United States v. Stewart B. Hopps

331 F.2d 332, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5846
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 1964
Docket8976_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 331 F.2d 332 (United States v. Stewart B. Hopps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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. Stewart B. Hopps, 331 F.2d 332, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5846 (4th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

BUTZNER, District Judge:

Stewart B. Hopps appeals from a judgment of conviction entered upon the verdict of a jury finding him guilty of two counts of an indictment which charged him with use of the mails in a scheme to defraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. 1 His grounds for reversal are the insufficiency of the evidence to establish his guilt, error in the District’s Judge’s charge to the jury, and the denial of motions to suppress evidence which was seized without a search warrant. We affirm the judgment of conviction.

The indictment alleges that as a part of a scheme to defraud, Hopps caused a brochure describing the International Guaranty and Insurance Company to be delivered by mail to the Insurance Commissioner and to the Better Business Bureau in Baltimore, Maryland. The indictment charges the brochure falsely and fraudulently described the company with respect to its reinsurance facilities and the assets listed in its balance sheet. Stocks and bonds included among the assets, the indictment charged, were valueless securities of four companies Hopps caused to be chartered in Panama. Cash and funds due to the company were also charged to be falsely stated.

The District Judge charged the jury that the evidence was insufficient to convict Hopps with respect to the allegations pertaining to the reinsurance facilities and to cash and funds due to the company. Pie also charged that the evidence concerning reinsurance contracts should be considered only on the issue of Hopps’ willfulness. Thus, the only misrepresentations submitted to the jury concerned the stocks and bonds listed as assets.

I.

Hopps challenged the sufficiency of the evidence by motion for judgment of acquittal and post-conviction motions. He argues that the verdict rests on inferences insufficient to sustain conviction, and further that the inferences were contravened by substantial evidence. Our reading of the record leads us to believe that the District Court and the jury were *335 not as tightly circumscribed as Hopps urges. The evidence supports the jury’s verdict.

Hopps had broad experience in the insurance business, particularly in the field of reinsurance. He recognized that insurance of savings and loan companies would provide a large and lucrative business. In order to furnish insurance facilities he used a small company chartered in Tangier named West Indisehe Her-verzckering Maatschappij. Hopps arranged for the sale of this company to several American investors. He did not directly acquire any stock and he was not an officer of the company. His principal activity was advisor or consultant. The name of the company was changed to International Guaranty and Insurance Company in November 1957.

In his role as advisor, Hopps pervaded the affairs of International. Although its legal home office was nominally in Tangier in the banking house of Mars Et Cie, little business was transacted there. Hopps, operating in the United States, dictated letters and documents for the signatures of many persons. He prepared letters addressed to Mr. J. Rene Mars in Tangier, and then dictated the answer from Mr. Mars. For this purpose he maintained two typewriters. The old one was used to write the letter from Mr. Mars and an electric machine was used to write from the United States ostensibly to Mr. Mars. To perfect the deception, the ribbon copies of letters originating in the United States to Mars were destroyed and only carbon copies were kept in the office files.

Numerous letters and documents were prepared for the signature of E. S. Van Galder, who was cast in the role of an international banker and administrateur of the company. None of the many witnesses who testified in the case ever saw or talked with Van Galder. Hopps dictated Van Galder’s letters and prepared documents for his signature. At Hopps’ direction, Van Galder’s name was signed to the letters and documents by Hopps’ son or secretary.

An investigation made by a prospective American investor in Tangier yielded scant knowledge of the company. The impression of foreign control of the company, upon which Hopps relied in part for his defense, was a fiction created by Hopps’ activities in the United States.

In November 1957 Hopps arranged for the preparation of a statement of the financial condition of the company as of September 30,1957, which was filed with the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Nevada. Included among the assets were 5% bonds of Finance Republique S.A., with a market value of $501,610.00. The statement listed as additional assets 125 shares of Instituto Azeca de Créditos y Trust, Pref. (5%%) stock with the market value of $174,803.75; 140 shares of Cie Intereuropean de Navigacion, Pref. (5%%) stock with a market value of $206,710.00; and 140 shares of Cie Céntrala du Gas, Pref. (5%%) stock with a market value of $201,266.68.

The statement represented that the stocks had been acquired from a predecessor company and set out in detail in dividends received in 1955, 1956 and 1957. The statement was prepared by a bookkeeper employed by Hopps. The bookkeeper received the cost data concerning the stocks and bonds from Hopps’ son and the information concerning market value and dividends from Hopps.

From the evidence the jury could find that the companies whose stocks and bonds were listed on the September 30, 1957 balance sheet were not then in existence. In November 1957 Hopps directed that a letter bearing the signature of E. S. Van Galder be delivered to a New York attorney. The letter requested the attorney to incorporate three of the corporations in Panama. Shortly thereafter directions were given to incorporate the fourth company. The corporations had the same directors, two of whom were employees or associates of Hopps and the third a stenographer in a New York law office. The directors attended no meetings and did not authorize the issuance of stocks or bonds. The companies did *336 business neither in Panama nor the United States. Hopps paid for their incorporation and was reimbursed by International.

In the early part of 1958, Hopps and his associates became aware of apprehension in the insurance industry generally concerning insurance of domestic savings and loan associations by foreign companies. In addition, a complaint was received concerning an association which was insured by International. Hopps’ first inclination was to ignore the criticism and to solve the specific complaint by cancelling the policy that related to it. His associates, however, believed that the inquiries should be answered. Accordingly a brochure was prepared for wide circulation in the United States. Hopps supplied an abbreviated balance sheet of International as of December 31, 1957 for the brochure. The names of the companies issuing stocks and bonds which were included among the assets of International were not listed in the brochure. PIopps dictated for the signature of an officer of the company the letters transmitting the brochure by mail to addressees in Maryland.

The District Judge charged the jury that Hopps could be convicted onfy upon proof that the stocks and bonds were worthless, “not worth the paper they were written on”.

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Bluebook (online)
331 F.2d 332, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stewart-b-hopps-ca4-1964.