United States v. Marvin Ruell Poole

557 F.2d 531, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12025
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1977
Docket76-3076
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 557 F.2d 531 (United States v. Marvin Ruell Poole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Marvin Ruell Poole, 557 F.2d 531, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12025 (5th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

JAMES LAWRENCE KING, District Judge:

Marvin Ruell Poole was convicted in two counts of fraudulently selling a nonexistent heavy duty earth excavator to two separate victims in Illinois and Louisiana in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. 1 He contends that reversible error occurred when the trial court denied his motion for judgment of acquittal as to the second count 2 because the proof failed to establish that the check he received from the sale ever traveled in interstate transportation.

He further suggests error in the admission into evidence of hearsay and prior similar offense testimony, as well as in the denial of a motion to suppress bank records. We conclude that the government failed to establish that the check Poole received from the Louisiana purchaser ever traveled in interstate commerce, and therefore reverse his conviction as to Count II. After carefully reviewing the defendant’s other argu'ments, we find them to be without merit, and we affirm as to Count I.

I. The Scheme to Defraud

Poole prepared a series of fake documents purporting to reflect ownership by two of his solely owned corporations of two Poelain Hydraulic Excavators and an Allis Chalmers Dozer. These documents included 1) false invoices from Bayou Equipment and Enterprises, Inc. purporting to reflect a sale of this equipment to Poole’s Corporations, Marbane Realty Company and Mar-bane Construction Company; 2) copies of a fabricated check in the amount of $55,-445.85, payable to, and allegedly endorsed by, Bayou Equipment and signed by Poole on behalf of Marbane, purportedly reflecting payment for one machine; and 3) a forged letter from Bayou to Poole purportedly verifying the sale of the equipment to Poole. These documents were false in their entirety; the transactions never took place, Bayou never sold this or any machinery to Poole, Bayou never received a $55,445.85 check from Marbane or endorsed such a check, Bayou never owned the machinery described in the documents, and the Poelain Excavators and Chalmers Dozer never existed except in the fertile imagination of the defendant Poole. To complete his documentation, Poole obtained blank Bayou invoices from his step-son-in-law (a co-owner of Bayou), filled them in with false serial numbers and other data pertaining to the nonexistent machinery, and forged endorsements to the doctored checks. He then possessed what appeared to be genuine documentation establishing ownership of the heavy equipment by his companies. Using the false documents as proof of ownership, Poole proceeded to sell the nonexisting machinery.

During November and December of 1973, Poole entered into four contracts for the sale and lease back of three Poelain Hydraulic Excavators and one Allis Chalmers Dozer. Relying on the false documentation as proof of ownership, Leasing Services, Inc. of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, paid Poole *534 $55,445.85 for Poclain Excavator # 0164426379R1, $55,445.85 for Poclain Excavator # 0164428412R3, and $45,360.00 for the Allis Chalmers Dozer. Poole deposited the check for Poclain Excavator # 0164426379R1 into his Marbane Realty account in the Guaranty Bank of Lafayette, Lousiana, and ultimately it was processed for payment at the Fidelity National Bank of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. On the same day that he received the Leasing Services check for the excavator, Poole wrote a check for an identical amount on his Guaranty Bank account payable to his Marbane Construction Company. This check was thereafter deposited in the Marbane account in the Citizens National Bank of Beaumont, Texas. After the Guaranty Bank in Louisiana paid the check the Mar-bane Realty account in that bank showed a balance of $79,506.44. Therefore, there had been sufficient funds in the Marbane Realty Account to pay the Guaranty Bank check without applying the proceeds of the Leasing Services check, and the fact that the two checks were identical is immaterial.

A few days after the sale to Leasing Services, Inc., Poole sold the identical nonexistent Poclain Excavator to Trans Mutual Investment Company of Chicago, Illinois, using the same false documentation to establish ownership and receiving an additional $55,445.85. The check from Trans Mutual was deposited in the American Bank in Opelousas, Louisiana in Poole’s Marbane Realty-Construction Company account. American Bank placed the check in the stream of interstate commerce for payment from the Trans Mutual account at Lakeview Bank in Chicago, Illinois.

Poole, as President of Marbane Realty, gave bills of sale for the twice-sold nonexistent excavator to both Leasing Services and Trans Mutual, representing to each that Marbane Realty was the absolute owner of the property with full power to sell. Both transactions were consummated under sale lease-back contracts whereby Poole retained possession of the machinery and the purchasers acquired the right to possession only in the event of default in lease payments. The fraud was discovered after Poole defaulted and the machinery could not be found.

II. Interstate Transportation of Securities

That the appellant Poole conceived and perpetrated a scheme to defraud was established beyond any reasonable doubt in the trial court. However, the statute under which the appellant was charged requires the interstate transportation of the fraudulently obtained security 3 as an essential element for conviction in a federal court. “To constitute a violation of [this section], it is not necessary to show that petitioners actually . . . transported anything themselves; it is sufficient if they caused it to be done.” Pereira v. United States, 347 U.S. 1, 8, 74 S.Ct. 358, 362, 98 L.Ed. 435, 444 (1954). The law clearly establishes that a person causes a security taken by fraud to be transported in interstate commerce when that person “knowingly cashes [or deposits] a fraudulent check in one state drawn on a bank in another state.” United States v. Hill, 468 F.2d 899 (5th Cir. 1972). This is so because, as the court reasoned in Pereira, “[i]t is common knowledge that such checks must be sent to the drawee bank for collection”. 347 U.S. at 9, 74 S.Ct. at 363, 98 L.Ed. at 444, 445.

The transactions involved in Count I provide two clear examples of the interstate transportation of a security taken by fraud. When Poole caused Trans Mutual to send a check from Chicago, Illinois to Lafayette, Louisiana, he caused that check to cross state lines. The causation resulted from Poole’s having provided falsified invoices and a falsified check to show a nonexistent sale of a nonexistent excavator by Bayou Equipment to Marbane Realty as an inducement for Trans Mutual to purchase the excavator.

*535 The second example of the interstate transportation of a security taken by fraud occurred when Poole deposited the Trans Mutual check in the Marbane Realty account in the American Bank at Opelousas, Louisiana.

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Bluebook (online)
557 F.2d 531, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marvin-ruell-poole-ca5-1977.