Graves v. United States

165 U.S. 323, 17 S. Ct. 393, 41 L. Ed. 732, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1972
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 15, 1897
Docket31
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 165 U.S. 323 (Graves 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
Graves v. United States, 165 U.S. 323, 17 S. Ct. 393, 41 L. Ed. 732, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1972 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Peckham

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff-in error was convicted in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa, under section 5209 of the Eevised Statutes, of making false entries in -certain reports in regard to tdae condition of the Commercial National Bank of Dubuque, of which he was president.

The indictment contained sixteen- counts, all but six of which were taken from the jury, the remaining counts being .the fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth.

The fourth and seventh counts relate to the making of alleged false entries in the returns made respectively on the 5th days of August and October, 1887. Those counts (each relating to one of the two returns) charged that the plaintiff in error falsely understated the amount of overdrafts paid by the bank and remaining unpaid to it on the date mentioned in ■the count.

*324 The. ninth and’ tenth counts relate to the same reports, and each count charges that the plaintiff in error falsely overstated the amount of loans and discounts which the bank had made and which stood on its books at the date mentioned, the claim in fact being that, as to the sum of about $20,000 contained in the item of “ loans and discounts,”, the -return was a false statement.

The point in dispute is in regard to which heading of the returns the items amounting to about $20,000 should have been placed under; whether they should have been treated as overdrafts or as loans and discounts. .

The proof regarding these four counts shows that there are-in substance two charges of making false entries under the ' two heads of “ overdrafts ” and loans and discounts ” in the returns dated respectively August and October, 1887.

The fifth and eighth counts relate to the making of entries alleged to have been false in the returns for the same two quarters, and relating to the liabilities of the directors, it being therein charged that those liabilities were stated in each report at a sum much less than the actual fact required it.

The plaintiff in error having been duly arraigned upon the indictment, pleaded not guilty, and was placed on trial at a term of the District Court for the Northern District of Iowa, Eastern Division, held in December, 1892, and was convicted upon the counts above mentioned.

In the course of the trial and for the purpose of proving the guilt of the accused under the fourth count, the Government gave evidence that from the books of the bank there appeared under the head of loans and discounts, on August 1, 1887, the sum of $490,133.78 ; that the plaintiff, in error was the president of the bank and as such signed-the. quarterly report to the Comptroller of the Currency- as to. ,the- condition of the bank at the time last named; that under the head of loans and discounts he placed in the report to the Comptroller the sum of $551,048.60, which, as.is seen, is.'an increase of about sixty. thousand dollars over the amount as shown by the bank’s books on that date. One of the items gping to make up this increase was the sum of $20,465.00, and this sum was *325 part of a sum of $23,413.38 appearing in the bank’s books' to have been drawn out by certain depositors in excess of the amounts appearing in such accounts to their' credit. In this way it appeared on the books of the bank that there were overdrafts, on the above date, to the extent of $23,413.38. In the return to the Comptroller the amount of overdrafts was stated to have been, at the close of business on the 1st of August, 1887, $2948.38, when in truth, as is alleged, it. was the sum above named, $23,413.38. The amount taken from the above' item of overdrafts was placed by the plaintiff in error in the same report under the head of loans and discounts, thus increasing that sum by that amount. Other items'were placed under that heading so as to make up the difference between the $490,000.00 and the $551,000.00 as above stated. The Government claims the plaintiff in error had no right to take' those items amounting to over $20,000 from the heading “overdrafts” and place them under that of “loans and discounts,” and that an intentional act of that kind was a violation of the statute, if meant to deceive. The plaintiff in error urged that he had the legal right to do as he did, and upon being called to the witness stand he. testified substantially as follows:

“ Certain overdrafts were classified and were put in the. reports as loans and discounts, because the different persons making such overdrafts had spoken to the managers of the bank and obtained permission'to make the same. Those overdrafts which had not been arranged for were reported as overdrafts. Those that were included in loans and discounts were accounts that had been arranged for and permission asked to overdraw. I"n other accounts treated as overdrafts were those where the person drew his check in advance without asking permission, and when this was done it was treated as an overdraft. "Where they asked permission to overdraw and such permission was granted it was classified as a loan. The overdraft made upon permission of the bank was treated as a loan. The reports severally contained the overdrafts treated as a. part of the loans and discounts, while the others were classed in the reports as overdrafts. (The witness names the persons *326 whose accounts were included in the loans and .discounts, and! each of whom had .permission and had arranged for the overdraft ; also the names and amounts of those whose accounts were overdrawn.)
“ All these matters were brought before the board in detail. Explanations of the permission to overdraw were made to the-board at their meetings. Each and all those accounts included in the loans and discounts had permission to overdraw and had arranged therefor. A classified list of overdrafts, showing' the' book loans and overdrafts proper, was laid before the directors at each of their meetings. A loan in the form of an overdraft account was classified as book loan and the others as overdrafts. They were presented to the directors in two lists; one headed as book loans and the other as overdrafts;. and in this way they were presented to the board of directors, at each of their meetings. Those persons having book loans-were granted them for different reasons. The book loans were made to parties who had been to the bank and made arrangements to overdraw. The overdrafts were where checks-were presented and paid without any arrangement or authority for the drawers to overdraw their accounts. Where an account had been overdrawn at first without permission, and parties thereafter made arrangement for its continuance for a few days, it was classed under the heading book loans.”

Explanations of his action were given in regard to the other items in the report to the Comptroller, making up the sixty thousand dollar increase of loans and discounts, the sufficiency of which it is not necessary here to discuss. It appears from the reasons stated by the plaintiff in error for changing the-amounts of “ loans and discounts ” and

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Bluebook (online)
165 U.S. 323, 17 S. Ct. 393, 41 L. Ed. 732, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-united-states-scotus-1897.