Ray v. United States

114 F.2d 508, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4799
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 23, 1940
Docket11641
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 114 F.2d 508 (Ray v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray v. United States, 114 F.2d 508, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4799 (8th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

BELL, District Judge.

The appellant and one Mary V. Schutte were charged in count 1 of an indictment with conspiracy to violate Section 592, Title 12, U.S.C., 12 U.S.C.A. § 592, and in counts 2 to 32, inclusive, with the violation of said Section. Count 1 was dismissed. The defendant Schutte entered a plea of guilty to counts 2 to 32 inclusive. Appellant was tried and convicted on counts 2 to 32 inclusive and was sentenced to serve three years in the penitentiary on each count, the sentences to run concurrently. From the judgment this appeal was taken.

The Stockmens State Bank of Medora, North Dakota, was insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as provided by Section 264, Title 12, U.S.C., 12 U.S.C.A. § 264. The bank was closed September 24, 1938, with assets of $47,-873.23 and liabilities of $175,936.58. At the time of the trial the Insurance Corporation had paid depositors’ claims of approximately $72,000.

Appellant for many years was engaged in ranching, buying and marketing livestock, operating a “dude ranch” and producing “rodeo shows.” He owned an interest in a coal mine, a general merchandise store, a gasoline service station, a souvenir shop, and had held the office of Register of Deeds. Fie was admitted to the bar and had served as State Attorney in his county for fourteen years. Considering the community in which he operated, he was “boring with a big auger,” and was considered a “dominant figure in his community.” He was a customer of the bank but not an officer or stockholder. He kept little or no books in connection with his various business enterprises or of his bank balances and a portion of the time received no statements from the bank showing the condition of his bank account. At times checks were drawn on his account by his wife, son and daughter.

The defendant Schutte was cashier and in charge of the bank from 1924 until it closed. She was a school girl friend of appellant’s wife, a bridesmaid at the wedding and godmother to the first baby. She lived next door to appellant and was an intimate friend of the family throughout the years. She was first employed in the bank as assistant cashier in 1913 and as cashier in 1924. Apparently, the directors had little or no part in the management of the bank. Appellant became a depositor in the bank in 1916. He had overdrafts from time to time in the bank prior to 1924 but had always paid them. When the defendant Schutte took charge of the bank his overdrafts increased and he was unable to meet his obligations. Even though he had no money on deposit he drew checks on the bank and the defendant Schutte paid them and concealed the overdrafts by various false and fictitious book entries. Apparently her chief objectives in life were to keep the bank open under any conditions, to pay appellanf’s checks and to conceal his overdrafts. To accomplish these objectives she forged notes aggregating approximately $8,000, raised a note of $200 to $1,200, sold bonds of Billings County entrusted to the bank for safe keeping in the sum of $13,000 and used the money, made a false entry to show a credit of $2,300 that did not exist in another bank, embezzled $16,000 belonging to an estate, forged a bond to secure a deposit of $9,000, failed to register time deposit certificates aggregating approximately $8,000 and removed from the records of the bank individual ledger accounts amounting to a total of $51,443.50. Furthermore, she unlawfully abstracted and misapplied the funds of the bank, made numerous false entries and committed many forgeries and other violations of the law. The defendant Schutte pursued this course of conduct in the beginning she says because of her friendship for appellant and his family and because he was a man of large business affairs and financially able, as she believed, to meet his obligations. Later, when she realized that he was in financial difficulties, she feared that he would expose her if she refused to continue the practice of paying his checks, as she believed that she had been guilty of violating the law and that he was innocent.

*510 It is the theory of the government that the appellant aided and abetted the defendant Schutte in violating the law by drawing checks on the bank when he knew that his account was overdrawn and that he had no funds on deposit with which to •pay them, and that the defendant Schutte would pay them and, by false credits and by failing to charge such checks to his account and by misapplication of the funds of the bank, would keep his overdrafts concealed. The checks specified in counts 2 to 32 of the indictment were drawn, presented to and cashed by the bank during the period from January 1, 1936, to the date the bank was closed.

The contentions of appellant may be ■classified, as follows: (1) .That the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict, assignment of error 16; (2) that the instructions of the court to the jury were .erroneous, assignments of error 14 and IS; (3) that the court received inadmissible ■evidence over the objection of appellant, assignments of error 1 to 13 inclusive; .and (4) that a communication between the jury and a deputy United States Marshal was prejudicial to appellant, assignments of error 17 and 18. We will consider these propositions in the order stated.

There is little controversy about the facts in this case except as to whether appellant had an overdraft in the bank and knew it at the time he drew and delivered the various checks specified in the indictment and that his codefendant would use the funds of the bank to pay them.

The defendant Schutte admitted her guilt in all respects and related in her testimony how for a period of many years .appellant had overdrawn his account and how the deficit had increased with the years. She stated that she often throughout the period discussed the situation with him, that he promised to use the money from the sale of a mine, from his mother’s ■estate and from other sources to repay the bank, but that he always failed to do ■so. She testified that she had concealed the overdrafts of appellant by not charging many of his checks on the bank to his account and by entering fictitious credits in his favor, and that she commenced this practice in 1924 or 1925. She estimáted his total overdraft at the time the bank •closed at approximately $30,000. Counsel for appellant calls her story unbelievable. It does seem almost incredible that a banking institution could be operated with such extreme crudity under modern surveillance and escape for fourteen years. However, there is much corroborative evidence.

It is appropriate to observe some of the outstanding features that were revealed by the books and records of the bank. They were examined and analyzed by two experienced accountants, one of whom had devoted eight months to the work. For convenience the accountants divided the period from January 1, 1931, to September 24, 1938, into three subdivisions: In the first, 1931 to 1935 inclusive, appellant’s overdraft was '$6,680.65; in the second, May 24, 1933, to January 1, 1935, no overdraft was shown because of insufficient records; and in the third, May 1, 1936, to September 24, 1938, the overdraft was $9,045.28. The overdraft for the entire period, less the nineteen months from May 24, 1933, to January 1, 1935, was $15,925.-93.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 F.2d 508, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-united-states-ca8-1940.