218 F. 83 | S.D.N.Y. | 1914
The indictment charges that between January 1, 1908, and February 9, 1914, John Burke and Jacob R. Salas did unlawfully conspire to defraud the United States; the agreement consisting of a promise on the part of Burke to cause purchases on behalf of the commissary department to be made from Salas, and
This matter comes on for determination of a demurrer to the indictment, upon the ground that the District Court for the Southern District of New York is without jurisdiction of the offense; the contention being that the indictment shows that the conspiracy was formed between the defendants in the Canal Zone, and fails to show the commission of any overt act within the jurisdiction of this court. It is not clear that the question, intended to be presented, can be raised by a demurrer to the indictment, in view of the fact that the indictment alleges, at least as a conclusion, that the payments, relied upon by the plaintiff, were overt acts to effect the object of the conspiracy.
However, after considering the matter upon, the merits, I have reached the conclusion that the averments of the indictment relating to defendant Burke’s collection of the drafts in this district through a local bank give this court jurisdiction of the offense. The collecting bank in New York City was an agent of defendant Burke in presenting and receiving acceptance and payment of the draft, and its acts in so doing are Burke’s acts; and this is true, though the collecting bank was an innocent agent and not a party to the conspiracy. If the defendant Burke had sent a person from the Canal Zone to New York City with the drafts, and this person had there collected them and received payment from Salas or his agent, it is clear the act of that person would have been that of Burke as much as if done by Burke himself. It is no less true of the collecting bank’s act.
The facts of the case of Ex parte Black (D. C.) 147 Fed. 832, and 160 Fed. 431, 87 C. C. A. 383, relied upon by the demurrant, show that the payments relied upon by the government in that case as overt acts were made after the conspiracy had been fully completed, and could not, therefore, have been done to effect its object. In that case the object of the conspiracy was to effect a fraudulent entry of public lands. The acts essential to the conspiracy were the successive steps necessary to be taken in the land office to complete the entry. These steps had been taken and the entry completed long before the payments relied upon as overt acts were made. The statute of limitations had barred the acts constituting the entry, and the case was' sought to be taken out of the influence of the statute by laying the subsequent payment of money, made after the conspiracy had successfully ended, as an overt act.
In this case the object of the conspiracy- alleged in the indictment was to bribe the defendant Burke, by a series of payments of money to him by the defendant Salas, to induce him to purchase supplies