United States v. Thomas

52 F. Supp. 571, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1929
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Washington
DecidedNovember 17, 1943
DocketC-3812
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 F. Supp. 571 (United States v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Thomas, 52 F. Supp. 571, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1929 (E.D. Wash. 1943).

Opinion

SCHWELLENBACH, District Judge.

This is a conspiracy case in which the five defendants now seeking a new trial and six others were charged with having combined and conspired to commit acts and offenses against the United States by making, passing and entering false papers and documents for the purpose of influencing the action of the Federal Housing Administration in order to secure insurance under the modernization of homes provisions of the National Housing Act. Title 18 U.S.C.A. §§ 83-88; Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 1731. The five moving defendants are: C. I. T. Corporation, a corporation engaged in the financing of commercial paper; P. A. Thomas and J. Q. A. Price, who, under the corporation Thomas and Price, operate a fairly large furniture store at Yakima, Washington; Herm G. Link who, at the time involved in the indictment, was sales manager for Thomas and Price; Lou D. Wilkins who, at the time involved in the indictment, was manager of C. I. T.’s branch office at Yakima. The other six defendants, who were acquitted, were salesmen for Thomas and Price.

The Federal Plousing Act as amended in 1938 included a home modernization program. Its purpose and objective was to provide employment. It was conceived that during the depression many persons of small financial means had permitted their homes to run down. These persons were not in a financial position to secure financing through regular sources. Private financial agencies were not willing to make one hundred per cent loans covering the costs of materials and labor, particularly when there was no mortgage device by which such loans could be protected since the real estate was, in most instances, already subject to mortgage. So the Congress set up the procedure by which the owners of homes could secure materials and labor for repairs and improvements and give therefor unsecured promissory notes. In order that private industry all along the line might benefit through the program, the participation of the Federal Housing Administration was limited to the insuring of these notes to the per cent felt necessary to protect the financial institutions involved against the risks which experience had proved were incurred in transactions of this kind. In order to encourage the origination of the transactions, dealers in home equipment and- building material were permitted to handle them on a non-recourse basis. These dealers were charged with the responsibility of securing the signature upon the application which, while it contained a number of questions to be answered by the home owner, was in no sense complicated. That application was to be subject to check by the financial institution and the checking of the credit background of the applicant was at some stage of the’ procedure required. The notes signed by the applicants bore a low rate of interest and three years were allowed for the repayment. Financial institutions like the defendant C. I. T. were qualified by the Federal Housing Administration and a contract of insurance was entered into with them. The financial institution furnished the money required by the home-owner. Then, if the home-owner failed to pay, it was the obligation of the Federal Housing Administration to reimburse the financial institution. The primary purpose of the Congress in authorizing the procedure was to stimulate employment through the means of improving and modernizing the homes of individuals whose financial condition was such that, otherwise, that could not be accomplished.

In the beginning the system provided that the money would not be paid out by the financial institution until after the materials had been installed in the house. Under this system, the dealer who arranged the transaction was required to furnish a completion certificate making proof that all of the materials had been actually installed in the house before he could be reimbursed for the materials he had furnished or had secured from other dealers and for the money he had advanced for labor in the installation. This system might have been satisfactory had it worked out so that one dealer furnished all the ma *575 terials and supplied the labor. It did not work out that way. The modernization of a house involved the furnishing of lumber, bricks, cement, nails, plumbing, furnaces and other supplies. Usually two or three different types of laborers were required on a job. Under the completion certificate system, the dealer who originated the transaction was required to carry the load until the improvement had been completed. This proved too cumbersome and too burdensome. As a result, there was substituted for it an arrangement by which the materials might be paid for as soon as they were all delivered to the premises of the home-owner. There was shifted to the home-owner the responsibility of installation and he was given the opportunity of borrowing a sum sufficient to pay for the labor of installation. Under this system, there was outlined in the application the details of the improvements to be made, the estimated costs of the materials and the names of the suppliers from which such materials were to be secured. The responsibility of seeing that the materials had been delivered to the premises was placed on the originating dealer. He was required to secure from the borrower a receipt entitled “Borrower’s Receipt for Merchandise” which read as follows:

“Notice to Borrower — Do Not Sign This Certificate Until the Materials Have Been Satisfactorily Delivered.
“I hereby acknowledge receipt in satisfactory condition of the materials listed in my application for a loan pursuant to the provisions of Title I of the National Housing Act as amended. Said materials shall be used to improve the premises of which the address is given below.
“(Signature) --
(Address of Property Improved)
(Date)
“Form 7789 - 100M8-39”
He was then required to sign what is called a “Dealer/Contractor/Applicator” statement which reads as follows:
(Date)
“To: C.I.T. Corporation:
“In consideration of your purchasing the note given by the debtor (s) whose signature^) appears on the Borrower’s Receipt on the reverse hereof, we hereby certify that all articles and materials contracted for have been furnished, that the signature^) on the Note and Receipt for Merchandise are genuine, that the Receipt for Merchandise was signed after the articles and materials contracted for had been delivered, and that we did not and will not perform any part of the work involved in the installation and/or application of said articles and materials.
<• “(Signature) -
(Name)
(Title)
“Dealer/Contractor/
“Applicator to whom the note is made payable must sign here
Do Not Use This Form If You Have Performed or Are to Perform Any Part of the Work of Installation and/or Application

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 571, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-thomas-waed-1943.