Stettinius v. United States

22 F. Cas. 1322, 5 D.C. 573, 5 Cranch 573
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedNovember 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 1322 (Stettinius v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stettinius v. United States, 22 F. Cas. 1322, 5 D.C. 573, 5 Cranch 573 (circtddc 1839).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court; (Thrus-ton, J., dissenting.)

' The judgment below was against the defendant upon both indictments, although it is understood that a motion had been made in arrest of judgment. The record had not been made up at full length, and there is no formal assignment of errors; but in argument the counsel for the traverser contend,

1. That there is error in overruling the motion in arrest of judgment, because the indictment does not substantially set forth any offence against the statute.

The gist of the offence intended to be forbidden by the statute, and punished, is the issuing of paper currency of a less denomination than five dollars. Unless, therefore, the notes passed by the defendant were such notes as were “ paper currency,” and which, in the second section, is called paper medium of the denomination aforesaid, evidently intended for common circulation, as for and in lieu of small change in gold or silver, or any other pretence whatever,” he has committed no offence against the statute.

Its title (which may be resorted to, to ascertain the evil which was in the contemplation of the legislature, although" it will not restrict the enacting clauses, if they clearly go beyond it,) is, to restrain the circulation of small notes as a currency; ” and the enacting clauses forbid the issuing or passing of “ any note, cheek, draft, bank-bill, or any other paper currency of a less denomination than five dollars;” and “any note, check, bank-bill, or other paper medium of the denomination aforesaid, evidently intended for common circulation, as for and in lieu of small change in gold or silver, or for any other pretence whatever.”

It is clear that negotiable notes, checks, and drafts for a less sum than five dollai’s, may be issued or passed from debtor to creditor in bona fide payment of a debt, or for the purchase of [580]*580goods, in the common course of mercantile transactions, without incurring the penalty of the statute.

The passing of a note, check, or draft is primd facie a lawful act; and every man is presumed innocent until the contrary appears.

All the facts charged in the indictment may be true, and yet the traverser not guilty.

If the indictment had simply charged the passing of a note, check, or draft for the payment of one dollar, it would not have charged any offence, unless the note had been averred to be, “paper currency,” or “ paper medium,” &c.

But it charges the traverser with passing a note and 'bank-bill.

If the jury had found the traverser guilty of passing the note only, he must have been acquitted, because the passing of the note was no offence unless it was paper currency,” or “ paper medium evidently intended for common circulation.”

Is the word bank-bill better than note ? Does the name, per se, import paper currency without an averment that it was paper currency ? It might have been a bank-bill, and yet be what the brokers call an uncurrent bank-bill, or a bank-bill not payable to order, or bearer. It might have been the bill of a bank long since broken, and whose notes are no longer current. If the names, “ note,” “ draft,” and “ check,” are insufficient,per se, we do not perceive why the name “ bank-bill ” should not be insufficient also.

In the cases of Ringgold and of Milburn, this Court decided, that under the statute which prohibited the keeping of “ a faro-bank or other common gaming-table,” an indictment for keeping a faro-bank was not sufficient without also averring it to be a common gaming-table, or a common faro-bank. Although I did not concur in those decisions, yet they’ are binding upon this Court, in like cases. I dissented, in those cases, because I thought that the term faro-bank ” did, per se, import a common gaming-table ; and that it would be tautology to say a common faro-bank. In the present case I do not think that the names," note,” “ check,” and draft,” or even bank-bill, do of themselves import a paper currency, so as to dispense with an averment, in the indictment under the first section of the act, that they were paper currency ; without such an averment and without setting forth the note or bill, so that the Court may judge whether it was such a note or bill as is meant to be prohibited by the statute, we think the indictment does not charge an offence against that section ; and that the judge erred in not arresting the judgment. See the State of Maryland v. Scribner, 2 Gill & Johnson, 251, and The Mary Anne, 8 Wheaton, 386, 389.

[581]*581Another reason suggested in arrest of judgment is, that the act of Congress is unconstitutional, because Congress cannot regulate the currency unless by some uniform rule operating equally upon all the States and territories.

The answer, to this is, that Congress, in legislating for this district, has the same power which a State has in legislating for the State, superadded to the power of legislating over all the States and. territories as to the matters within its constitutional jurisdiction.

2. The second error, suggested in argument, is, that the special verdict (in the case No. 107,) did not justify the-judgment against the traverser ; but is, in effect a verdict of acquittal, inasmuch as it finds him not guilty of circulating the notes in the District of Columbia.

This special verdict, if extended according to the agreement of the counsel, would state,

That Electius Semmes, the person named in the indictment, on the 15th of October, 1839, was about to go to Baltimore in the State of Maryland, in the railroad cars of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company; the same company then and there being a company chartered by Congress, and. in the city of Washington, in the county of Washington, in the District of Columbia, offered to the traverser, who was then and there acting as the agent of the said company, a five-dollar bank-note to pay for his passage in the said cars in the city of Washington. That the traverser took the said note and gave in change to the said Electius Semmes, a half dollar in silver and two one-dollar notes, the same being notes issued and payable in the State of Maryland. That the said Electius Semmes went to Baltimore aforesaid, on the said day, in the said cars, and w'hen in Baltimore passed away the said two notes without difficulty at par, and did not circulate them in the District of Columbia as a currency/

Being of opinion that the passing of a note of a less denomination than five dollars is not an offence against the statute, unless it be “ paper currency,” or “ paper medium of the denomination aforesaid, evidently intended for common circulation, as for and in lieu of small change,” or for some other pretence, we think the special verdict, if not a verdict for the traverser, is an imperfect verdict, in not finding that the notes passed by the traverser were “ paper currency,” or paper medium evidently intended for common circulation,” &c., and that it does not support the judgment against the traverser. It does not say any thing of the bank-bill charged in the indictment.

But, as the evil to be remedied was the circulation of small notes as a currency, in the District of Columbia,” and as the jury [582]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 1322, 5 D.C. 573, 5 Cranch 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stettinius-v-united-states-circtddc-1839.