United States v. Ernest W. Mullins, Jr., United States of America v. Ivan Mullins

355 F.2d 883
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1966
Docket14837, 15000
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 355 F.2d 883 (United States v. Ernest W. Mullins, Jr., United States of America v. Ivan Mullins) 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. Ernest W. Mullins, Jr., United States of America v. Ivan Mullins, 355 F.2d 883 (7th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

EILEY, Circuit Judge.

Ernest and Ivan Mullins, brothers, were tried separately and convicted as principals of aiding and abetting 1 Glen B. Garrott, cashier of Farmers - State Bank in Brookston, Indianá, in a wilful misapplication of bank funds and credits in violation of Section 656, Title 18, United States Code. Both Mullinses have appealed and, because of common questions raised, we consider the appeals together. We affirm the convictions.

Garrott was cashier of the Farmers State Bank (hereafter referred to as Bank) when in 1948 or 1949 his association with Ernest Mullins began. Later Garrott met Ernest’s brother Ivan. Gar-rott and Ernest Mullins began a business association which eventuated in the indictments. Originally both owned G & T Manufacturing Corporation, with Gar-rott arranging the financing, and they apparently commenced operation of the business with Garrott’s issuing fraudulent cashier’s checks against the Bank, using a “plugged figure” 2 on the Bank’s books to cover the fraud. Subsequently *885 Ernest Mullins started a new business venture under the name Exterior Contracting Company. He owned and ran the company and employed his brother Ivan.

Garrott, although at the trials disclaiming any ownership or managerial interest in Exterior, continued his fraudulent conduct in rendering financial assistance to Exterior through Ernest and Ivan Mullins. He used about $200,000 of his own money and about $700,000 of the Bank’s in paying Exterior checks drawn upon the Bank without sufficient funds. Garrott would hold the checks in a desk drawer until he could “pick them up” with his own money or a collection from Exterior. He kept an accurate record of what the “plugged figure” had to be for the checks which were not covered legitimately. He induced other Bank employees to cooperate with him in concealing the fraud. In the beginning he would make up the difference with his own funds before the bank examiners would come in. This had continued for a period of more than thirteen years when, in July of 1963, the fraud was discovered, at which time the “plugged figure” was approximately $600,000.

An official examination of the Bank was impending in 1962. Garrott, then without money of his own, conceived the idea of a “check kite” to keep the Bank’s books in balance while the examination was under way, i. e., so that he would not be holding any checks for Exterior on a Monday morning, when the examiners arrived. The kiting worked this way, for example: Ernest or Ivan Mullins would give Garrott an Exterior check drawn on a distant bank sufficient in amount 3 to “pick up” the accumulated overdrawn checks of Exterior which had been concealed by Garrott. The account in the distant bank would not be sufficient to cover the check. The check would be deposited in the Bank to cover the accumulated checks, and then sent, to the distant drawer bank for payment. Garrott would then issue a cashier’s check 4 to Exterior, a bit more than the Exterior check which Mullins would deposit in the distant drawer bank. Gar-rott did not enter the cashier’s checks on the Bank’s books as liabilities. When the cashier’s checks were returned, Garrott took them to his drawer and started his records all over again.

The indictment charged each Mullins brother with aiding and abetting Garrott, a bank officer, in the violation of Section 656, and consequently their liability to punishment is that of a principal under Section 2, Title 18, United States Code.

The general charge in the indictment of aiding and abetting Garrott is particularized in each of the four counts against each Mullins with the further charge that said Mullins and Garrott “with intent to defraud * * * did wilfully misapply * * * moneys, funds and credits of the Bank * * * in that Glen B. Garrott * * * did issue and deliver a Cashier’s check drawn by the Bank upon itself, * * * payable to Exterior Contracting Company and endorsed Exterior Contracting Company by * * * [Ivan or Ernest] Mullins, * * * [when each] then and there knew said Cashier’s check was issued without sufficient consideration * * *, whereby the possession, control and use * * * of the moneys, funds and credits of the Bank were depleted and lost to the Bank and were then converted and misapplied to the use and benefit of * * * [each] Mullins * *

*886 Both Ernest and Ivan Mullins contend that the indictment is fatally defective in that it neither charges “how Mullins aided and abetted” nor alleges “wilful” action 5 or “a bad purpose and an evil motive” by defendants. 6

We think the alleged action of each Mullins in endorsing the cashier’s checks, with knowledge that there was no consideration even though it followed the alleged action of Garrott in issuing the checks, was sufficient to charge “how” each Mullins aided and abetted, and to “associate” each brother as a participator in the alleged unlawful enterprise he worked to bring about. Benchwick v. United States, 297 F.2d 330, 334-335 (9th Cir. 1961); United States v. Chiarella, 184 F.2d 903, 909 (2d Cir. 1950), cert. denied 341 U.S. 956, 71 S.Ct. 1009, 95 L.Ed. 1377 (1951). And while it is true that an intent to injure or defraud the Bank is an essential element of the offense (Section 656) defendants allegedly aided the commission of, we think that this element is sufficiently alleged here in the words that each Mullins, and Garrott, “with intent to defraud” did “wilfully misapply” the Bank’s funds. Logsdon v. United States, 253 F.2d 12, 14 (6th Cir. 1958).

We see no merit in the contention of each Mullins that the proof fails to support a finding that the cheeks issued “without sufficient consideration,” that the amounts of the checks were lost to the Bank or its assets depleted, that said Mullins converted the proceeds to his own use or benefit, or that the checks were issued with the intent of defrauding the Bank. Both Mullinses argue that the funds were lost long before the issuance, in 1962, of these cashier’s checks, and that the proof shows concealment and falsification by Garrott, but not the crime charged in the indictment, i. e., their aiding and abetting a wilful misapplication of Bank funds.

Garrott pleaded guilty to the indictment and among other things testified for the Government in both trials that no consideration and no “money” was received by the Bank for the cashier’s checks in the four counts of each indictment; that the checks drawn by Ivan and Ernest Mullins were covered by the cashier’s checks issued by Garrott at times when Exterior’s balance on account at the Bank was only nominal. 7 He further testified in both trials that the loss suffered by the Bank was “made good” by insurance and that from time to time he used Bank funds to pay “fraudulently” drawn checks.

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Bluebook (online)
355 F.2d 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ernest-w-mullins-jr-united-states-of-america-v-ivan-ca7-1966.