United States v. Crouch

224 F. Supp. 969
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 9, 1964
DocketCr. A. 1564
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 F. Supp. 969 (United States v. Crouch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Crouch, 224 F. Supp. 969 (D. Del. 1964).

Opinion

STEEL, District Judge.

Defendant has moved to dismiss an information which charges in each of two counts that defendant, with unlawful and fraudulent intent, knowingly caused a falsely made “security” to be transported in interstate commerce in violation of the third paragraph of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. 1 The security referred to in each count is a “Credit-Charge Slip” (hereinafter “charge slip”) issued by the Atlantic Refining Company. Whether the charge slip is a “security” within the meaning of § 2314 is the question for decision.

The information, twice amended by stipulation, alleges in the first count that the charge slip charged $39.70 for specified merchandise to the account of V. R. Mowry, the owner of credit card #564-847-820, which defendant had stolen, that the charge slip was issued and based upon a contract between Y. R. Mowry and the Atlantic Refining Company, the terms and conditions of which were stated on the back of the card as follows:

“CONDITIONS.
“All bills for purchases made with this credit card are due and payable upon presentation. Authorized dealers may make credit deliveries to the holder of this card, * * *.”
“By accepting this card the holder named hereon agrees to pay all charges incurred by any person using same until written notice has been received by The Atlantic Refining Company of the loss or theft of the card.”

that by the terms of the credit contract and custom and usage in the commercial world of an Atlantic Refining credit card, *970 the holder of the card is required and agrees to pay for purchases made and charges incurred with the credit card upon submission of a bill for the items purchased. The count further alleges that the defendant used the credit card at a gas station in Newark, Delaware on August 30, 1962, that the attendant made an impression upon a charge slip of the raised numbers from the credit card thus charging the account of V. R. Mowry, that defendant signed the charge slip as Jim Cross the purchaser, knowing it to have been falsely made, and that the attendant gave defendant a copy, and sent the original to Atlantic Refining Company, Credit Card Department, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from whence it was sent to Mowry in Petersburg, West Virginia. The first count further alleges that by commercial custom and usage the charge slip is treated not only as evidence of indebtedness but as a writing evidencing ownership of goods purchased and a transfer of a right in goods.

The second count is like the first except that it alleges the purchase of merchandise in the amount of $25.04 on August 31, 1962, and that the charge slip was signed by the defendant as the purchaser in his own name, knowing that the same was falsely made.

Copies of the charge slip and credit card have been made part of each count by stipulation.

Defendant attacks the information and argues that the charge slip is not a “security” within the meaning of the third paragraph of § 2314. The Government counters by pointing out that 18 U.S.C. § 2311 defines “securities” for purposes of the National Stolen Property Act which includes § 2314, that the definition includes, among other things, an “evidence of indebtedness” and a “writing evidencing ownership of goods, * * or transferring or assigning any right, title, or interest” in them, and argues that the credit slip falls within either of these two categories. 2

A resolution of the issue depends upon what Congress meant by the language which it used. Since the same principle is applicable to each count, only the first will be discussed.

The term “evidence of indebtedness” can have various meanings depending upon the context of its use. Here the question is what meaning Congress intended it to have in § 2311 in the context of its interstate transportation. The 'National Stolen Property Act, of which §§ 2311 and 2314 are parts, does not define an evidence of indebtedness. Nevertheless, guide lines helpful to an ascertainment of its purport are not entirely lacking.

In ordinary parlance, when one speaks of transporting an evidence of indebtedness, reference is made to a written instrument by which one person promises to pay to another a sum of money at a given time. While some of the terms of the instrument may vary, there is' no evidence of indebtedness as the term is normally used unless there is a promise by an obligor to pay a sum of money to an obligee.

The charge slip here involved carries the imprint V. R. Mowry after the designation “customer”, the name of Jim Cross after the designation “purchaser”, the name and address Ralph Wilson, *971 Newark, Delaware, after the designation “dealer”, and, in the upper right hand corner, the word Atlantic, without designation. It also contains an itemization of the purchased merchandise with quantities, unit prices and total. The charge slip indicates that Cross was the purchaser of the articles from Wilson, the dealer. The relationship of V. R. Mowry, the customer, to the transaction is not shown.. The pertinence of “Atlantic” does not appear. Whether the purchase was for cash or credit is not disclosed. The slip does not indicate to whom payment was made if the transaction was for cash, or to whom the payment is due if the transaction was for credit. If any inference is to be drawn, it would seem that payment was either made or owed to the dealer who sold the merchandise. The information, however, avers that the sale was on credit and that the Atlantic Refining Company is the obligee and Mowry the obligor. The charge slip standing alone is wholly inadequate to substantiate this relationship. Consequently, it is not an evidence of indebtedness, as the term is normally understood.

The Government admits that the charge slip standing alone is inadequate to provide a basis upon which the Atlantic Refining Company could recover the price of the merchandise from Mowry, which is the credit-debtor relationship which the information charges resulted from the transaction. But the Government argues that when the terms of the credit card and custom and usage applicable to its employment are considered in connection with the charge slip, the liability of Mowry to the Atlantic Refining Company is clear. For this reason it is claimed that the charge slip is “evidence of indebtedness” within the meaning of § 2311, and hence a “security” referred to in § 2314.

Of course, any single item of proof which together with other proof will substantiate a monetary claim by a creditor against a debtor, is in a broad sense, “evidence of indebtedness”. But it is unlikely that Congress intended the term, as it was used in § 2311, to have this latitudinous meaning. Each of the other “securities” defined by § 2311 consists of a single document which in itself is sufficient to establish a given right, relationship, or property interest. It is reasonable to conclude that the intended meaning of evidence was similarly circumscribed. ,.is

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. Supp. 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-crouch-ded-1964.