delivered the opinion of the Court.
Prussiаn, the petitioner, was convicted in the District Court for, Eastern New York of forging an endorsement purporting to be that of a payee of a govеrnment draft. At the trial, by motions to dismiss and in arrest of judgment, the sufficiency of the indictment was challenged on the ground that the offense charged was the forging of an obligation of the United States in violation of § 148 of the Criminal Code, U. S. C., Title 18, § 262, and that the endorsement alleged to have been forged was not such an obligаtion. The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the judgment, holding that the indictment sufficiently charged a violation of that- section. 42 F. (2d) 854.
Certiorari was asked on the ground, among others, that the decision below conflicted with decisions of the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit,
Gesell
v.
United States,
1 F. (2d) 283;
Lewis
v.
United States, 8
F. (2d) 849. See also
White
v.
Levine,
40 F. (2d) 502. In accord with the decision below are
Hamil
v.
United States,
The indictment charged the forging by petitioner of “ a certain obligation of the United States,” described as the endorsement on a draft, drawn by a disbursing clerk оf. the United States Treasury upon the Treasurer of the United States and issued to the payee, ■“ by falsely making and forging the name of the payee ... on the back of said draft.” It set out a copy of the draft and the endorsement, and alleged that together they constituted a forged obligation of the Unitеd States. The indictment also set up that the endorsement was “ for the purpose of obtaining and deceiving from the Treasurer of' the United States a sum оf money,” and was stated to be in violation of both §§29 and 148 of the Criminal Code.
Under § 148, “ whoever, with intent to defraud, shall falsely make, forge, counterfeit, or alter any obligation or other security of the United States” is guilty of a criminal offense. Section 147 provides: “The words ‘ obligation or other security of the United States ’ shall be held to mean all... checks, or drafts for money drawn by or upon authorized officers of the United States.” It is apparent that the draft drawn on the Treasurer by an authorized officer is an obligation ... of the United States” both in common parlance and by the express definition of § 147. But to extend thе meaning of that phrase so as to embrace the endorsement on the government draft is to enlarge the statutory definition, and would be possible only by a strained construction of the language of §§ 147 and 148, inadmissible in the interpretation of criminal statutes, which must be strictly construed. See
Fasulo
v.
United States,
*678 The writing described in the indiсtment, when issued by the drawer, was a check or a draft. The added endorsement was in itself neither a check nor a draft. We need not stop to consider the argument advanced that the obligation upon the draft does not become complete until it is endorsed, see Hamil v. United States, supra, p. 371 for it overlooks the circumstance that the meaning of “ obligation ” in § 148 is narrowed by the definition in § 147 to 'specifically enumerated written instrumentó, including checks or drafts for money, whiсh are complete, as such, within the statutory definition and in common understanding, at least when issued to the payee by an authorized officer of the government. The endorsement was at most the purported obligation of the endorser, not of the United States, and a purported transfer of the title of the draft to the endorsee. ■ In neither aspect was the endorsement itself an obligation oí thev United States as défined by .§ 147, or such a part of the draft as to constitute the -forging of the endorsement a forgery of the draft.. *
If the point were doubtful, the doubt would be resolved by a consideration of the purpose and history of the Act of which § 148 is a part, and a comparison of it with related provisions of the Criminal Code. Its purpose has been declаred by this Court to be the protection of the bonds-or currency of the United States, and not the punishment of any fraud drhvrong on individuals.
Dunbar
v.
United States,
But we think the indictment is to be sustained as charging an offense under §29 of the Criminal Code, which punishes the forgery of “any deed, power of attorney, order, certificate, receipt, contract, or other writing, for the purpose of obtaining or receiving . . . from the United States, or any of their officers or agents, any sum of money.” The indictment alleges specifically and with certainty the forgery of the endorsement on the draft, for the purpose of obtaining a sum of money from the Treasurer of the United States, and charges a violatiоn of § 29. We think the endorsement was a
“
writing ” within that section. Its language is “ comprehensive ” and “ all-embracing.” Cf.
United States
v.
Davis,
•Petitioner asserts that the indictment is defective in that it does not charge that the forgery was with intent to defraud the United States. See White v. Levine, supra, p. 503. No such averment is rеquired by the-language of § 29. relating to forged endorsements. Other provisions of § 29 punish the uttering' of a forged writing, or presenting any such writing to an officer of the United States in support of any claim, “ with intent to defraud the United States.” But the present indictment is not under either of those provisions. The charge is forgery of thе endorsement, which is punishable by the different provision, now in question, if committed merely “ for the purpose of obtaining or receiving ” from an officer or agent of the United States any sum of money. This imports an intent to defraud the United States, which the indictment sufficiently charges in the language of the statute.
Nor is thе present indictment defective, as is urged, because its material allegations are uncertain or repugnant. The accused was left in no uncеrtainty that he was charged with only a single act, that of forging the endorsement for the specified purpose. ’The judgment here would constitute an unmistakable bar to any future prosecution for the same offense. The validity of the indictment is therefore not affected by the fact that the pleader,
*681
through excess of caution, has mistakenly stated the act to be a. violation' Sf both § 148 and § 29. See
Williams
v.
United States,
Affirmed.
