Romney v. United States

167 F.2d 521, 83 U.S. App. D.C. 150, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2456
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 1948
Docket9561
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 167 F.2d 521 (Romney v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Romney v. United States, 167 F.2d 521, 83 U.S. App. D.C. 150, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2456 (D.C. Cir. 1948).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal by Kenneth Romney, formerly Sergeant at Arms of the House of Representatives of the United States, from a judgment of conviction entered against him in the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia. A jury found him guilty of presenting to the General Accounting Office certain false statements of his accounts, and of concealing a shortage by trick, scheme, and device, in violation of Title 18, § 80, U.S. C.A. 1

The nature of the accounts and the falsification of them charged against the appellant can be readily understood from a description of one of the principal functions of the Sergeant at Arms, and his method of performing it. Romney handled public money and kept official financial records because the Sergeant at Arms of the House of Representatives, in addition to the traditional duties of such an officer, is directed by statute to “keep the accounts for the pay and mileage of Members and Delegates, and pay them as provided by law.” 2

Since he must be furnished with public funds for that purpose, the 'Congress appropriates, at the beginning of each session, a sum sufficient to cover the salaries and mileage of the legislators during that session. This action constitutes the authority of the Treasury to place to the credit of the Sergeant at Arms such portions of the appropriation as are requisitioned by him. Under the established custom, each month the Sergeant at Arms draws a requisition on the Treasury to cover the compensation of Representatives for that month; and, usually at the beginning of the session, an additional amount to cover mileage. He gives checks drawn on the Treasury to those Congressmen who desire to be paid in that way, but he withdraws from the Treasury and keeps in his office at the Capitol actual cash sufficient in amount to cover the salaries of other Congressmen who prefer to obtain their compensation by writing orders to the Sergeant at Arms for such portions of their salaries as from time to time they desire to receive. The orders are similar in appearance to bank checks. Equipped with bank-like fixtures and commonly called the “House Bank,” the office of the Sergeant at Arms is a place where Congressmen may cash their orders upon him, their Treasury checks, or checks drawn on commercial banks. But the “House Bank,” unlike a comm.ercial bank, does not receive deposits and cannot legally lend any of the cash on hand.

*523 Because of the considerable number of Congressmen who choose to draw their salaries and mileage by means of orders on the Sergeant at Arms, that official necessarily keeps on hand in his office large sums in coin and currency. Except for the arrangement just described, there would be no occasion for the Sergeant at Arms to have cash in his office, for otherwise all salaries and mileage would be paid by checks drawn on the Treasury of the United States; indeed, there can be no cash in his hands except that which he gets from the Treasury to meet the salary and mileage orders drawn upon him.

The events which brought about the accusation and condemnation of the appellant began in 1925, when he was the cashier in the office of the Sergeant at Arms. J. H. Smithwick was then a member of the House of Representatives. He and Romney became associated in Florida real estate operations, which were so unsuccessful that both men lost heavily. During the following six years, Smithwick, with the cooperation of Romney, “kited” checks through the office of the Sergeant at Arms in an aggregate of more than a million dollars: When his regime ended at the close of 1946, Romney held the Congressman’s worthless checks amounting to $87,538.12. Smithwick was defeated for reelection in 1928, although he used in his campaign $20,000 furnished to him from the till of the Sergeant at Arms. Writing to Smith-wick under date of December 3, 1931, Romney, then having been advanced from cashier to Sergeant at Arms, graphically described the situation in this language:

“To call you back to bitter realities, you have had the use of approximately a million dollars in the last seven years, or since 1925. For a period of only one month in the spring of 1928 have you ever in those seven years been out of debt to this office for sums ranging from $5,000 to $40,000. You have been in and o-ut continuously since that time, but the checks held and ‘kited’ through this office would easily approximate a million dollars and made possible all of your "operations both in Florida and Maryland, however they may have resulted.”

In the same letter he later added:

“* * * When the time comes I shall make a truthful statement of the whole situation and take the consequences. You will have to take them too. We have been jointly guilty of fraud. You know that as well as I do. And I will say more, that if you had never come to Congress I would not be in trouble today. You involved me in Florida in 1925 in order to get the use of my money and I have never been able to retrieve myself, but have backed you without stint as the best bet to pull me out.”

Romney discovered in November, 1938, that he was not alone in his peculations. Frank J. Mahoney, who had been employed in the appellant’s office from the time the latter became Sergeant at Arms in 1931, then confessed that he had embezzled slightly more than $25,000 from the funds of the office. The surety on Mahoney’s bond of $10,000 was not called upon to pay because Romney said, as a witness related, that “he did not see -how we could, because it would not cover the amount that he had taken, and he said it would ruin the prestige of the office and ruin us all.”

Two worthless checks aggregating $5,000, which had been cashed in 1929 and 1930 for a former bookkeeper, H. A. McKenzie, were being carried as cash when the end came. There were also worthless checks of two-other individuals which amounted to $3,500-, and checks drawn by the appellant himself, all of which were carried and reported in the same manner.

As had his predecessors, Romney sent to the General Accounting Office monthly statements of the status of his accounts, called “accounts current.” Each included an item denominated “Balance now due the United States” and a breakdown of that item into three subheads, one of which is “Cash on hand.” Manifestly the cash on hand shown on each account current was the cash remaining from that drawn from the Treasury to meet the orders of Congressmen for salaries and mileage, since there was no other purpose for which he could obtain government money.

The indictment charged that in his accounts current for May and October, 1946. *524 Romney falsely represented the item of “Cash on hand” to have been greater by $143,863.77 than it actually had been at the end of those months. It was also charged that throughout the first ten months of 1946, by trick, scheme, and device, he had concealed from the General Accounting Office a shortage in his accounts amounting to $143,863.77.

The appellant does not deny the falsification of the two accounts current, nor the existence of the shortage and its concealment. He argues that those acts were not violative of the statute, and in his brief summarizes his position in that respect in this language:

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Bluebook (online)
167 F.2d 521, 83 U.S. App. D.C. 150, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romney-v-united-states-cadc-1948.