251 F. 440 | 6th Cir. | 1918
Plaintiffs in error were convicted upon an indictment under section 215 of the Criminal Code (Act March 4, 1909, c. 321, 35 Stat. 1130 [Comp. St. 1916, § 10385]), for using the mails in furtherance of a scheme to defraud. The indictment named several defendants, in addition to plaintiffs in error, including one Collins and one Brown. The alleged fraudulent scheme’ is best understood from a brief statement of the government’s claim, which the record
Defendants operated in the Nasby Building, in Toledo, Ohio, a purely fictitious “turf exchange,” equipped with paraphernalia apparently adapted thereto, including blackboard, charts, telephone and telegraph instruments, fictitious packages of money, betting tickets, etc. Hoblitzel, who resided in Marion, Ohio, while at Toledo on business, was met by Brown, who pretended to be acting for' a syndicate of gamblers in betting on the turf exchange, and who won Hoblitzel’s confidence, introducing him to Collins; the two bringing him to the “turf exchange” rooms referred to, where Hoblitzel was induced to bet his check for $5,000 on a pretended horse race, in the belief and on the false representation that Collins had advance information by wire from New York on the result of the races, whereby he always won the bets. It was announced that Hoblitzel had won $10,-000, but that the money could not be paid until $5,000 cash was substituted for his check- — which several days later was done. It was then announced that Hoblitzel’s bet turned out to have been lost, through an alleged misunderstanding of betting instructions, whereby the wager was laid on the wrong result. Hoblitzel was thus swindled out of his $5,000. The transaction extended from August 15 to August <25, 1914. The use of the mails will be referred to later.
The instant case is a companion to No. 3078, 251 Fed. 433, - C. C. A. -, this day decided, in which Shea alone is plaintiff in error, and which involved another alleged case of swindling through fake horse race betting by means generally similar to those charged to have been employed here. A former trial of that case was reviewed by us. Shea v. United States, 236 Fed. 97, 149 C. C. A. 307. On the former trial proof of the Hoblitzel transaction (the subject-matter of the indictment in the instant case) was received as evidence of intent and motive in the other case. In our opinion referred to, the substance of the evidence relating to each of the alleged frauds is stated. The alleged errors argued relate to the admission of evidence, the charge of the court as given, and refusals to charge. So far as seems practicable, we consider the questions in that order.
“Gentleman will invest from $30,000 to $50,000 in modem fertile farm. Must be unincumbered. State size and acreage and full particulars in first letter. Owners only. Agents need not answer. Address Box R-20, News.”
The evidence tended to show that Rundel, a farmer living in Oakland county, Mich., read and replied to the advertisement. Later he was called upon by one Collier, who claimed to be representing the “Guggenheims” in the prospective purchase of a farm. Rundel met Collier by appointment at Toledo, September 21, and was thereafter inveigled into a fictitious “turf exchange” in the Denison Building, where he was induced to bet $3,000 on a fake horse race, under representations similar to those made to Hoblitzel, and by which he was induced to make his bet. Rundel’s money was lost by the claim that the
The evidence of these transactions was properly admitted. There was testimony sufficiently connecting both plaintiffs in error with the Rundel transaction. True, neither plaintiff in error is directly shown to have been connected with the Millard incident; but the Rundel and .Millard transactions were apparently the result of the Detroit advertisement with which there was testimony directly connecting Shea. Both these transactions were in progress at substantially the same time, and the same man (Collier) opened the fraudulent negotiations in both rases and by similar representations. The two alleged frauds — the one accomplished; the other attempted — were inferably the outgrowth of the same general fraudulent scheme charged, with which the evidence tended to connect both plaintiffs in error and in whose execution the testimony indicated fictitious “turf exchanges” were at different limes maintained in the Nasby Building (where EToblitzd was swindled), in the Denison Building (where Rundel lost his money), and in the Chamber of Commerce Building.
As to the admissibility generally of this class of testimony, we content ourselves with a reference to what was said on the subject in Shea v. United States, supra, 236 Fed. 102, 103, 149 C. C. A. 312, 313. The charge (an extract from which we print in the margini
The important question is whether the court went beyond a proper exercise of his functions. In discussing the evidence of the existence of the alleged scheme to defraud the trial judge used the language which we quote in the margin.
“If your opinion upon the questions upon which the court has ventured an opinion, namely, that a scheme to defraud was in operation, which was substantially of the character charged in the indictment, and that the mails were misused to promote such a scheme, without reference to the identity of the parties interested, differs from that entertained by the court, your duty is to adhere to your own opinion, and not allow that of the court to have any influence whatever upon your conclusion.”
It is true that the court did express his opinion that no reasonable man could question that the so-called turf exchange was a pretense and a sham. This proposition, under the evidence in the case, was not reasonably open to question. There was uncontradicted and competent testimony which could reasonably mean only that neither the telephones nor telegraph instruments connected anywhere. The only reasonable inference from the testimony was that the charts, racing forms, etc., were shams. In view of the court’s charge, taken as a whole, including the express instructions regarding the presump
We think the court did not err in either of the three respects complained of. There was testimony that at the “exchange,” in answer to Hoblitzel’s statement that he did not wish to go to Marion for the money, Taylor said to him, in the presence of Brown and Collins, that there was no need of his going down after it — “you can send a check just as quick as you can go yourself after itthat Taylor then extended for a few days the time for getting the money, whereupon Collins, in the presence of Taylor and Brown (Shea was not present), asked Hoblitzel to go with him to the bank and send the check out through the bank; that Collins and Hoblitzei then went to the bank, where the collection was arranged for, Collins introducing Hoblitzei and indorsing the check; that a few days later, when the money was paid by the Toledo bank to Hoblitzei, in the company of Brown and Collins, it wras taken by Hoblitzei to the “exchange” and there received from him by Taylor, in Shea’s presence and with the latter’s participation.
Notwithstanding the fraudulent scheme charged did not include the use of the mails, and such contemplated use is not necessary to a vio
We see no merit in the suggestion that the evidence showed “at most, a mere suggestion that Hoblitzel could use the mails”; nor do we think the effect of the portion of the charge criticized amounted to an instruction to “find the defendants guilty, even though the use of the mails was a fresh and independent product of the mind of one of their confederates.”
The proof of the custom of banks to collect checks by mail was clearly competent. The existence of such custom would be presumed to be within the knowledge of. people of ordinary business experience (Spear v. United States [C. C. A. 8] 246 Fed. 250, 158 C. C. A. 410); and the jury might well think plaintiffs in error more than ordinarily waywise.
We think, moreover, that the testimony would warrant a conclusion that plaintiffs in error consciously participated in bringing about the use of the mails for the purposes stated. Such a bringing about of the use of the mails would be a “causing” of such use, even though neither of them - personally made the arrangements with the bank. United States v. Kenofskey, 243 U. S. 440, 37 Sup. Ct. 438, 61 L. Ed; 836; Goldman v. United States (C. C. A. 6) 220 Fed. 57, 61-63, 135 C. C. A. 625.
We find it unnecessary to consider the question (not presented in brief of plaintiffs in error nor clearly raised on the record) whether the mere fact of the formation of the fraudulent scheme charged would make plaintiffs in error liable for the act of either of their associates (not directly or indirectly participated in by plaintiffs in error) in causing the mails to be used in collecting the check, without reference to whether such use was such a probable, incidental, or reasonable consequence of the execution of the alleged fraudulent scheme as that it should naturally have been foreseen by all the parties thereto as likely to happen.
We have discussed the prominent assignments argued by plaintiffs in error, and have considered all so argued. We find no prejudicial error, and the judgment of the district court is accordingly affirmed.
“The Millard testimony ought to be disregarded by you altogether, unless it is your judgment that some one then associated and confederal ed with either Taylor or Shea in the scheme to defraud, such as involved Itundel, and such as'involved Hoblitzel, was the party who negotiated with Millard, and that his dealings with Millard were for (he purpose of bringing the lader within the roach of the confederates in the alleged fraudulent scheme, that Millard might be victimized substantially in (he same maimer as Itundel.arwl Hoblitzel were defrauded, and substantially in the maimer as alleged in the indictment.”
In Jackson v. United States, supra, the prosecutor's inquiry, in the course of argument, to tlie jury, “Why didn’t the defendant put a sworn witness: on The stand?” was held not necessarily to imply, and not ordinarily to be understood to mean, that comment was being made on the defendant’s failure to testify. In Carlisle v. United Bin tes, supra, an argument by prosecuting counsel that the government liad mude out a prima facie case, which had not been contradicted, was held not reversible error. In Rose v. United States, supra, an argument that the evidence “is such, that no sane man can arrive at any other conclusion” than that the defendant was guilty, followed by an inquiry, “Who is it that denies that Mr. Warren told the truth when lie went on the witness stand?” was held to be no more than an argument that the evidence of the government is uncontradicted "and unexplained. rJ!he statute, indeed, does not go so far as to forbid any nonprejudieial reference bv the court to the defendant’s failure to testify, as in Hanish v. United States (C. C. A. 7) 227 Fed. 584, 586, 142 C. C. A. 216, where it was held that an instruction that the fact that defendant had not testified is not to bo considered against him was not prejudicial comment, and so was not error. A verdict cannot be impeached merely by showing that the jurors discussed in the jury room defendant’s failure to testify. Stout v. United States (C. C. A. 8) 227 Fed. 799, 803, 804, 142 C. C. A. 323.
“There is little chance for dispute here, in the court’s opinion, hut that the paraphernalia employed to impress Hoblitzel with the thought that he was in touch with a real turf exchange, so called, where real wagers on the outcome of real horse races might he laid, were hut the furniture of this swindle. The large amount of apparent money was hut a simulation, the telegraph and telephone instruments were hut shams, m that neither was a real instrument of communication; the amvouneements and posting of races toere shams, the hookings were tricks. Any one who devised this scheme produced just such a fraudulent device as the statute condemns.”