United States v. Funkhouser

25 F. Cas. 1226, 4 Biss. 176
CourtDistrict Court, D. Indiana
DecidedMay 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 F. Cas. 1226 (United States v. Funkhouser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Funkhouser, 25 F. Cas. 1226, 4 Biss. 176 (indianad 1868).

Opinion

MCDONALD, District Judge.

This was a proceeding for the adjudication of a forfeiture of a distillery, distilling materials, machinery and apparatus, and a large quantity of whisky, the property of Funkhouser & Co., of Lafayette, for violation of the internal revenue law.

The libel was filed September 27, 1867, and on the 20th of December following, a judgment of forfeiture of the property in question was pronounced. [Jnder this judgment, the property has since been sold; and the proceeds remain in the hands of the marshal.

Several persons have preferred claims, as informers, to a portion of said proceeds. And the question to be decided is whether any of said claims—and, if so, which—shall be allowed.

Among the various claims preferred, there are only two which, according to the evidence, are entitled to the least consideration of the court,—that of George L. Little, and that of Charles Lamb and Rufus Chadwick. The contest is, therefore, between Little of the one part, and Lamb and Chadwick of the other.

The libel recognizes Little as the informer. It commences thus: “Alfred Kilgore, attorney," &e., “who prosecutes for the United States, as well as for George L. Little, the informer herein, exhibits this his libel,” &c. And it concludes with a prayer of process against the property, and that all persons in interest be required to appear and show cause “why said forfeiture should not be decreed in manner and form as by law provided, one-half of the proceeds of sale for the use of George L. Little, the informer."

On the 15th of January, 1868, Little filed under oath what he calls “a supplemental claim and answer.” In this he asserts that he is the first informer; that on the 9th of September, 1867, he proceeded to Lafayette “in the capacity of a special agent of the treasury department.” to investigate the manner in which Funkhouser & Company carried on their business of distilling, and to ascertain whether they had violated the internal revenue laws; that he spent several days in that investigation, and ascertained all the facts on which the judgment of forfeiture was rendered; that, on the 12th. of September, 1867, he embodied the result of said investigation in a report to the collector of the proper district, and promptly advised the internal revenue commissioners of said result; that, on the facts developed by said investigation alone, the seizure of the property was made, the libel filed, and the judgment of forfeiture rendered; and that Lamb and Chadwick furnished no information which led to these results.

On the 19th of December, 1867, the day before the judgment of forfeiture, Lamb and Chadwick filed their claim. In it they allege in general terms that they are the first informers and entitled to a moiety of the proceeds; and that Little is not the first informer, and is not entitled to any of the proceeds. And they pray the court to protect their interests and to allow their claim.

On the 20th of March, 1868, Lamb and Chadwick amended their claim by alleging that they discovered the frauds out of which said forfeiture arose before the first of September, 1867, and gave information thereof to the assessor and collector of the proper district before Little made his said investigation and discoveries at Lafayette; and before that in[1227]*1227vestigation. gave to Little, in his character of a special agent of the treasury department, full and complete information of said frauds; and they aver that “said Little then and there undertook and faithfully promised, in consideration of said information, and the communication thereof by them to him, that he would see that their rights as informers against the said distillery of Funk-houser & Co. should be protected; and they say that, relying on said promise and un-ilertaking * * * they took no steps to protect or secure their own rights as such informers, until they learned that said Little, in direct violation of his aforesaid promise and undertaking, had fraudulently and falsely set up a claim as informer-’ in the premises; and that, confiding in said promise, they were induced to give their claim no further attention till they discovered Little’s said fraud on them, whereupon they immediately filed their claim.

It is understood that the district attorney takes no part in this controversy.

A great mass of testimony, in the form of depositions, has been filed by the contending claimants. This evidence, I think, establishes the following facts:

On the first of September, 1867, Little was, and has ever since continued to be, a special, agent of the United States treasury department. In that capacity, he was employed at St. Louis early in that month. While there, he received from the treasury department a letter dated September 4, 1867, instructing him to proceed to Lafayette and investigate whisky frauds suspected to have been perpetrated there. He arrived at Lafayette about the 10th of December, and forthwith commenced said investigation. In a few days he discovered that Funkhouser & Co., who had carried on a distillery at Lafayette, had been guilty of divers frauds on the revenue, and had thereby forfeited said distillery and its appurtenances, with large quantities of whisky, to the government, and had defrauded the revenue to the amount of forty-nine thousand three hundred and thirty dollars. On the 12th of September, 1867, he made out a detailed written statement of said frauds and forfeitures, and delivered the same to Williams, the collector of the district in which the distillery was situate. At the sa'me time, he telegraphed Hon. E. A. Hollins, commissioner of internal revenue, of the same facts. On the information thus given by Little, the property was seized by Williams, the collector, who thereupon forwarded to the district attorney the facts so communicated to him by Little. Little also had communication with the district attorney; and the district attorney, on the information above thus obtained through Little, framed the libel on which the judgment of forfeiture was rendered. Little's discovery of any of the causes of said forfeiture could not have been made earlier than the 10th of September. 1867; and he did not. in any sense, become an informer till the 12th of that month.

About the first of September, 1867, and certainly before the 10th of that month. Lamb and Chadwick, by a joint inquiry, discovered that Funkhouser & Co. were shipping whisky in barrels from their distillery in duplicate serial numbers, in violation of the 38th section of the internal revenue act of July 13, 1866, and immediately gave information thereof to Thomas W. Fry, assessor of the district, and delivered to said Fry a written statement of the serial numbers so duplicated, with the dates of the shipments. In July or August, 1S67. Lamb and Chadwick gave like information and written statements to one G. W. Giesey, a special agent of the treasury department residing in Cincinnati, and then fit Lafayette investigating these whisky frauds; but he. as it seems, made no use of the information they gave him. They also, before the 10th of September, 1867. wrote to the district attorney concerning these frauds; but they stated nothing with sufficient definiteness to enable him to act on it, and he did not act on it. About the 10th of September, 1867, while Little was making said investigation, and after he had discovered enough to effect said forfeiture, Lamb and Chadwick informed him that they knew of important facts relative thereto.' He requested them to give him these facts. At first they refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 1226, 4 Biss. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-funkhouser-indianad-1868.