Charge to Grand Jury

30 F. Cas. 976, 5 Blatchf. 558, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 682
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 12, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. Cas. 976 (Charge to Grand Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charge to Grand Jury, 30 F. Cas. 976, 5 Blatchf. 558, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 682 (circtdct 1867).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge

(charging grand jury). You are assembled, in pursuance of law, to enquire into the truth of any charges that may be submitted to you against individuals, for crimes committed in this district, or on the high seas, in violation of acts of congress. You are aware that the courts of the United States have no common law jurisdiction. They can punish no offences except such as are prohibited by some specific acts of the national legislature. These are comparatively few in number. The great body of offences against society pertain exclusively to the jurisdiction of the state courts, and can be punished by them alone. You are also aware, that no man can be put on trial before a federal court, until he has first been ■ indicted by a grand jury. The law is different in the tribunals of our own state. There, in all cases-when the punishment is neither death nor imprisonment for life, the state attorney can file-his information and bring the offenders directly to trial. But, in this court, before any trial can be had, a grand jury of the district must present the accusation, and upon that accusation all the subsequent proceedings are-founded.

It will be your duty, at the present term of this court, to investigate charges against -several alleged offenders. The district attorney will see that you are supplied with such evidence as can be obtained, and he will prepare and furnish you with bills covering the offences-that you may find proved by the requisite evidence. In order to find a true bill against any person, the proof should be such as, in your judgment, would warrant a petit jury in pronouncing the accused guilty. You proceed upon the evidence furnished you by the government, leaving the alleged offender to meet the charge, before the petit jury, by such proof as he may command. Sixteen of your number-should always be present whenever you are engaged in the work before you, and twelve at least must concur in order to find a true bill.

It is not my purpose, at the present time, to dwell upon many of the particular crimes with which you may have' to deal, but there is one class to which I invite your particular attention. By the fifty-fifth section of the act approved June 3, 1864 (13 Stat. 116), entitled, “An act to provide a national currency secured by pledge of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof.” it is provided, “that every president, director, cashier, teller, clerk or agent of any association. who shall embezzle, abstract, or wil-fully misapply any of the moneys, funds, or credits of the association, or shall, without authority from the directors, issue or put in circulation any of the notes of the association, or shall, without such authority, issue or put forth any certificate of deposit, draw any order or bill of exchange, make any acceptance, assign any note, bond, draft, bill of exchange, mortgage, judgment or decree, or shall make any false entry in any book, report, or statement of the association, with intent, in either case, to injure or defraud the association, or any other company, body politic or corporate, or any individual person, or to deceive any officer of the association, or any agent appointed to examine the affairs of any such association, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by imprisonment not less than five nor more than ten years.” It is hardly necessary to remark, that the word “association,” in the section, refers to what are commonly termed “national banks.” Now, I am informed, gentlemen, that in two instances, at least, officers of such banks, located in this district, and organized under the provisions of this statute, have committed one or more of the offences prohibited by the section which I have read. It will be your duty, therefore, to inquire into the facts, and, if you ascertain that such crimes have been committed, and who are the guilty parties, to present indictments against them. To this end the district attorney will see that you are supplied with such evidence as can be obtained. He will cause the necessary witnesses to be summoned, and the books that may throw light on your inquiries to be produced before you. You will have the statute before you, and will carefully discriminate between embezzlement and false entries, and mere loose transactions done under the express or implied authority of the directors. Let your investigation -be thorough and complete, and if. after full inquiry and deliberation, you find, upon adequate proof, that any person has, within this district, committed any offence of the character specified in [977]*977this statute, you will find a bill against him. The faithful execution of this law is of the utmost importance. The business of banking has, in a great measure, been withdrawn from the oversight and supervision of the local state authorities, and these duties have been committed to officers far removed from the communities which are most interested in the safe and prudent management of these institutions. It is, therefore, of great moment that the provisions of the law enacted for the protection of the stockholders and the public should be strictly enforced.

It is not my habit to indulge in lengthy addresses to grand juries, but I feel constrained to say, that offences of this character are alarmingly frequent in this country, and the omission to bring the offenders to justice is followed by the worst consequences. Vast interests are committed to the hands of officers of banks. They occupy places of trust and confidence, conferred upon them for their intelligence and supposed integrity. They are men of good social standing, are raised, by their salaries, above want, and are removed from many of the temptations which assail those in the obscurer and humbler walks of life. To fail to punish them when they deliberately violate their trusts and plunder those who have relied on their integrity, while, at the same time, the more ignorant and degraded offenders against law are visited with its penalties, shocks the moral sense, and is a bitter mockery of justice. It renders property insecure, encourages fraud, and removes those wholesome checks which should guard and warn others from treading in the path of crime. The position of the active officers of a bank, who are daily employed in conducting its affairs, is one of peculiar responsibility. They are not only entrusted with the property of the opulent, who are able to bear losses, and who have usually a potent voice in selecting these officers, but they control the interests of the small stockholders, of widows and orphans, whose sole means of support are often the small savings of a life of industry and self-denial, carefully invested by those who have passed away, as a security against want, for • friends who have shared their affections and been dependent on their care. No more delicate or sacred earthly trusts than these can be committed to men. And yet they are often shamefully violated, and the public and the victims are told that the high position of the culprits, their attractive and manly qualities, their past unblemished reputation, or their eminent piety, or all combined, are such, that those who have the earliest and freest access to the evidence of guilt do not desire their punishment, and cannot find it in their hearts to aid in bringing them to justice. If the moral sense of those most immediately interested in the management of these institutions is reduced to this sickly condition, it is quite time that a law was enacted declaring every officer, director, or stockholder of a bank who has knowledge that a fraud has been com-’ mitted upon it, and fails to make immediate' complaint to the officers of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 976, 5 Blatchf. 558, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charge-to-grand-jury-circtdct-1867.