Edwards v. United States

123 F.2d 465, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2744
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1941
DocketNo. 9690
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 123 F.2d 465 (Edwards v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. United States, 123 F.2d 465, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2744 (9th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

DENMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment, sought upon an information claimed to charge a criminal contempt, holding appellant Edwards guilty of contempt in violating an injunction of the District Court restraining him from violating an order of the Secretary of Agriculture, hereafter called the Citrus Order, limiting the volume of oranges to he shipped by him from the State of California into interstate commerce. No question is raised as to the validity of the Citrus Order (Cf. Edwards v. United States, 9 Cir., 91 F.2d 767) nor as to the validity of the injunction. Another defendant, a California corporation, Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., was adjudged not guilty.

[466]*466Edwards at the conclusion of the Government’s case below moved to dismiss, thus raising the question, inter alios, as to the sufficiency of the information. This question was not raised on the briefs, but at the hearing, where it was discussed by both parties and considered by us and was submitted for our decision.

The information nowhere directly charges that Edwards violated the injunction. It is difficult to understand why the draftsman of a criminal pleading should have avoided the plain statement that Edwards had made the described over-shipment, unless it was believed that he had not. Instead, after narrating the undisputed steps in the injunction proceedings, the information alleges that subsequently “Edwards caused to be filed in the office of the Secretary of State of the State of California articles of incorporation of the Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., [hereafter called the corporation] which corporation is the alter ego or assignee of Hugh David Edwards doing business under the fictitious firm name of the Edwards Fruit Company.” (Emphasis supplied).

The information then describes the Secretary’s order fixing the weekly proration periods and the prorate basis for the several shippers created under the Citrus Order and upon which the shippers are required by the Citrus Order to apply for allotments of citrus shipments in interstate commerce.

The information then alleges, “The defendant Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., alter ego or assignee of Hugh David Edwards, individually and doing business under the firm name and style of the Edwards Fruit Company, during one or more of the weekly prorate periods set forth above and in the regular course of its business processed, packed, sold, handled, and shipped oranges in defiance of and wilful violation of the applicable provisions of the Citrus Order and regulations issued thereunder. On April 25, 1940, the Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., by H. Edwards, President, acting by and with the consent and in behalf of Hugh David Edwards, filed an application for an allotment and a prorate base for Valencia oranges grown in Prorate District No. 2 with the Growers Advisory Committee of the California-Arizona Orange Grapefruit Agency. Thereafter the Secretary of Agriculture of the United States, acting upon the recommendation of the Galifornia-Arizona Orange Grapefruit Agency and upon other available information, established a prorate base for the Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., and fixed the allotments for the said Edwards Fruit Company, Inc. The said allotments permitted .the said company to ship Valencia oranges grown in Prorate District No. 2 in interstate commerce and from the United States to Canada during the weekly prorate periods set forth.”

Nowhere is it alleged that Edwards had any allotment under the Citrus Order at the time of the challenged shipments. The information continues to describe the amount of such allotments for various weeks “for Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., acting in behalf of” Edwards and of shipments in interstate commerce in excess of such allotments by “Edwards Fruit Company, Inc., acting with the consent and in behalf of” Edwards. With respect to the word “consent”, the injunction does not restrain Edwards from consenting to a third party violating the injunction.

Nowhere is it alleged that the corporation’s relation to Edwards was that of agent and nowhere in the briefs is the claim made of a principal-agent relationship between Edwards and the corporation. The District Court’s adjudication that the corporation was not guilty negatives that it could have been Edwards’ agent in making the shipments, for the injunction also restrained Edwards’ agents.

On the contrary, the corporation’s challenged shipments are alleged in the information to have been made in “behalf of” and “with the consent” of Edwards in this alternative relationship of “alter ego or assignee.” The injunction restrains the assignees of Edwards, but does not prohibit him from being an assignor of anything to the corporation, much less any contract he may have to ship oranges in the future for which there has not yet been received an allotment.

In this alternative statement that the relationship was either that of “alter ego or assignee” we have a criminal pleading akin to an indictment which charges that Jones feloniously took the watch from the pocket of Smith with intent to keep it, or Smith handed the watch to Jones with the intent that Jones should accept it as a gift. Obviously, an indictment which thus alleges facts upon which the accused is innocent of wrongdoing cannot be held valid because he might have been doing the something criminal alternatively pleaded. [467]*467Criminal proceedings should not be so framed. The Government’s brief, naturally enough, treats only of the alternative which it believes constitutes a criminal contempt, i. e., the alleged alter ego relationship. It is silent as to the alleged assignor-assignee relationship as it is as to that of principal and agent. Respecting the phrase “alter ego,” nowhere is it alleged that Edwards dominated the corporation or even that he created it, — the only allegation in the latter regard being that he was the person who caused its articles to be filed with the Secretary of State, two and a half years before the challenged shipments. Filing is a mere clerical matter, not evidence of dominance.

The problem then arises whether the mere Latin phrase alter ego, when used in a criminal information with reference to a corporation and an individual, is an allegation that the individual so dominates the affairs of the corporation that it has no existence apart from the individual, but is in fact the individual and not a separate entity at all. The Latin phrase is considered by Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, in defining the word “ego” as “ * * * The self, whether considered as an organization or system of mental states, or as the consciousness of the individual’s distinction from other selves and so as contrasted with an alter or alter ego.”

Here the phrase is disjunctive in meaning. This definition certainly would not advise the accused that he was charged with dominating the corporation so completely that it had become merged in him and had lost its corporate identity.

No case, even civil, is cited to us in which the phrase is used in the pleading as a substitute for the required allegations of dominance by and merger of the corporation into an individual. There are several opinions in civil cases where the phrase is applied to a situation where such dominance over a corporation has been proved, such as Nelson v. Parker, 104 Cal.App. 770, 286 P. 1078.

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123 F.2d 465, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-united-states-ca9-1941.