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

LUSE, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). This record presents some 44 assignments of error, under which are presented 91 legal propositions in support of the contentions for reversal by plaintiffs in error. Mr. Messing’s death, and the resultant abatement of proceedings as to him, renders it unnecessary to consider some of these, but the number remaining is sufficiently large to render it inadvisable to deal with each separately within the compass which this opinion may reasonably take. All have had careful consideration.

[1] The sufficiency of the indictment is challenged on several grounds, the first of which is a failure to name the persons whose money or property it is alleged the scheme or artifice was devised to obtain. In this connection the language of the first count is illustrative of all of the counts, and charges that the defendants devised a scheme and artifice for obtaining money and property from “a certain class of persons, then resident in divers states of the United States, by means of false and fraudulent pretenses and representations, that is to say, from the persons whom said defendants should, by means hereinafter described, induce to give, send, and pay their money and property to said defendants under the name of the Consumers’ Packing Company.”

In each of the counts, save the fifth, sixth, seventh, and ninth, it is averred that the letter set out and alleged to have been mailed was to “a person who then was one of said persons of said class of persons.” In the .counts just enumerated this phrase is omitted, and it is apparent. from the character of the letters set out that théy were not mailed to persons whose contribution in money or property was sought. The gist of these letters has already been stated. In our view it is. quite apparent that the indictment charges the equivalent of a-scheme to [23]*23obtain the money or property of the public and whomsoever thereof might respond to the inducements and representations to be made by the means as charged “of oral statements and divers letters and printed advertisements and prospectuses.” Under the scheme as charged the defendants could not themselves know, when they devised it, the particular persons who would be injured. It was the proper province of the indictment to describe the scheme as it was devised as accurately as possible, and in those cases where the scheme is of the nature of a dragnet to capture all of the public who may be attracted to_ and entangled in its mesh, without regard to individuals, it would quite clearly be inaccurate and misleading to attempt to name the persons designed to be injured. To do so would characterize the scheme as one aimed at the particular individuals, when in fact the scheme as devised did not do so. As we view it, the scheme here set out as alleged to have been devised contemplated the public as its field of operation, and we see no reason for requiring that those who may be injured as the scheme is executed be named nor excuse given for omitting their names. The nature”of the scheme is itself sufficient reason for the omission. The indictment, in our opinion, falls outside that under consideration in the case of Larkin v. U. S., 107 Fed. 697, 46 C. C. A. 588, and within the class considered in the case of Mounday v. U. S., 225 Fed. 965, 140 C. C. A. 93, and Finnegan v. U. S., 231 Fed. 561, 145 C. C. A. 447.

[2] As to counts numbered 5, 6, 7, and 9, the additional objection is made that the letters mailed were not alleged to have been to any person of the class of persons whom it was intended to injure. It does appear, however, that each of the letters was written and mailed for the purpose of forwarding the alleged scheme. Under section 215, C. C., it is an offense if the mailing is in execution of or by way of an attempt to execute the scheme. It is not necessary that the use of the mails be for communicating with a person intended to be injured. Larkin v. U. S., 107 Fed. 697, 701, 46 C. C. A. 588; Preeman v. U. S., 244 Fed. 1, 156 C. C. A. 429. It was said in the Larkin Case:

“It is within 'the statute if, in aid of the scheme to defraud, the mails be used to open correspondence with the intended victim, or ‘any person.’ ”

Quite clearly each of the letters set out in each of the four counts last enumerated comes within that category.

[3] On the oral argument it was earnestly urged that the indictment fails to allege sufficiently the scheme or artifice by which it was designed to obtain money or property by false and fraudulent pretenses; reliance being had on the decision of this court in the case of Dalton v. U. S., 127 Fed. 544, 62 C. C. A. 238. There the indictment failed because the statements as to tire scheme to defraud were so placed with reference to the description of the class of persons intended to be defrauded asrto have no force, except as part of such description, and in addition there were no positive allegations of the falsity of the pretenses, such allegations appearing only in the “whereas” clause, so called. Thus in the Dalton Case the indictment charged that the defendant “had devised a scheme to defraud a class of persons not capable of being resolved into individuals, * * * that is to say, such of the persons, being publishers of newspapers * * * as should accept and [24]*24publish * * * a certain advertisement. * * * ” At the places following the words “that is to .say,” where omissions have been indicated above, appeared words from which it could be inferred that the advertisement was one purporting to be sent by a regular advertising agency entitled to credit, and then followed the language “whereas, in truth and in fact, the Independent Advertising Agency aforesaid was not a bona fide advertising agency at all, but was a fictitious and fraudulent concern contrived” for the purpose of inducing the persons to be defrauded to accept and publish said advertisement on credit. The phrase “that is to say” quite clearly presaged a more detailed description of the class of persons only. In the instant case, however, the language is that the defendants did devise a scheme and artifice for obtaining money and property from “a certain class of persons * * * by means of false and fraudulent pretenses and representations, that is to say, from the persons whom said defendants, should, by means hereinafter described, induce to give * * * their money and property to said defendants * * * upon pretenses and representations, to be made * * * to the effect,” and here followed the substance of the alleged representations, after which appear the positive allegations that the defendants “by said pretenses and representations” intended to have “said persons” believe in the existence of the facts represented to exist, and then appear positive and direct allegations that such pretenses and representations were and would be false to the knowledge of defendants, and pointing out wherein their falsity had, did, and would lie. No formal rule exists requiring that in indictments of this nature the description of the class of persons designed to be injured shall be in any particular manner separated from a description of the scheme devised. By placing the phrase “that is to say” immediately after the reference to the “false and fraudulent pretenses and representations,” it is made clear that the pleader intended thereafter to describe such pretenses and representations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 F. 13, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ader-v-united-states-ca7-1922.