United States v. Michael Anthony Sinacola

476 F.2d 307
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 1973
Docket72-1760
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 476 F.2d 307 (United States v. Michael Anthony Sinacola) 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. Michael Anthony Sinacola, 476 F.2d 307 (7th Cir. 1973).

Opinions

SPRECHER, Circuit Judge.

The main point argued in this appeal is whether a theft or embezzlement of interstate goods occurred prior or subsequent to the defendant’s surrender of his possession of the goods.

Defendant Michael Anthony Sinacola was sentenced after a jury trial to six months in prison and two and one-half years probation for violation of 18 U.S. C. § 659.1

[308]*308According to the testimony of Roy Thurman Wagner, the owner of a company which bought submersible sump pumps and sold them to contractors to install in homes, defendant, an employee of Associated Truck Lines, Incorporated, regularly delivered to Wagner’s company pumps which Wagner purchased from Piqua Machine & Mfg. Co., in Piqua, Ohio. On November 13, 1970, Wagner ordered what amounted to 239 cartons of pumps and 8 cartons of repair parts from Piqua with a total value of about $18,000 for delivery about November 23. On the latter date, defendant came to see Wagner and asked why he hadn’t delivered any pumps to Wagner lately. Wagner explained that the 247 cartons were presumably leaving Piqua that very day. Defendant then suggested “why don’t we see if we can get this one free.” When Wagner asked how, defendant replied that “we can get them at the truck dock, delivered to you with no freight bill . . . .”

After more conversation, Wagner testified that “I finally agreed that he would steal the pumps at the dock and I would accept the pumps,” with the proceeds to be “split 50-50.”

The 247 cartons of pumps were delivered by Piqua to the Chicago freight docks of Associated Truck Lines by means of an Associated truck trailer which arrived from Dayton, Ohio, on November 27, 1970. The trailer was unloaded and its contents distributed among several of Associated’s docks for ultimate delivery to the various consignees. The 247 cartons consigned to Wagner were delivered to dock 60, assigned to defendant, and loaded on trailer 622, also assigned to defendant.

Defendant arrived at the Associated terminal before the normal starting time of 8:00 o’clock in the morning and at 8:20 he left the terminal with trailer 622. About 9:00 o’clock, defendant drove his truck'into the Wagner Company garage. Defendant told Wagner that “Santa Claus had come early and nobody had saw [sic] him and he didn’t have to take the freight bill.” The pumps were unloaded by Wagner and the defendant, during which time defendant said that he would be entitled to $9,000 and could he get $4,000 in cash right away. Wagner told him that he could only raise the cash by selling the pumps. The conversation at that time also emphasized that the scheme involved “no invoices” and defendant told Wagner that there would be no freight bills. The unloading was completed by 9:30 and defendant eventually returned to the Associated terminal, reaching there at 10:40 in the morning.

Wagner then moved most of the pumps to a garage he had rented for the purpose across the alley from his home. At about 3:00 o’clock that afternoon, defendant telephoned Wagner and told him to call Associated and complain about not receiving the pumps, which Wagner proceeded to do on both November 30 and December 1. On December 4, an FBI agent visited Wagner and the pumps were subsequently recovered from Wagner by the FBI.

Defendant’s primary contention is as follows:

“Whether the defendant, Michael Sinacola, be viewed as an employee, agent or bailee, it is apparent that there was no unlawful possession or taking of his employer’s goods until that time when the co-defendant, Roy Wagner, took the first illegal act — notifying Associated Truck Lines that he had not received the pumps, and this act occurred after defendant, Michael Sinacola, had relinquished possession, thus making it impossible as a matter of law for him to be guilty of the offense of possession of stolen property.”

Government Exhibit 2 is a copy of the “way-bill,” which was prepared in the regular and ordinary course of Associat[309]*309ed’s business, as testified to by Associated’s Chicago manager. A copy of the way-bill is required to be signed by the consignee as a receipt acknowledging delivery to the consignee of the goods shown on the way-bill, in this case 247 cartons of power pumps and service parts. The crux and genius of defendant’s scheme in this case was to get the pumps out of Associated’s terminal without defendant taking the “freight bill” or “invoice” and without Wagner signing the way-bill when he received the merchandise.

In United States v. Fusco, 398 F.2d 32 (7th Cir. 1968), Malone was a truck driver for Mobil Oil Corporation. In 1967, he was scheduled to deliver 8500 gallons of gasoline to a Hyde Park gasoline station. He delivered all but 470 gallons which he then delivered to Fusco’s station and sold to him for $40.00. Malone then cranked receipts from his truck’s automatic meter for 8500 gallons and turned them in to Mobil as evidencing delivery of 8500 gallons to Hyde Park. Both Fusco and Malone were charged with violations of 18 U.S.C. § 659.

The conviction of Fusco was reversed by this Court on the ground that he was a receiver of stolen goods rather than a thief since the theft occurred at the Hyde Park station and not later at Fusco’s station. This Court said at 398 F. 2d 35:

“In this case, Malone purposely left the delivery tickets in the meter after he acquired dominion over the 470 gallons of gas with a view to disposing of them later, thus evidence of his ‘intent to convert [these gallons] to his own use and of the completion of the crime’ at the Hyde Park station.”

In the present case, defendant purposely left the way-bill at the Associated terminal (“Santa Claus had come early . and he didn’t have to take the freight bill”) after he acquired dominion over the 247 cartons of pumps with a view to disposing of them later through Wagner.

In United States v. De Normand, 149 F.2d 622 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 326 U. S. 756, 66 S.Ct. 89, 90 L.Ed. 454 (1945), the defendants were hijackers charged with violations of 18 U.S.C. § 409, the predecessor of § 659. The driver of one of the trucks involved parked it in the street when he went for coffee. When he returned the defendants took him back to his terminal at gunpoint and placed him bound and gagged in an empty truck. They then left the terminal and headed back toward the original parked truck but were arrested before they reached it. The truck remained sealed and none of its contents had been removed or even touched. The court rejected the contention that the statute had not been violated “because there was no asportation of the truck or any of its contents.” In affirming defendants’ convictions, Judge Swan said at page 624 that “[t]he unlawful ‘taking’ of constructive possession should serve to complete the offense

Likewise in United States v. Padilla, 374 F.2d 782 (2d Cir. 1967), a helper on a truck was able to slip some merchandise out of a carton in his truck without breaking the sealed carton.

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Related

United States v. Michael Anthony Sinacola
476 F.2d 307 (Seventh Circuit, 1973)

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