United States v. Wimberly

34 F. Supp. 904, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2695
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 22, 1940
DocketCr. No. 9380
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 F. Supp. 904 (United States v. Wimberly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Wimberly, 34 F. Supp. 904, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2695 (W.D. La. 1940).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Defendants were charged in an indictment of six counts with using the mails in furtherance of a scheme to defraud. In a demurrer they have attacked it for repugnancy and for the further reason that, as they contend, on its face, the bill shows no fraud to have been committed.

Some twelve typewritten pages were used in describing the scheme. Partly summarized, it was as follows: That defendants did, on or about the first of July, 1937, devise said scheme to defraud the Parish of Bienville, Louisiana, its citizens and taxpayers, and the J. D. Adams Company (hereafter called the Adams Company) of Indianapolis, Indiana, under these circumstances, to-wit, the members of the Police Jury for said parish “acting separately by Wards, and not by resolution or jointly, purchased during the years 1935 and 1936” from the Adams Company “ * * * nine (9) International tractors, seven (7) terracers, one (1) small rotary scraper and one (1) grader”, for the price of $38,666.75, which had been reduced by payments to the sum of $34,519.97, bearing interest as to part at 6 per cent, and the balance at 7 per cent.; that as of June 6, 1938, the said indebtedness stood at $39,541.83; that the defendants planned to induce the State Tax and Bond Board, and the Police Jury “as a body and jointly to approve and authorize the payment of” said last-mentioned sum to the Adams Company, and at about the same time “to represent to said J. D. Adams Company that it would be necessary for the said Company to have the assistance of the said defendants in order to collect the said alleged indebtedness”, and for which they “would have to be paid 50 per cent. (50%) of the amount collected”; that, at the time, the defendant, J. S. Williams, was Secretary of the Police Jury and Treasurer of the parish, and was Mayor of the town of Arcadia, Louisiana; that J. Rush Wimberly, Sr., was one of the state judges of the district embracing Bienville Parish; that defendant M. E. Woodward was State Senator from the district also embracing said parish, and that the defendant, Lorris M. Wimberly, represented said parish in the lower house of the State Legislature, was Speaker of that body and also Chairman of the State Civil Service Commission; that J. Rush Wimberly, Jr., was employed as equipment inspector of the Highway Department of the State; and that each of the named defendants “was receiving a salary or compensation under and by virtue of his respective official office, and under a solemn oath, promise, representation and understanding to faithfully and honestly discharge and execute the duties entrusted to him, and especially to work in the interest and for the benefit of the said citizens and taxpayers, who were defrauded and intended to be defrauded under said scheme.”

That it was further a part of said scheme to cause the Police Jury “to represent to [906]*906the State Bond and Tax Board that the said indebtedness had been incurred and contracted for in good faith, and value had been received therefor by the Police Jury”, and that payment should be approved by said Board, “whereas in truth and in fact”, the defendants knew that said machinery and equipment had been “sold to the members of the said Police Jury * * * in their respective Wards, separately, and not to the Police Jury jointly and as a body, but to the members forming the Bienville Parish Soil Conservation and Terracing Association, and under an understanding between said members of the said Police Jury and representatives of the said * * * Adams Company * * * that said equipment would be paid for from the funds, over and above the necessary maintenance, collected as rentals from the farmers in each Ward, who used the said machinery and equipment for terracing and soil conservation purposes”; that the said plan for payment by said association had failed, except to the extent of $4,146.47, which had peen paid; “that there was no legal or lawful resolution or ordinance of the said Police Jury * * * authorizing the purchase of the said machinery * * * or for incurring the debt or agreeing to pay the same”, and that the parish taxpayers “were under no obligation to pay * * * and * * * 'there was no legal or lawful authority for payment by said Police Jury.”

Further, that as a part of said scheme, defendants did cause to be filed in the district court of Bienville Parish a “petition for judgment against the said Police Jury” for the full amount “of approximately $38,183.35 * * * and prayed in said petition that” it be ordered to levy a tax upon the taxable property in the parish for the year 1938 of sufficient millage to pay the same with interest; and that they, the defendants, did “corruptly, immorally and improperly induce, persuade and counsel” the Police Jury “as a body politic to accept and recognize said indebtedness as a legal claim against the said Parish of Bienville * * * and to file no answer”; that as a result, judgment was taken by default, and signed by the other presiding judge of said district on March 4, 1938; 'but that a petition was filed for a devolutive appeal (without supersedeas) to the Supreme Court of the State “by certain taxpayers” which “was granted * * * on September 8, 1938”; and that thereupon the said defendants caused the Adams Company to cancel said judgment.

Further, that as a part of said scheme, defendants did “cause the Police Jury * * * at its meeting on May 2, 1938, to pass an ordinance authorizing the issuance of eighty (80) Parish certificates of indebtedness, with a par value of $500 each”, bearing interest at 5 per cent, per annum, and maturing over a period of years “with a total principal value of $40,000 for. the purpose of paying for the aforesaid machinery and equipment * * * and providing for the payment of” said certificates with interest “from one-half (1/2) of one (1) mill of the regular alimony tax of four mills authorized by the constitution and laws of the State of Louisiana”; that the defendants did cause the said Williams, as Secretary of said Police Jury “to deliver all of said certificates to” an authorized agent of the Adams Company at Arcadia, Louisiana, on October 27, 1938, “under a contract, agreement and arrangement to the effect” that it would immediately deliver * * * to said defendants” the total issue of the par value of $80,000, “in exchange for certain checks totaling the sum of $20,000”; that of this sum, $3,500 was paid out of funds on hand of the said Police Jury and that the last maturing certificates, 7 in number, bearing the numbers 74 to 80, due June 6, 1957, and 1958, were surrendered and cancelled, leaving those “of an earlier maturity in the hands of the said defendants”; that the balance of $16,500 was paid to the said Adams Company and certificates received by the defendants as follows:

Certificates Par value Checks

J. Rush Wimberly, Sr., and J. Rush Wimberly, Jr....... M. E. Woodward.......... 22 $11,000 $ 3,500 24 12,000 7,000

R. L. Williams............ 7 3,500 2,000

L. M. Wimberly........... 18 9,000 4,000

71 Totals $35,500 $16,500

[907]*907(Note two certificates of $500 each amounting to $1,000 are not accounted for.)

That as a further part of said scheme, “defendants had, at all times, concealed from the members of the Police Jury * * * the citizens and taxpayers * * * and the Parish Officers * * * other than defendant J. S. Williams” the fact that the Adams Company “was willing to accept and did accept fifty per cent (50%) of the amount of said indebtedness in full settlement * * *, which was well known to the said defendants * * * ”.

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303 P.2d 393 (Montana Supreme Court, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
34 F. Supp. 904, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wimberly-lawd-1940.