Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Pеtitioners, together with one Street, now deceased, conceived and executed a nefarious scheme in fraud of the federal District Court and in corruption of the administration of justice. The short of it was that petitioners by fraud and deceit and through misrepresentations by attorneys induced the court to issue decrees effectuating a corrupt settlement of litigation. It happened this way:
Several insurance companies doing business in Missouri filed with the Superintendent of Insurance an increase in insurance rates which the Superintendent denied. The insurance companies filed over 130 separate injunction suits against the Superintendent and the Attorney Gеn
The lure of this sizeable amount of other people’s money played an important part in the scheme which was hatched.
Street was in charge of the rate litigation for the insurance companies. Pendergast was a “political boss.” O’Malley was the then Superintendent of Insurance. McCоrmack was an insurance agent. Of these, only O’Malley was a party to the litigation. Street agreed to pay Pendergast a “fee” of $750,000 to use his influence over O’Malley and obtain a settlement of the litigation which would be satisfactory to the insurance companies. O’Malley was agreeable. McCormack was the go-betwеen. Street made an initial payment of $100,000 in currency, which was divided $55,000 to Pendergast, $22,500 to O’Malley, and $22,500 to McCormack. Thereafter an agreement was reached and reduced to writing in form of a memorandum. O’Malley would approve as of June 1, 1930, 80% of the increase in rates which the companies had sought; the parties would apрear by their attorneys and join in seeking appropriate orders for distribution of the impounded money; 20% was to go to the policyholders, 50% directly to the insurance
Petitioners then proceeded further with their corrupt plan. About April, 1936, Street paid $330,000 in currency, of which Pendergast received $250,000, O’Malley $40,000 and McCormack $40,000. In the fall of 1936, Pendergast received another $10,000 in cash from Street. That left $310,000 of the $750,000 “fee” unpaid. And, so far as appears, it was never paid, due to the unraveling of facts which led to an exposure of the entire corrupt scheme. For about that time an internal revenue investigation of Street’s income tax return disclosed that оver $400,000 of the funds for which Street was to account as trustee had been paid to unknown persons. This was reported to the Court in February 1939. A grand jury investigation followed, in which the rest of the sordid story was unfolded. See United States v. Pendergast,
Petitioners press several objections to the judgment below. The chief of these are that the offense was not a contempt under § 268 of the Judicial Code (28 U. S. C. 385) as construed by Nye v. United States,
That section provides: “No person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any offense, not capital,. . . unless the indictment is found, or the information is instituted, within three years next after such offense shall have been committed . . .” It would seem that the statute fits this casе like a glove. If the conduct in question was a contempt, there can be no doubt that it was a criminal contempt as defined by our decisions. See Nye v. United States, supra, pp. 41-43 and cases cited. As such, it was an “offense” against the United States, within the meaning of § 1044. It was held in Gompers v. United States,
Certainly the power to punish contempts in thе “presence” of the court, like the power to punish con-tempts for wilful violations of the court’s decrees, “must have some limit in time.” Gompers v. United States, supra, p. 612. It is urged, however, that there is no limitation on prosecutions for contempts in the “presence” of the court except as one may be implied from the conclusion of the proсeeding in which the contempt arises. But if we are free to consider the matter as open, no reason for that different treatment of contempts in the “presence” of the court is apparent. Adams v. Woods,
But it is said that the contrary conclusion is to be inferred from Gompers v. United States, supra, because this Court took pains to point out that its ruling was аpplicable
The prosecution contends, however, that the offense consisted in the imposition of a fraudulent scheme upon the court, that successful execution of the scheme required not only misrepresentations to the court but continuous cooperation in concealing the scheme until its completiоn, that the fraud on the court would not be fully effected until 80% of the impounded funds was distributed to the insurance companies and $750,000 paid by Street and divided among petitioners. On that theory the fraudulent scheme, though commenced before the three year period, continued thereafter. Accordingly, it is argued, by analogy to such cases аs United States v. Kissel,
That section, so far as material here, limits the power “to punish cоntempts” to cases of “misbehavior” in the
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I do not agree that we should leave undecided the question whether conduct of this sort constitutes punishable contempt. To use bribery and fraud on the Court to obtain its order for disbursement of nearly $10,000,000 in trust in its custody is not only contempt but contempt of a kind far more damaging to the Court’s good name and more subtly obstructive of justice than throwing an ink
Neither can I agree with the Court’s conclusion that this contempt expired with the setting sun and the statute of limitation then began its work of immunizing these defendants. The fraud had as its object not merely to get the Court order, but to get the money from the Court’s custody. The contempt and the fraud did not cease to operate so long as the money was being disbursed in reliance upon it, and by virtue of its concealment.
Hence, I find no good reason for interfering with the effort of the lower court to bring these men to account for their fraud on it.
I whоlly agree with the conclusion of Mr. Justice Jackson that the petitioners’ conduct constituted a contempt within the meaning of § 268 of the Judicial Code, 28 IT. S. C. § 385. But I am also compelled to conclude, for the reasons stated in the opinion of the Court, that prosecution for such offense is barred by the applicable statute of limitations, R. S. § 1044,18 IT. S. C. § 582.
