United States v. Peter Lynch

366 F.2d 829, 63 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2427, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4840
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 1966
Docket15491
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 366 F.2d 829 (United States v. Peter Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Peter Lynch, 366 F.2d 829, 63 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2427, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4840 (3d Cir. 1966).

Opinion

*830 OPINION OF THE COURT

GANE Y, Circuit Judge.

James Callahan and Peter Lynch were charged in a nine-count indictment with having embezzled, on several occasions, funds belonging to Local No. 1, Checkers, Clerks and Talleymen’s Union, I. L. A., AFL-CIO, in violation of § 501(c) of the Labor-Management Reporting & Disclosure Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 501(c). 1 Callahan was one of the local’s three secretary-treasurers, and Lynch was one of its eight elected business agents. Their jurisdiction extended over the waterfronts of New Jersey. Callahan died prior to trial. Lynch, who went to trial in December of 1964, was found guilty by a jury on the ninth count of the indictment and not guilty as to the seventh and eighth, which charged the same offenses only at different times. After denying his alternative motions for arrest of judgment 2 and a new trial, the court sentenced him to prison for six months. He appealed.

His first claim here, is that the evidence was insufficient to support the charge under Count IX. That count charged that on or about April 5, 1963, at Hoboken, New Jersey, Lynch, while a business agent of Local No. 1, did willfully “embezzle, steal, abstract and convert to his own use the sum of $170” belonging to the local. 3 Thus, the prosecution must have shown, not only that Lynch collected the $170, which was an initiation fee, belonging to the local, but that he willfully converted it to his own use. 4 See Taylor v. United States, 320 F.2d 843, 850-851 (C.A. 9, 1963). There was no direct proof that he retained the $170. The prosecution maintains that the jury was free to infer that Lynch willfully converted the $170 payment to his own use from the circumstances under which he received the money and the fact that the local’s membership records did not mention Anthony Gentile, the name of the waterfront worker who paid the money to Lynch, or note any receipt of the $170.

Gentile testified that he desired to become a member of the local, that Lynch told him it would cost $200 in cash to join, that he borrowed that amount, that sometime in 1963 he paid it to Lynch and in return received from him a membership dues booklet wherein he was credited with having paid $30 for six months dues, and that he did not get a receipt for the remainder of $170, the initiation fee. The dues booklet contained the number 4447 which supposedly referred to the page of the local’s ledger book in which the notation of Gentile’s dues payments would be recorded. As of the time of trial, the local’s membership roll did not list Gentile as a member and its records did not reflect that any money had been collected from him.

The constitution of the local set the initiation fee at $500 and required all applicants for membership “shall appear before the membership at a regular meeting prior to their being accepted.” In practice, however, the formalities were not followed and the $500 limit was not enforced. The amount charged was left to the discretion of the secretary-treasurer or whatever the traffic could bear. In a number of instances, in order to *831 increase membership and service the loading and unloading of ship cargo, no initiation fee was charged to new members.

Frank L. McCarthy, the senior secretary-treasurer of the local, informed the jury that although the local’s constitution did not authorize them to do so, business agents did collect dues and initiation fees. According to his testimony, when Lynch collected the money from Gentile it became Lynch’s duty to turn it over to Callahan, the secretary-treasurer of Local No. 1 for the area of New Jersey, and report the fact to him that $30 of the $200 represented union dues and $170 initiation fees. It was then Callahan’s job to transport the money, along with a day sheet denoting the person from whom the money was received in the first instance, to the main office in New York City where the books of the local, over which Lynch had no control, were kept. There entries would be made on the appropriate numbered dues card or page bearing the name of the particular dues paying member. The money would be deposited in the local’s bank account by Mrs. Albina Livsey, secretary of the local. It was stipulated that if certain witnesses were called they would testify that they paid money directly to Callahan as initiation fees for membership in Local No. 1 during January, March and April of 1963. An examination of the books and records in evidence, however, showed no such entries.

What may be inferred from these facts? It is possible that Lynch did retain $170 out of the $200 handed him by Gentile. But a defendant is not to be convicted on a possibility alone. It is also possible that Callahan received the money from Lynch but either by inadvertence, carelessness or design never turned it over to the New York office. The prosecution did not attempt to prove that Callahan, the one to whom Lynch should have transferred it, did not receive the money. The prosecution cannot be heard to argue that the latter situation is highly improbable. It accused Callahan of also having embezzled funds (initiation fees) of the local, and at the trial the prosecuting attorney told the jury there was no doubt in his mind that he was a crook where initiation fees were concerned. Moreover, in the early part of 1963 Callahan was ill from cancer of the stomach. It is also possible that Callahan or someone else placed the money in the local’s treasury without a specific notation having been made as to its origin. Here, again, the prosecution made no attempt to prove that the money never reached the local’s bank account.

The fact that Lynch asked for cash is not inconsistent with innocence. There is a large turnover of employees on the waterfront. It is probably greatest with beginners. A man may desire to work a week or two and then move on. For this privilege he might be willing to sign a check when he has insufficient funds to cover it. In addition, the local may have desired to put these fees, as adverted to above, in a general fund without designating from whence it came.

A presumption that the amount of the initiation fee, if it had been received by Callahan or some other secretary-treasurer, would have been recorded in the books of the local never arose in this case. The evidence was the other way. With the exception of his admission that he received the $200 from Gentile, Lynch’s testimony did not aid the prosecution’s case, since he claimed that he turned the money over to Callahan.

Under the circumstances, we think the inference that Lynch converted the money to his own use is one which the jury should not have been permitted to draw because it was too tenuous. Cf. United States v. Romano, 382 U.S. 136, 86 S.Ct. 279, 15 L.Ed.2d 210 (1965). Consequently, the trial court erred in not allowing Lynch’s motion for judgment of acquittal.

In any event, we think the trial court erred in denying his motion for a new trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
366 F.2d 829, 63 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2427, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-peter-lynch-ca3-1966.