United States v. New South Farm & Home Co.

241 U.S. 64, 36 S. Ct. 505, 60 L. Ed. 890, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1801
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 24, 1916
Docket808
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 241 U.S. 64 (United States v. New South Farm & Home Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. New South Farm & Home Co., 241 U.S. 64, 36 S. Ct. 505, 60 L. Ed. 890, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1801 (1916).

Opinion

*65 Me. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error is directed to a decision of the District Court sustaining a demurrer to an indictment and is prosecuted under the Criminal Appeals Act, it being contended by the Government that the decision involved the construction of § 215 of the Criminal Code. The opposing contention is that the court passed only on the sufficiency of the indictment as a criminal pleading and that, therefore, the writ of error should be dismissed. The contentions are repeated here, and make the issue. They necessarily require a consideration of the indictment. It is constituted of three counts. Their foundation is § 215, supra, which, so far as material, reads as follows:

"Whoever, having devised . . . any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises, . . . shall, for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, or attempting so to do, place, or cause to be placed, any letter, . . . circular, . . . or advertisement, ... in any post office, . . . to be sent or delivered by the post office establishment of the United States, . . .” etc.

The section is a somewhat enlarged successor of § 5480, Revised Statutes, which provides: "If any person having devised . . . any scheme or artifice to defraud, . . . shall, in and for executing such scheme or artifice, or attempting so to do, place any letter . . ., ” etc.

As showing a violation of § 215 the first count of the indictment charged the following facts, which we state narratively: The individual defendants are directors and stockholders of the New South Farm & Home Company, a corporation engaged in selling approximately 142,000 acres of land, referred to as the Burbank-Ocala colony and *66 the Florida-Palatka colony, situated in Putnani, Marion and Clay counties, Florida. They devised a scheme to defraud certain persons, who were named, and other persons, of their money and property, with the intention to convert the same to the use and gain of the defendants and the corporation, by means of correspondence and communications through the post office establishment of the United States and by means of oral and verbal communications, by offering to sell to such persons, and inducing them to purchase, certain ■ 10-acre farms upon certain terms through false and fraudulent representations concerning the title, fertility, value, drainage, location, environs, and survey of the farms and the improvements made or to be made thereon.

The representations were these: The lands and farms were not swampy; the largest ocean steamers operating between New York and Jacksonville could load at Palatka; a family could make enough on one farm during the first year to support itself and save money; three crops a year could be grown; every month in the year was a growing month, that is, somé farm or truck product could be raised during each month of the year; the farms were surrounded with orange and citrus fruit groves and vegetable truck farms; the farms had fine roads running through them, were high and well drained and on the whole like the lands ,of Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Illinois; artesian wells were scattered about on the farms or “could be obtained by going down 100 feet”; the land was divided into 160-acre tracts; roads were being built around each 160-acre tract and each 10-acre farm would face on a road, and ditches were being dug so that each farm would be drained; many miles of fence had been erected and hundreds of homes and many school houses had been built; the school houses were more than comfortably filled with pupils, and more schools would have to be built to take care of the rapid growth of the colonists settling upon the farms; com *67 fortable hotels had been built upon the lands and farms and improvements of all kinds were going forward at a wonderful rate; lumber was cheap and homes could be built without nearly so great expense as in most places in Florida and at about one-half of the expense the same would cost in the North; the Title Guarantee Company of Jacksonville, Florida, would guarantee the title, with which company the New South Farm & Home Company had made arrangements so that purchasers might know that their investments were safe; the farms were cut over and ready to go upon at once and there were no timber leases upon the lands; the defendants were not land brokers or speculators; the New South Farm & Home Company owned the land outright, the title having been approved by the best attorneys, and any one buying a farm could depend upon securing a clear title as the company was selling something it owned itself; the farms were free from mosquitoes, malaria, and insects of all kinds and were below the frost line; the company had secured telephone connections with Palatka and with local exchanges at other places (they are named) which would place every farm “in direct touch with the community at all times;” the lands and farms were located high and dry and in a section well drained; hundreds of people had settled on them and at the little city of Burbank the lands and farms had increased — doubled, trebled and quadrupled — in price, and the same was true of the lands owned by the company at Silver City, and a thousand settlers were on the lands who could sell them at a large profit; land selling at $30 an acre would be .worth in two years $200 and $300 per acre; well-stocked stores and factories weré located upon the lands and they were the best located and the most fertile lands in America, and Luther Burbank had been arranged, with for “the exclusive right for the production of certain of his farm products”; there would be installed a Burbank producing *68 station on the lands and farms and the purchasers of the latter would share in the profits of the station, the director of which would be available for the needs of the purchasers; one could get out of a Pullnian car on the farms, use a long distance telephone, have the daily paper, rural free delivery and all the comforts of home.

There were other representations of fact, and, to give emphasis to those which we have enumerated, it was charged that the pictures in the publications sent out by the defendants represented the true conditions to be seen on the farms.

All of the representations were explicitly repeated and charged to be false; that defendants well knew them to be so and intended by them to deceive the persons to be defrauded and to induce such persons to part with their money and property in the purchase of the farms.

That the representations were made and communicated by the .defendants to the persons intended to be defrauded through and by means of oral statements, circulars, maps, advertisements, photographs, etc., so worded, drawn, constructed, presented and expressed as to deceive; but all too voluminous to be set forth in the indictment, wherefore the grand jurors omitted them.

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Bluebook (online)
241 U.S. 64, 36 S. Ct. 505, 60 L. Ed. 890, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-new-south-farm-home-co-scotus-1916.