56 F. 218 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1893
This case comes before the court, for the first time upon a motion to quash the indictment. The indictment, found on the 17th of June, 1884, contains several counts which differ from each other only in the amount of money charged to have been misapplied, and in the name of the payee of the money. What is there said in regard to the first count is therefore applicable to all the counts.
The first count, after alleging that the defendant was president of the Second National Bank of the City of New York, an association carrying on a banking business in the city of New York under the act of congress approved June 3, 1864, charges as follows:
“Tlie defendant unlawfully and willfully, and with intent to injure and defraud the said association for the use, benefit, and advantage of bimself, tbe said John 0. Eno, did misapply certain of tlie money and funds of said association, to wit, tlie sum of $100,000, wliicb said sum of money be, the said John O. Eno, then and there, with the intent aforesaid, paid and caused to he paid from the moneys and funds of said association to Arthur Dyett and Abraham R. L. Norton, who then and there carried on business under the firm name and slyle of A. Dyett & Co.”
To this charge it is objected that it is insufficient in law — First, because the facts stated do not show that the payment by the de-
The law controlling on this occasion has been settled by the supreme court of the United States. The only duty devolving upon this court in this case is to apply that law to the indictment found against the defendant. By the law declared by the supreme court; in Britton’s Case, 107 U. S. 669, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 512, an indictment for a. misapplication of the funds of a national bank must specify the particulars of the appropriation, so as to show the application charged to be a criminal misapplication, as distinguished from applications that are unlawful but not criminal “There must be averments to show how the application was made, and that it was an unlawful one.” And in Northway’s Case, 120 U. S. 332, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 580, it is said by Urn supreme court:
"11 is oí the essence of the criminality of the misapplication that there should ho :i conversion of the funds to the use of the defendant, or of some person other than the association.”
In my opinion, the indictment in hand does not comply with this law. The statement of the indictment is simply that the defendant, for the use, benefit, and advantage of himself, misapplied $100.-©00 of the moneys of the association of which lie was president, by paying $100,000 of the association’s money to Dyett & Co. Tills statement; shows how the application was made, via. by paying 8100,000 to Dyett & Co. at the time and place stated, but it; does not show that such payment was an unlawful one. It; will be observed that the indictment contains no averment that the .8100,000 was by the defendant paid, or by Dyett & Co. received, to the use of the defendant. It is not averred that the payment by the defendant to Dyett & Oo. was in truth and in fact a payment to himself. There is no statement that; Dyett & Oo. were not entitled to be paid by the bank the §100,000 that was paid them. They may have had $100,000 on deposit in the bank, or their note for §100,000 may have been discounted by the bank. For aught that appears in this indictment, the payment to Dyett & Co. was entirely lawful, and, if so, the payment was not a conversion of the money by the defendant. Much a payment of §100,000 to Dvett & Co. might be useful or beneficial or advantageous to the defendant without being a conversion of the money by him. It is of no consequence that the payment is stated to have been unlawful. Calling a thing unlawful does not make it unlawful. Facts showing that the payment of the $100,000 to Dyett & Oo. was not only unlawful, but a. criminal application of the bank’s money, should have been stated. Nor is the indictment helped by the averment that the money was paid by the defendant to Dyett & Co. with
“The words ‘with intent to injure and defraud’ are words essential to the offense as charged, but do not enlarge the significance of the language, which avers the facts necessary to be proved in order to constitute the offense.” Mass. Crim. Law, 624.
It may be proper to add, in regard to the point made that the indictment is defective because it fails to aver that the acts charged were done without the knowledge or assent of the directors of the association, that, in my opinion, such an averment is not essential in an indictment for the misapplication of the funds of a national bank. The statute does not make absence of authority from the directors an ingredient in the crime of misapplication. I conceive that a conversion of the funds of a national bank by its president may be a criminal misapplication of the funds of the bank, although done with the knowledge and assent of the directors of the bank. The president of a national bank is not the association, nor are the president and directors the association. They are only officers of the association. The moneys of the stockholders and of the depositors in the association are not the moneys of these officers, but of the association; and it has not yet been held that a national bank may be pillaged of such moneys by its president, with impunity, provided the act be done in pursuance of a conspiracy between the president and the directors, or a majority of them.
The motion to quash must be granted.