213 F. 320 | 8th Cir. | 1914
W. E. Blanton, W. W. Chinn, Thomas A. Wakefield, and T. A. Wakefield, Jr., were jointly indicted for using the mails in aid of a scheme to defraud and to obtain money by false and fraudulent pretenses contrary to section 21-5 of the Penal Code. The Wakefields pleaded guilty. Blanton and Chinn were tried, convicted, and sentenced, and they separately prosecuted these writs of error. Another party who was discharged at the trial is excluded from the list of defendants. The assignments of error which merit notice may be grouped according to the general subjects to which they relate, as follows: (1) The sufficiency of the fourth count of the indictment upon which alone conviction resulted; (2) the sufficiency of the evidence to convict; (3) the admission of evidence; and (4) the refusal of instructions.
The fraudulent scheme charged, in the execution of which the mails were used, related to the sale of so-called “soldiers’ additional homestead entry rights.” Section 2304, Rev. Stat. (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1413), provides that soldiers who had served for 90 days in the army of the United States during the Rebellion and were honorably discharged and remained loyal should be allowed to enter 160 acres of land under the homestead act. Exceptional, favorable terms and conditions are granted by section 2305. Section 2306 (page 1415) provides that every person entitled under section 2304 who may have “heretofore” entered under the homestead laws less than 160 acres shall be permitted to enter an additional quantity not exceeding altogether the original maximum. Section 2307 extends the right to the widow of the soldier and in case of her death or remarriage then to his minor1 children. The statute was embraced in the revision of June 22, 1874, and speaks as of that date. It was construed as granting a bounty or gift, assignable or vendible by the beneficiaries, and as not requiring their personal residence upon the public land selected and entered. Webster v. Luther, 163 U. S. 331,
“It is not necessary that they shall all have the same function to perform in the carrying out of the scheme; but simply that they knowingly and intentionally combined and participated in the scheme as a whole, each one doing his part to the accomplishment of it, a larger part or a minor part, it may be, but nevertheless a substantial part at some time and in some form in the progress of the scheme to carry it out.”
The evidence of what each one did was properly laid before the jury (Fizpatrick v. United States, 178 U. S. 304, 20 Sup. Ct. 944, 44 L. Ed. 1078), and under the guidance of the instructions the jury found all were participants in a scheme to defraud. We think the verdict was supported by substantial evidence. It is true that all the script they bought and sold was not fraudulent, nor did all the defendants have an interest in every transaction, but there was a substantial párt of their business wholly fraudulent in which all defendants participated, showing an association in a continuous course of dishonest conduct, and, as regards the ultimate purchasers, an indifference whether the thing sold' was good or bad. In a case typical of this class a veteran of the Civil War who had a name like or similar to that of a homestead entryman who according to the government records had entered less than 160 acres of land prior to June 22, 1874, would be approached first by correspondence and then personally, and an affidavit would be obtained from him falsely reciting his identity with the entryman and also an assignment of his pretended right of additional entry. Ordinarily this was not difficult to do because of the advanced age of those dealt with; but sometimes to overcome obstacles interpolations were made in the papers after they were signed and delivered and without the authority of the signers. Blanton, who had lists of names and abstracts from official records from which he got the names of original entrymen and of the old soldiers, generally conducted the preliminary correspondence, Chinn the negotiations with the old soldiers pr their widows, and T. A. Wakefield the sales of the “script” obtained. The papers were transmitted by Wakefield to the purchasers through a bank with which all the defendants did business; the bank received the proceeds and then disbursed them according to previous directions. The disbursements regarded by themselves indicated a sale from one defendant to another; but, as we have said, the evidence justified the jury.in be
Complaints of the purchasers were met by promises which yielded nothing. They were put off on one pretext or another, but lost their money. There were so many cases in this class of fraudulent, worthless papers, so much money taken for them from innocent purchasers, and so many fruitless complaints from purchasers that with the other evidence the jury were justified in believing there was a prepared course of action designed to defraud and not a number of separate, isolated transactions each to be judged solely by itself; also, that the effort to make what each defendant did appear independent of the conduct of the others was a pretense. The letter charged in the fourth count to haye been deposited in the mails did not by its terms describe any particular homestead right, nor did the evidence show that the “script” Wakefield afterwards sold Moore, the addressee, was fraudulent, or that Blanton and Chinn were interested in it, still by heading and text it advertised the business in which Wakefield was engaged and generally solicited correspondence on the subject. In their joint and fraudulent venture Wakefield was the salesman, and whatever advertised or aided him was for the benefit of all. They were working together, and they mixed their business good and bad. They made no distinction in this particular among themselves or towards those they solicited to purchase, and the use of the mails to exploit or advertise the business was to effectuate that which was unlawful as well as that which was not. When the letter was put in the mails, their fraudulent course of business was still afoot; it had begun and had not been concluded or abandoned. The complaints of the admission of evidence, so far as properly assigned as error, are answered by what has been said. See, also, St. Clair v. United States, 154 U. S. 134, 149, 14 Sup. Ct. 1002, 38 L. Ed. 936; Sprinkle v. United States, 73 C. C. A. 285, 141 Fed. 811. A joint scheme to defraud with acts to effectuate it has the features of a conspiracy.
The judgment is affirmed.