United States v. Bowcott

170 F.2d 173, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2598
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 29, 1948
DocketNo. 9325
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 170 F.2d 173 (United States v. Bowcott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bowcott, 170 F.2d 173, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2598 (7th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

SPARKS, Chief Judge.

Appellants appeal from their conviction on a charge of using the mails to defraud in violation of section 215 of the Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C.A. § 338.1 The principal errors urged on the appeal relate to the overruling of the demurrer to the indictment, the admission of certain evidence, and the denial of their motion for acquittal.

The details of the scheme to defraud varied as described by different witnesses, but the evidence substantially supports the project as set forth in Count I of the indictment. Appellants solicited funds which they stated were to be invested in a plant which Henry Ford and the Ford Motor Company contemplated operating in Fulton County, Illinois. “Investors” were promised not only employment in this enterprise, but also enormous profits. They were also told that Mr. Ford was desirous of using 'the enterprise as a means of distributing surplus income in the form [174]*174of charitable contributions for which he could obtain deductions for income tax purposes, and that he would make such gifts to those persons who manifested confidence in him by investing in his enterprise. Having obtained moneys by means of these representations, in order to prevent demands for their return or at least for accounting, appellants paid small amounts purporting to be from earnings to certain of the “investors,” and in a few cases where these investors were insistent upon return of their investments and threatened publicity or prosecution, moneys paid by other “investors” were used to reimburse them in full. As a further part of the scheme, in order to allay the suspicions of such of the investors as had become dissatisfied, appellants made further promises, oral and written, as to the vast profits to be made if the investors left their funds with appellants instead of withdrawing them.

The letters on which the various counts of the indictment were based consisted of promises to pay at certain times, explanations why payments were not made as promised, and repeated promises as to the bonuses which were to be had if the investors would only wait a little longer. One promised to pay the principal amount at once if the investor insisted, but repeated the bonus promises if the recipient would only wait. These letters were dated from 1941 to 1943, during which time the notes hereafter described indicate that the scheme continued in operation with new solicitations' and new collections. The use of the. United States mails for the transmission of each of the letters of the indictment was fully established by the evidence.

Mrs. Bowcott had been a fortune teller for many years in Fulton County and it appears that her clientele constituted the principal source of her victims. When persons came to her , for the purpose of obtaining readings of their fortunes, she advised them of the wonderful possibilities for obtaining enormous profits by investment in the Ford project, and also of sharing in the charitable distributions of Henry Ford intended to enable him to reduce his income tax liabilities. Both appellants gave their investors notes for amounts invested. Many of these notes were introduced in evidence. They varied in form. Some were judgment notes. All were short term, due in from thirty to ninety days. They were for amounts ranging from five dollars to seven hundred, and all promised bonuses -in different proportions, from double to one hundred times the amount. One ninety day judgment note signed by Woodcock recited a promise to pay the $200 principal, and, at the foot, stated, “Bonus .1 farm 156 acres more or less near Brereton 111.” Another ninety day, $200 judgment note recited at the foot, “1 farm 283 acres more or less in the N% of Sec. 23. Farmington twp. $100.00 lien.” Another, for $285, stated “Bonus $28,500/00 double.”

Both appellants testified in their own behalf, and each stated that she had herself invested in the scheme and still believed in its genuineness.

Mrs. Bowcott testified that one Harold J. Martin came to her home for a reading in 1938, and at that time told her that he had a good proposition on which he would like to have her work with him. He then disclosed the plan of the Ford Motor Company to take over a plant formerly •operated by the International Harvester Company in Canton, Illinois, and add new buildings for a soy bean factory and other purposes. This, he stated, would open up prospects for new employment for all in: vestors. He was to be president of the new unit, and one George Arnold whom she stated she met on a trip to Chicago a little later, was to be vice-president. According to the plan which they unfolded to her, she was to put any funds collected into envelopes with the name of the contributor on each and give them all to a messenger who would call at her door for them. Martin gave her the names of two'such messengers. He told her to give each investor a note for the amount of his investment and the bonus, “whatever the bonus was the messenger would tell me on that day for that day. Some days it was a dollar, two dollars, and it varied.” She testified that one of the messengers would come to her home for tire money and to bring' her instructions. They did [175]*175not come regularly — some times every day, and again only once a week. This continued from 1938 until the F>BI began investigating, and the last she heard from Martin was late in 1943.

Mrs. Bowcott had no receipts from Martin or either of the messengers; she did not know where any of them lived or where headquarters were; she had received letters from Martin and Arnold, but she had burned these when the the “FBI was hounding me.” The only witnesses who ever saw Martin were the two appellants and the husband of one of them; otherwise, people whom appellants named as having met him were all dead, and Mrs. Bowcott stated that she had heard that Martin himself died during 1944, though she had never verified this. After Mrs. Woodcock’s arrest in 1943, she left town and remained away until she was picked up in Missouri about two years later. She said she got a tip-off, “That they had arrested Edna Woodcock and for me to get out of town.”

Mrs. Woodcock, testifying in her own behalf, stated that she had operated a milk route around St. David, Illinois, from 1937 on; that some time in 1938 she had met Martin through a friend of the family (since deceased) who suggested that she might be interested in an investment scheme so she would have money enough for the education of her daughter. Although her description of the scheme is far from clear, it appears that she was to put in her own money, apparently to be derived from her farm of sixty acres in which she said she had invested $10,000, and that also she was to solicit others to likewise invest their funds, all to be invested in short term loans at six per cent or more. She was to receive her expenses and a salary for her activities. She maintained an office rendered necessary because “the people that heard about it would come to me and want me to take their money and invest it where I had mine and naturally it began to accumulate until I couldn’t take care of their interest and I had to have a place where I could have my records and my files.” The office was also headquarters for Mr. Martin when he was in town, but she did not know where he stayed at such times, and his home was “where he hung his hat.”

Mrs. Woodcock first learned that Mrs. Bowcott was interested in the same investment scheme in 1939, and she signed some “renewal” notes with her, knowing that if the money were invested with Mr. Martin it was all right, although she had not seen it.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F.2d 173, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bowcott-ca7-1948.