Gilbert v. United States

370 U.S. 650, 82 S. Ct. 1399, 8 L. Ed. 2d 750, 1962 U.S. LEXIS 2289, 10 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5214
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 25, 1962
Docket478
StatusPublished
Cited by146 cases

This text of 370 U.S. 650 (Gilbert v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. United States, 370 U.S. 650, 82 S. Ct. 1399, 8 L. Ed. 2d 750, 1962 U.S. LEXIS 2289, 10 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5214 (1962).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioner, an accountant whose business included acting for others in federal income tax matters, was charged in a thirty-five-count indictment with violations of 26 U. S. C. § 7206 (2), 18 U. S. C. § 1001, and 18 U. S. C. § 495, in that he had allegedly falsified his clients’ returns (§ 7206 (2)), forged their endorsements on government tax-refund checks (§ 495), and, by endorsing such checks, had made false statements as to a matter within the jurisdiction of a government agency (§ 1001). The jury convicted on thirty-one counts and acquitted on four others. *651 On appeal, 291 F. 2d 586, 597, the judgment of conviction was set aside as to twenty-nine counts, and a new trial ordered, because the Court of Appeals found that evidence used by the Government in support of these counts had been illegally seized. The judgment as to the remaining two counts (Nos. 21 and 22), charging the petitioner with having forged the endorsements of Daniel H. Bartfield and Charline R. Bartfield on two government refund checks (18 U. S. C. § 495), was affirmed. 1

It was stipulated at the trial that petitioner had endorsed in his own handwriting the two checks, made out to:

“Daniel H & Charlene R Bartfield c/o R Milo Gilbert 519 Taft Building Hollywood 28 Calif”

in the following manner: *652 Petitioner claimed that a written power of attorney, allegedly signed by both Bartfields in his office, authorized him to endorse tax-refund checks, and that “Trustee” after his name served to designate the particular bank account where he deposited and held all client-refunds until December of each year, against the possibility of there being a refund adjustment and until his contingent fee was settled. The Bartfields acknowledged that the signatures on the power of attorney were theirs, but disclaimed recollection of signing the instrument, and denied that they ever authorized petitioner orally or in writing to receive or endorse checks. 3

*651 “Daniel H. Bartfield Charline R. Bartfield R. Milo Gilbert, Trustee” 2

*652 On these premises the Court of Appeals, concluding that the evidence was sufficient to permit the jury to find that petitioner had endorsed the checks without authority (a conclusion which for present purposes we accept), held that one who endorses a government check by signing the name of the payee and then his own, as agent, when in fact he has no such authority, is guilty of forgery under § 495. We granted certiorari to consider the correctness of that view of the statute. 368 U. S. 816. While not mentioned in the petition for certiorari, though discussed in the briefs on the merits, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, after the Court of Appeals’ decision in the present case, held that “forgery” under § 495 does not embrace a purported, but misrepresented, agency endorsement (hereafter called simply an “agency endorsement”). Selvidge v. United States, 290 F. 2d 894. For reasons given in this opinion we agree with the Tenth Circuit.

*653 I.

At the outset we are met with the Government’s suggestion that the statutory construction question need not be faced in this case. Before the Court of Appeals, as in the petition for certiorari, it was assumed by all that the two checks (which after the trial and before the case reached this Court had for some reason become mislaid) had been endorsed “by R. Milo Gilbert, Trustee.” (Emphasis added.) That was a mistaken assumption for, as the checks themselves show (supra, p. 651), there was no “by” before “R. Milo Gilbert, Trustee.”

Arguing that the jury might have found that the word “Trustee” after Gilbert’s signature did not purport to indicate an agency endorsement, but was merely intended as a designation for routing the checks for deposit in one of Gilbert’s “client” bank accounts, the Government suggests that a plain case of forgery is made out, and the agency-endorsement question is not in truth presented by the record.

We cannot so easily dispose of the case. For accepting the premise that the jury could have found that petitioner did not purport to act in a representative capacity when he endorsed the checks, it was surely also permissible for the jury to find that petitioner had purported to make an agency endorsement in both instances, and we are thus left to speculate on which theory its verdict in fact rested. Indeed the record before us seems to indicate that this aspect of the case was tried, at least primarily, on an agency-endorsement theory. The trial judge’s instructions to the jury on this phase of the case were at best opaque. Having refused to instruct the jury that an agency endorsement was not forgery under § 495, 4 he at *654 no point undertook to explain the difference between an agency and a nonagency endorsement. 5 Nor can we perceive any force in the Government’s further suggestion. that the jury’s verdict on these two counts might have rested simply on the theory that in describing himself as “Trustee” the petitioner had made a fictitious endorsement, in that he had never occupied that status. Since the charge was that petitioner had forged the names of the Bartfields, not of their agent, this is but another way of describing the agency-endorsement version of the transaction.

In this posture of things the Government’s proposal that we bypass decision of the question that brought the case here must be rejected. If an agency endorsement *655 does not constitute forgery under § 495, the petitioner is at least entitled to a new trial under proper jury instructions.

II.

The original predecessor of § 495 was enacted in 1823, 3 Stat. 771, and in respects here pertinent has throughout the intervening years been in substantially the same form as § 495. There is no significant legislative history illuminating § 495 or any of its predecessors. In deciding whether “forges” under § 495 embraces agency endorsements, it is therefore important to inquire, as the Government recognizes, into the common-law meaning of forgery at the time the 1823 statute was enacted. For in the absence of anything' to the contrary it is fair to assume that Congress used that word in the statute in its common-law sense.

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Bluebook (online)
370 U.S. 650, 82 S. Ct. 1399, 8 L. Ed. 2d 750, 1962 U.S. LEXIS 2289, 10 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-united-states-scotus-1962.