McDonald v. United States

241 F. 793, 154 C.C.A. 495, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1819
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1917
DocketNo. 2609
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 241 F. 793 (McDonald v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. United States, 241 F. 793, 154 C.C.A. 495, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1819 (6th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs in error were, with six others, indicted under section 215 of the Penal Code (Act March 4, 1909, c. 321, 35 Stat. 1130 [Comp. St. 1916, § 10385]) for using the mails pursuant to a scheme to defraud. One of the respondents was never found, one pleaded guilty, two were discharged at the trial upon anolle prosequi, two were acquitted by the jury, and the two plaintiffs in error were convicted. The indictment contained five counts, each resting upon the same alleged scheme, but each involving the mailing of a distinct letter. The indictment is very prolix, and it is by no means easy to identify, out of the mass of evidential things recited, the scheme which was intended to bes charged. The trial also reveals confusion as [795]*795to what this charge was. However, the respondents proceeded without objection to the indictment for vagueness and uncertainty, and we are required to construe it as best we may, and review the case from the standpoint of that construction.

Respondent Sims (who pleaded guilty) formerly resided in Kansas City, Mo. He was a man of some banking experience, and, so far as the record shows, of good reputation. He devised a plan for organizing a company, which should be called a bank, but which in substance should be a holding company or a chain of banks, so that it should receive such of the earnings as were paid as dividends, and should also make profit by acting as depositary, corres])ondent, etc., for its constituent batiks. Intending to start the enterprise at Chattanooga, he was diverted, more or less by chance, to Memphis. He interested in his plan Bonds, a banker at Kansas City, and Hendrey, a hanker at Memphis. These three, with three others who did not expect to be stockholders, but signed only as an accommodation, joined in the organization papers of a Tennessee corporation námed the “American Trust Company,” and, under the Tennessee law, they constituted the board of directors until there should be an election. No one of them subscribed for capital stock, such subscription being unnecessary under the Tennessee law. The company had an authorized capital of $500,-000. This was on February 14, 1911. It was Sims’ plan that part of the stock should be issued in exchange for the controlling stock of small banks, which would go into the treasury of the holding company, and that, upon these stocks so held, money could be borrowed, with which other stocks could be purchased, etc., and that the deposits and balances of the constituent banks would furnish working cash capital —all to the end that it would not be necessary to sell for cash any great part of the stock. Already Sims had interested McDonald, who controlled three small banks in the Southwest, and Hilton, who had one. McDonald turned in his equity in his stock in the three hanks and received the American Trust Company’s stock, as did also Hilton with reference to his bank. Defendant Hendrey says that he never agreed to nor did subscribe, except by signing the organization papers, never mrned over any bank stock, and never received any trust company slock. There was no formal election. Stationery was printed showing McDonald to be president, Sims treasurer, and these two, with Hendrey aud others, to be directors. In fact, Sims and McDonald began to try to sell stock and handle some paper, '['hey thereafter gave their time 1o the enterprise., It had no cash paid in, but for itself or in Sims’ name borrowed promotion expenses from Hendrey’s bank, until — to Hendrey’s alleged surprise — the loan had mounted up to $12,000. In the end, all stock-selling efforts were without success. About the 1st of June it was determined to open as an ordinary bank of deposit, and advertisements were published and deposits received. The bank survived only until .August 8th.

The indictment alleges that the whole scheme of organization was fraudulent from the beginning, and that all the -dubious steps afterward taken were in original contemplation as part of the scheme. Detached .sentences in the charge to the jury seem to imply that, unless the re[796]*796spondents were guilty of this original underlying scheme, they must be acquitted. A review of the record convinces us that no conviction upon this distinct theory could be sustained. The record is insufficient to support the conclusion that the respondents, at and before the organization of the company, or at the date shortly thereafter when McDonald and ‘Sims began to push it, had any scheme or plan to defraud, or any intention, except to organize and prosecute an enterprise which, while highly speculative, did not contemplate the defrauding of any one. If this were the only theory upon which conviction could stand, we should agree with respondents’ counsel that it could not be sustained.

' It was not the only theory. United with this in the indictment and throuhgout the trial and in the judge’s charge was the idea of a scheme to defraud consisting in an attempt to sell stock and to operate by getting deposits and credit for the bank through means of false representations about its capital and assets, or, what is practically the same thing, to maintain its standing and keep it up as a going concern by means of similar classes of false representations. The indictment may be fairly interpreted as charging, also, such a scheme; the testimony was mainly devoted thereto; and the charge, taken as a whole, must have indicated to the jury that there could be a conviction based upon a scheme formed after the organization of the company. If there was evidence to support this theory, the respondents’ requests for directed verdicts were rightly refused.

[1] So far as concerns the refusal to direct a verdict, it is evident, also, that this would not be error, if there was evidence to support any one count, since the sentence imposed was not more than the law permitted to be imposed under one count.

Upon the theory of the indictment which we have approved, it is not to be denied that the case against McDonald was for the jury. His active participation in the circulation by mail of false representations about the capital stock and assets of the bank, and with the purpose of getting deposits and credit for it, are conceded by him. His excuses and-justifications, and his claims of good faith in intention, were, to say the least, not convincing.

As to Hendrey the situation is different. He had no ostensible connection with the bank, except that his name appeared as a director. He claimed not to be a stockholder. He claims he had nothing to do with the management and took no interest, excepting as a creditor; but this is in dispute. We see nothing here from which it can fairly be said that he was a party to the scheme to sell stock by means of direct false representations to those who might purchase, or that he caused the mails to be used in sending the letters written by Sims or McDonald in the course of specific efforts to get particular persons to buy stock. However, two of the counts depend upon letters which were sent to other banks soliciting business, and one count rests upon a letter inclosing a statement, of assets and liabilities to a. mercantile agency. These three letters were sent by Sims or McDonald, and, so far as we observe, there is nothing to malee Hendrey responsible for the mailing of any one of the three, unless upon the theory that these things were so likely to be done by the active managers in carrying out [797]*797the scheme that any party to the scheme should be regarded as having authorized them to be done for him on the general principles of agency.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F. 793, 154 C.C.A. 495, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-united-states-ca6-1917.