United States v. Swett

28 F. Cas. 3, 2 Hask. 310
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedFebruary 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 28 F. Cas. 3 (United States v. Swett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Swett, 28 F. Cas. 3, 2 Hask. 310 (D. Me. 1879).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

The jury having found the defendants guilty upon the sixth count in this indictment, they have filed a motion in arrest of judgment thereon.

The federal courts have not jurisdiction to punish offences against the United States, which have not been previously defined and a specific punishment affixed by some statute of the United States. The crime must be so declared by act of congress and jurisdiction conferred on the- court, and such statutes should not be extended, by judicial construction, to cases not clearly and unmistakably within the provisions of the act Interpreting the aver-ments found in the sixth count as they would be ordinarily understood, giving the language of the count its usual, customary meaning, are these defendants thereby charged with any of-fence against the United States?

This count, after setting forth that one Thomas A. Holland, July 2G, 1876, was a person, respecting whom proceedings in bankruptcy had been commenced, alleges that Holland, with Swett, Winship and one William H. Leavitt, on July 26th, conspired to commit an offence against the United States, to wit: that Holland, on August 25th, in said proceedings in bankruptcy in the district court of the United States for the district of Maine, should then and there attempt to account for his property by fictitious losses and expenses, to wit, by then and there pretending that he, the said Holland, had on the 3d day of July, 1876, received from Swett and Leavitt the sum of $6000 as part of the consideration of two promissory notes for the sum of $5000 each, for which a mortgage was given by Holland to Swett and Leavitt to secure the payment thereof to them, which mortgage bill of sale contained certain of his, said Holland’s, goods and chattels, viz: certain wool and shoddy stock of the value of $13,000. which mortgage bill of sale bore date as of May 4, 1876, and was then and there made by Holland and delivered to Swett and Leav-itt, the consideration therein alleged being the sum of $10,000; and also, that he, said Holland, in said proceedings in bankruptcy in said district court, at said Portland, should testify and pretend, that said $6000 had been feloniously stolen from him said Holland, in Boston, July 4, 1876, with intent to defraud Perkins & als., creditors of said Holland. [See Case No. 6,603.] It avers, that the $6000 was not paid to Holland and was never stolen from him, all of which the defendants well knew; and that Holland in pursuance of this conspiracy and to effect the object thereof, on August 26th, did attempt to account for his property by fictitious losses, by falsely testifying and pretending that said $6000 was so paid to him by Swett and Leavitt as a part of. the consideration of the notes purporting to be secured by said mortgage, and that the same was so stolen from him.

Rev. St. U. S. § 5440, declares that if two or more persons conspire, either to commit an offence against the United States, or [4]*4*. * * , and one of such persona does any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all the parties shall be liable, &c. The offence against the .United States, which these defendants are charged with haying conspired to commit, is set forth in section 5132, which enacts that every person against whom proceedings in bankruptcy are commenced, who attempts to account for his property by fictitious losses or expenses shall be punished.

The principal objection to the sixth count is, that the allegations therein contained do not set forth and describe the offence contemplated by section 5132; and in the language of the brief, “the count is fatally defective in this, that it does not allege that Holland was the owner or possessor of any property for which he attempted to account by fictitious losses, or that he attempted to account for any property which was ever in existence; that the indictment is guilty of the absurdity of charging that a man can be guilty of keeping his property from his assignee by pretending to have and lese what he never had at all.”

The contention is, that, as the count states he never had the $6000, he, as a matter of course, could never have lost it; that there could never be a fictitious loss of this property, and that he could not, under such circumstances, be guilty of the offence of attempting to account for his property by fictitious losses. If, .to .constitute the offence, it is necessary that the property which the bankrupt claims to have lost, he should at some time have actually owned, and if the only allegations in the count had been, that, not being the owner of the $6000, he was to pretend he had lost the same, it may possibly be that this objection would have been valid, and that one material averment in the count would have been so repugnant to others that the count would be bad. For reasons hereinafter given, it is not necessary for any definite ruling upon such an objection; but, as at present advised, the court is not without considerable doubt as to its validity.

While one can not actually lose that which never existed, or which he never possessed or owned, may it not be, that under the bankrupt law, when attempting to account for his property, he may affirm that he had certain property that had been stolen- from him, when in fact he never had the property? .The offence denounced by section 5132 is not the concealing by the bankrupt of his property from his assignee, but, it is an attempt to account for his property by fictitious losses.

What are the constituents of this crime under section 5132?

First there must be the attempt by the bankrupt to account for his property. Does this require that at some previous time he should actually have owned the property, or that he should assert his having been the owner, and thereupon, as his property, attempt to account for it? If he asserts that on a certain day he had such and such property, which he goes on and accounts for as lost, is it or not, within the law, an attempt by him to account for his property? Of what matter is it, whether he held an absolute or contingent title, or whether he had any interest in the property, provided he accounts for it as his, and asserts that it was his?

Secondly, the alleged loss must be fictitious; that is, there must not have been any loss. Certainly, this requirement is met as fully . when there was no property to lose, as when it has actually been stolen from him. The purpose of the bankrupt, by such false statements, is to deceive and mislead his assignee, or the court; and by pursuing this course, and asserting that he once had the property, of which he had thus been deprived, he, for the time, succeeds in accomplishing his object This objection has been presented by both of the learned counsel with much force, and while it is by no means free from doubt, my opinion is rather inclined to the conclusion that the offence designated would be committed by a bankrupt, if, in attempting to give an account of his property, he declares that a portion of his property consisted of certain articles which had been stolen from him, when in fact he never had such property.

The validity of this count is not dependent on the correctness of this construction of the law, as other material averments are therein contained, which entirely obviate the objection as here presented.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 F. Cas. 3, 2 Hask. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-swett-med-1879.