John Wayne Meredith v. United States

238 F.2d 535, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4059
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 1956
Docket7232_1
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 238 F.2d 535 (John Wayne Meredith v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Wayne Meredith v. United States, 238 F.2d 535, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4059 (4th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Circuit Judge.

The cashier of a national bank is here appealing from a conviction on two counts of an indictment charging him with having made or caused to be made certain false entries in the bank’s general ledger Cash Account in violation of Title 18, section 1005 of the United States Code. The appeal is based on several grounds, separate but related. Chiefly these pertain to (a) the sufficiency of the evidence to show that the allegedly false entries were, in fact, false, and to (b) the Court’s charge to the jury on the law relating to false entries. These and other challenges to the judgment below must now be considered, and for the adequate treatment of the issues raised an understanding of the facts is necessary.

The appellant, John Wayne Meredith, as cashier of the First National Bank of Fairmont, West Virginia, exercised full auLhority and direction over its affairs. The bank’s president took no active part in the management of the institution, and for a long time the directors failed to direct. Their participation was limited to acting upon such matters as the cashier chose to bring to their attention.

In 1949, the appellant, with the directors’ approval, entered into an arrangement with one of the bank’s customers, Hammond Brick Company, to extend it credit on its notes to be secured by assignment of accounts receivable as collateral. When checks issued by the Brick Company exceeded its credit balance, the appellant habitually permitted the checks to be paid.

The company left blank notes at the bank, and these were, from time to time, filled in by the appellant to cover the overdrafts. As the company, in the course of its business, created new accounts receivable, they were assigned to the bank and credited to the Brick Company’s account, but the bank continued to honor checks even when there were insufficient funds or receivables to cover previously honored checks. Before long the appellant discontinued including the indebtedness of Hammond Brick Company on the weekly list of loans. Individual directors testified that they did not recall any loans having been approved after the original authorization to extend credit on good accounts receivable.

In the course of time the overdrafts grew until they aggregated $214,916.88 on September 3,1953, the day of the false entry mentioned in the first count; and $380,102.27 on March 2, 1954, the day mentioned in the second count.

To understand the purpose, nature and effect of the alleged false entries, it is necessary first to examine the bookkeeping procedure normally employed by the bank in paying checks drawn by its depositors. In the bank’s General Ledger was a liability account denoted “Individual Deposits.” This was a “control account” which showed the total amount of money on deposit with the bank. This'liability account of the bank should equal the aggregate of the credits due all depositors. When the bank paid checks of *538 its depositors the total amount of such checks on a given day would be debited to the control account known as “Individual Deposits.” Under the bank’s posting system, however, the amount of each honored check was not debited to the depositors’ separate accounts until the next day. Therefore, if there were insufficient funds to cover a particular check, this might not be known until the day after the entry was made in the control account.

Since the Hammond Brick Company had no credit balances the amount of its mounting overdrafts could not be charged to it the next day, as was done with other cheeks. It follows that the amounts so paid out and not charged to any deposit account came from the bank’s own funds, since there was no other possible source for these payments. The entries which had been made in “Individual Deposits” (the control account) showed a greater reduction in the total deposit line than had actually occurred, for the Hammond account was not debited. Therefore, as the appellant’s brief acknowledges, to the extent of the overdrafts the entry in the “control account” temporarily understated the bank’s liability to its depositors.

In normal practice, after all honored checks were posted to the individual accounts on the following day, the amount of the overdrafts which had previously been debited was then credited back to the control account, and the “no-good” checks were returned to the payees or to the correspondent banks.

Hammond’s overdrafts, however, were handled very differently. They were credited back to the control account with all other overdrafts, making the control account balance with the subsidiary ledger accounts of the individual depositors. But Hammond checks were not returned to the payee, or the correspondent banks. They were handed to the bookkeeper-teller to be included in his cash, to offset the diminution of cash which had occurred the preceding day. They were treated as “cash items” on the teller’s sheet, as is customary when a check is in process of clearing; but they were not included in the Cash Account of the General Ledger. Unlike others, Hammond cheeks were not expected to be cleared or returned, and so, later in the day they were removed from the teller’s cage and included with the incoming checks for that day as if they were new checks. The whole cycle was then begun anew by placing them again with the day’s newly honored checks and including them in the debits to the control account. Thus Hammond checks continued indefinitely to float through the bank.

By the times specified in the first and second counts of the indictment, some 4000 Hammond checks had accumulated and the Company’s overdrafts had snowballed to the huge figures above mentioned. Some of the checks had been making their daily rounds in the bank, being repeatedly counted in and counted out, for as long as eighteen months.

On September 3, 1953 and again on March 2, 1954, the national bank examiners visited the Bank for the customary examinations. On each occasion, after the examiners had counted the cash, the assistant cashier, Van Zandt, asked the appellant what to do about the Hammond checks. As the books then stood, according to the testimony, if the examiners would have compared the separate depositors’ accounts with the general ledger the total of the separate deposits would have been found to exceed the amount stated in the “Individual Deposits” account. This would have led to the disclosure of the shortage in the cash.

In fear of such disclosure and to meet this crisis, the appellant, on the occasion of each of the two visits of the examiners mentioned above, instructed Van Zandt after the examiners had counted the cash but while the examination was still in progress, to have two entries made in the General Ledger. First, he ordered the amount of the Hammond checks to be credited to the liability account called “Individual Deposits.” By so doing that account was made to equal the actual total of all of the separate depositors’ accounts, so that if the examiners should *539 run each account no discrepancy would appear. Second, Meredith instructed Van Zandt to debit the total of the Hammond overdrafts to the asset account “Cash.” Van Zandt in turn directed the bookkeeper, Burke White, to make the entries, and this he did.

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Bluebook (online)
238 F.2d 535, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-wayne-meredith-v-united-states-ca4-1956.