Fred A. Shelton and Marvin James brought habeas corpus actions pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1982), asserting that their convictions under the mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (1982), are invalid in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
McNally v. United States,
— U.S. -,
I.
In
McNally,
the defendants were charged with committing mail fraud by participating in a scheme whereby they gave state insurance business to an insurance agency that agreed to split the resulting commissions with them. “The prosecution’s principal theory of the case ... was that petitioners’ participation in a self-dealing patronage scheme defrauded the citizens and government of Kentucky of certain ‘intangible rights,’ such as the right to have the Commonwealth’s affairs conducted honestly.”
McNally,
Shelton and James are former Oklahoma county commissioners who were tried and convicted on indictments charging them with, inter alia, committing mail fraud by accepting kickbacks in connection with county purchases, thereby defrauding county citizens of the right to have county business conducted free from corruption and undue influence. The frauds are set out in more detail in the opinions affirming their convictions on direct appeal.
See United States v. Shelton,
Shelton and James maintain that
McNally
invalidates their convictions, and that the district court erred in refusing to apply that decision retroactively when considering their section 2255 motions. On appeal, the Government concedes that
McNally
applies retroactively in a federal habeas proceeding. The Government contends, however, that relief is nonetheless barred because petitioners have failed to satisfy the cause and prejudice inquiry mandated by
United States v. Frady,
We are one of the first appellate courts to consider the issues conceded by the Government, namely the retroactivity of
McNally
in a habeas proceeding and the adequacy of cause for defaulting that claim.
1
In view of the large number of cases in this circuit which are likely to be affected by these legal issues, and the divergent views of the courts that have considered them,
compare United States v. Smith,
II.
In concluding that
McNally
could not be applied retroactively in motions brought under section 2255, the district court applied the three-step retroactivity test set forth in
Allen v. Hardy,
This test, which was first articulated in
Linkletter v. Walker,
In the instant case, we are concerned with the retroactivity of a substantive non-constitutional decision concerning the reach of a federal statute, rather than a substantive decision on the scope of a constitutional guarantee like that at issue in Robinson. However, the practical effect of both decisions is the same; the defendant is not subject to trial on the charge. Accordingly, we believe that the rationale articulated by the Court in Robinson in concluding that the Linkletter test was not appropriate is equally applicable here. See Ingber,
Our conclusion is supported by Davis v. United States,
Two appellate decisions have relied on Davis to permit a federal habeas prisoner to assert a claim for collateral relief based on a subsequent Supreme Court opinion construing a federal criminal statute to exclude the conduct underlying the petitioner's conviction. See United States v. Bonnette,
We agree with the analysis in both Strauss and Bonnette and conclude that the opinion in McNally must be given retroactive effect in a section 2255 proceeding.
III.
In
United States v. Frady,
A. Cause
In
Reed v. Ross,
The decision in
McNally,
by limiting the reach of the mail fraud statute to deprivations of money or property, rejected the broader construction adopted by every circuit that had addressed the issue. “[V]ariously described as 'blockbusting/ as 'a total surprise’ and as a ‘wholly unexpected explication of the law of mail fraud,’
[McNally
] was, without a doubt, a departure from the law of every court of appeals—including this one—to consider the issue of intangible rights mail fraud prosecutions.”
United States v. Ochs,
B. Prejudice
We therefore turn to the Government’s assertion that Shelton and James are nonetheless not entitled to collateral relief because they have failed to establish actual prejudice resulting from the erroneous theory of mail fraud underlying their convictions. Our review of the record convinces *1491 us that the petitioners were prejudiced, although in different ways, and we will therefore address this issue with respect to each petitioner individually. However, as an initial matter we will consider the Government’s argument with respect to both petitioners that they were each fiduciaries who constructively defrauded their governments of money by accepting kickbacks for performing their jobs.
1. Constructive Trust Theory
James and Shelton were both charged with defrauding the citizens of their respective counties of their right to honest government by taking ten percent kickbacks from suppliers who sold goods to the counties. The Government did not charge that the counties lost money because of the kickbacks. Indeed, the evidence at trial tended to show that the sales were made at a previously established low price and that the kickbacks were paid out of the suppliers’ profits, which ordinarily were about thirty percent. See infra at 1496-97. Although the Government thus did not prove that the counties lost money, 5 the Government had no need to make such a showing given the state of the law at the time. Now, however, the Government seeks to avoid the impact of McNally by contending that the counties constructively lost money.
At least one circuit has agreed with this theory. In
United States v. Runnels,
The
Runnels
decision has been persuasively critized on several grounds. The dissent in that case, while agreeing that the constructive trust theory is sound, argued for reversal of the conviction because the theory had not been advanced at trial and the defendant had thus been prejudiced by not having the opportunity to defend against it.
See id.
at 1194-95. Other circuits have taken issue with
Runnels’
holding that a constructive trust theory can save a conviction that is otherwise invalid under
McNally. See Ochs,
In Holzer, the court reviewed the conviction of a judge charged with accepting bribes, thereby defrauding citizens of their right to have justice administered fairly. The court noted the lack of any showing that the victims of the fraud lost money or property, and then considered whether the convictions were nonetheless sustainable under the theory in
Runnels.
The court concluded that the constructive trust theory as it relates to bribes and kickbacks does not satisfy
McNally
because retaining a bribe or kickback does not divert money intended for the employer, thereby depriving the employer of property that is rightfully his.
“A constructive trust is imposed on the bribes not because Holzer intercepted money intended for the state or failed to account for money received on the state’s account but in order to deter bribery by depriving the bribed official of the benefit of the bribes. Unless we assume unreasonably that the state wants Holzer to take bribes so that it can recoup them under constructive trust principles, the state’s financial situation is the same whether he takes bribes or doesn’t take bribes. The only difference between the two situations is that in the first Holzer has deprived the state of its intangible right to honest civil servants. This is an intangible-rights case and only an intangible-rights case.”
Id.
We agree with the discussions in
Ochs
and
Holzer.
In rejecting the intangible rights theory, the Supreme Court in
McNally
characterized that theory as one under which “a public official owes a fiduciary duty to the public, and misuse of his office for private gain is a fraud.”
2. Marvin James
James was charged in a forty-three count indictment with thirty-eight counts of mail fraud, and five counts of extortion in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (1982). He was acquitted on fifteen mail fraud counts and two extortion counts. The mail fraud counts on which he was convicted all incorporate the first count by reference. That count provides in pertinent part:
“1. At all times material to this indictment, MARVIN JAMES, the defendant herein, was an elected County Commissioner for McIntosh County, Oklahoma.
“2. At all times material to this indictment, MARVIN-JAMES, in the performance of his official duties as County Commissioner would place orders and arrange the purchase of materials and supplies from various vendors doing business with McIntosh County, thereby causing the County Clerk’s Office of that county to encumber funds and send through the U.S. Mails county warrants or checks in payment for the materials and supplies purchased.
“3. At all times material to this indictment, MARVIN JAMES was under a duty to the citizens of McIntosh County to perform the functions of his office openly, honestly, impartially, free from corruption and undue influence, without receiving directly or indirectly, any money or other valuable thing for the performance or non-performance of any act or duty pertaining to this office other than the compensation allowed by law.
“4. During the period commencing on or about January 8, 1973, and continuing thereafter to on or about Dec. 14, 1981, MARVIN JAMES, the defendant herein, while serving as County Commissioner of McIntosh County, devised and intended to devise a scheme to defraud the citizens of McIntosh County out of their right to have the business of McIntosh County conducted openly, honestly, impartially, free from corruption and undue influence and in accordance with the Official Oath of Office by their elected County Commissioner, and to use the U.S. Mails in furtherance of the scheme.
*1493 “5. .4s a part of this scheme to defraud the citizens of McIntosh County, MARVIN JAMES, in his official capacity as a County Commissioner of McIntosh County, did place orders and arrange the purchase of equipment, equipment parts and service, road and bridge building and maintenance materials and supplies for McIntosh County from various vendors, and, in particular, Richard Henry Peak, d/b/a Muskogee Equipment and Supply Co., Inc., Muskogee, Oklahoma; Bill Klutts, d/b/a Okie Equipment Co., Meeker, Oklahoma; Marshall Greenman, d/b/a/ Eastern Equipment Co., Muskogee, Oklahoma; Donald Skipworth, d/b/a Caddo Material and Equipment Co., Oklaoma City, Oklahoma; Joe Swank, d/b/a Port City Road Supplies, Muskogee, Oklahoma, and Ed Wilson, d/b/a Wilson Material Co., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. It was a further part of the scheme that the defendant did receive from these sellers of road and bridge building and maintenance supplies cash kickbacks.”
Rec., vol. I, doc. 1, at 1-2 (emphasis added).
As James points out in this appeal, the indictment expressly charges only a scheme to defraud county citizens of intangible rights by the acceptance of kickbacks from third persons. The indictment contains no language which can be construed to allege that the victims of the fraud were deprived of money or property. Accordingly the indictment fails to charge a violation of the mail fraud statute as it has been construed in McNally. 6
The Government raises two related arguments in its attempt to overcome the patent insufficiency of the indictment: first it contends that the inadequate indictment did not prejudice James, and second it asserts that the evidence and instructions at trial satisfy McNally. These arguments mis-perceive the constitutional protections incorporated in the Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
The Fifth Amendment provides in part: “No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury....” The related provision of the Sixth Amendment states: “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation_” We discussed at length the role a criminal indictment plays in protecting these rights in
United States v. Radetsky,
“The purposes and requirements for the sufficiency of indictments have been variously stated, but the essentials are clear. First, the indictment must contain the elements of the offense and sufficiently apprise the defendant of what he must be prepared to meet_ Furthermore, and of paramount importance, a sufficient indictment is required to implement the Fifth Amendment guaranty and make clear the charges so as to limit a defendant’s jeopardy to offenses charged by a group of his fellow citizens, and to avoid his conviction on facts not found, or perhaps not even presented to, the grand jury that indicted him.”
Id. (citations omitted).
The Government’s argument that the indictment provided James with adequate no
*1494
tice of the elements of mail fraud under
McNally
is premised upon its reliance on the constructive trust theory. We have rejected this concept in Part II B,
supra,
and we further conclude that the indictment does not provide any notice that the transfer of money or property from the victim to the defendant is an essential element of mail fraud against which James had to prepare a defense.
See United States v. Baldinger,
In addition to failing to provide adequate notice, the indictment here does not ensure that James was tried only on an offense charged by the grand jury. An indictment that does not allege an essential element of the crime cannot satisfy the Fifth Amendment requirement that a grand jury has considered and found all the elements to be present.
See United States v. Hooker,
In sum, we conclude that the indictment here, by failing to ensure that the grand jury returned an indictable offense and by failing to provide James with notice of the elements of that offense, permitted James to be convicted on the basis of conduct that is not a federal crime. “There can be no room for doubt that such a circumstance ‘inherently results in a complete miscarriage of justice’ and ‘presents] exceptional circumstances’ that justify collateral relief under § 2255.”
Davis,
3. Fred A. Shelton
Shelton was charged in a 180 count indictment with 177 counts of mail fraud, and three counts of extortion in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951. He was convicted on thirty-seven of the mail fraud counts and all three extortion counts. The mail fraud counts on which Shelton was convicted all incorporated by reference the allegations in Count One, which states:
“1. At all times material to this Indictment, FRED A. SHELTON, the defendant herein, was an elected County Commissioner for Muskogee County, Oklahoma.
“2. At all times material to this Indictment, FRED A. SHELTON, in the performance of his official duties as County Commissioner would place orders and arrange the purchase of materials, supplies, and equipment from various vendors doing business with Muskogee County, thereby causing the County Clerk’s office of that county to encumber funds and send through the United States Mails county warrants or checks in payment for the materials and supplies purchased.
“3. At all times material to this Indictment, FRED A. SHELTON was un *1495 der a duty to the citizens of Muskogee County to perform the functions of his office openly, honestly, impartially, free from corruption and undue influence, without receiving directly or indirectly any money or other valuable thing for the performance or nonperformance of any act or duty pertaining to his office other than the compensation allowed by law.
“4. During the period commencing on or about January 1, 1968, and continuing thereafter to on or about June 30, 1981, the exact dates of which are to this Grand Jury unknown, FRED A. SHELTON, the defendant herein, while serving as County Commissioner of Muskogee County, devised and intended to devise a scheme to defraud the citizens of Muskogee County out of their right to have the business of Muskogee County conducted openly, honestly, impartially, free from corruption and undue influence, and in accordance with the Official Oath of Office by their elected County Commissioner, and to use or cause the use of the United States Mails in furtherance of the scheme.
“5. As a part of this scheme to defraud the citizens of Muskogee County, FRED A. SHELTON, in his official capacity as a County Commissioner of Muskogee County did place orders and arrange the purchase of road and bridge building and maintenance materials and supplies for Muskogee County from various vendors, and, in particular, James Joseph Skipper, d/b/a S & S Supply, Henry Peak, d/b/a Muskogee Equipment and Supply; and Joe Swank, d/b/a Port City Road Supplies. It was a further part of the scheme that the defendant did receive cash kickbacks from these sellers of road and bridge building and maintenance supplies in connection with both items delivered to and paid for by the county and items paid for by the county but intentionally not delivered with defendant’s full knowledge."
Rec., vol. I, doc. 1, at 1-2 (emphasis added). In this appeal, Shelton contends that the indictment and instructions given at trial are contrary to McNally, and that the evidence is not sufficient to support his conviction under the mail fraud statute as construed in McNally.
The indictment here, unlike the James indictment discussed above, charges that as part of the scheme to deprive county citizens of their right to honest government Shelton received kickbacks not only on actual purchases, but on “items paid for by the county but intentionally not delivered with defendant’s full knowledge.” Id. at 2. This allegation of “split deals” or “fifty-fifty splits” charges fraudulent conduct that necessarily deprived county citizens of money or property by asserting that the county paid for items it never actually received. Although the mere allegation of receiving a kickback is not sufficient to state a mail fraud violation under McNally, here the count alleging split deals was expressly incorporated by reference into every mail fraud count. As a result, while all the mail fraud counts could be read as charging only kickbacks, they could also all be read as charging that each transaction involved a split deal. 8 We therefore conclude that the mail fraud counts state a crime under McNally.
The jury instructions given in this case pose a more serious problem. Under
McNally,
instructions on the elements of mail fraud must require the jury to find that the victim of the scheme was
itself
defrauded of money or property.
See
In this case, the court informed the jury that the indictment contained the offenses alleged against the defendant and attached *1496 a copy of the indictment to the instructions, which the court allowed the jury to take into the jury room during deliberations. The instructions did not set forth the Government’s theory on how Shelton’s conduct had violated the mail fraud statute. Instead the court merely gave the jury the following general statement of the elements of the crime:
“Now, in order to establish the mail fraud offenses which are charged in Counts 1 through 177 of the indictment, the Government must prove the following essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
First: That the defendant devised or intended to devise a scheme to defraud or to obtain money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises; and,
Second: That for the purpose of executing or furthering such scheme, or attempting so to do, the defendant placed, or knowingly caused to be delivered by mail, a letter or other mail matter in a post office or other authorized depository for mail matter, to be sent and delivered by the Postal Service.
“The word ‘scheme’ includes any plan or course of action designed to deceive others, and by false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises, to obtain money or property from any person so deceived.
“A statement or representation is ‘false’ if untrue when made and then known to be untrue by the person making it or causing it to be made.
“A statement or representation is fraudulent if known to be untrue by the person making it or causing it to be made, and made or caused to be made with the purpose and intent to deceive.
“A ‘scheme to defraud’ means some plan to procure money or property by means of false pretenses or representations calculated to deceive persons of ordinary prudence.”
Rec., vol. III, at 837-38 (emphasis added).
Although the above definition of “scheme” states that it
includes
any plan by which the victim loses money or property, use of the open-ended word “includes” does not
require
the jury to find such a loss. This deficiency is compounded by the definition of “scheme to defraud”, which states that it means a plan to acquire money or property
but does not require that this money or property come from the victim.
Read together, these instructions inform the jury that a scheme to defraud means
any
plan to obtain money or property, and that the money may or may not come from the victim. Moreover, as discussed above, the mail fraud counts in the indictment could all be read to allege only the taking of kickbacks from suppliers on actual purchases as the way in which county citizens were defrauded of their right to honest government. The jury here, as in
McNally,
was thus not required to find that the victim suffered pecuniary loss. Consequently, “the jury instruction on the mail fraud count permitted a conviction for conduct not within the reach of § 1341.”
McNally,
These instructions together with the lack of evidence of split deals requires us to conclude that Shelton is entitled to collateral relief. Shelton was convicted on counts forty-three through seventy-eight, all of which involved county purchases from supplier James Skipper. Skipper testified without contradiction that all of these transactions involved the payment of kickbacks on actual purchases, and none of them involved split deals. Although Skipper did testify about two split deals that he had done with Shelton, these acts were outside the statute of limitations, were not the subject of any count in the indictment, and were admitted only pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 404(b).
Moreover, the evidence of several witnesses established without dispute that the payment of kickbacks had no impact on the way in which the price of county purchases was set. See, e.g., Rec., vol. II, at 120-22, 197, 211, 362, 415-20. Every six months, the county drew up a list of anticipated purchases and then advertised for sealed bids on the items on the list. The price for *1497 each item was then set by the lowest and best bid on that item. The price list was published. Although a supplier could obtain a sale on an item on the bid list by paying a kickback, his price had to meet the bid list price, as set by the lowest bid. Skipper testified that the price of items he sold to the county through Shelton was set by the bid price list. Id. at 253. Another supplier testified that he paid the kickback out of his profit on the sales. Id. at 211-12. The record thus contains no evidence that the payment of kickbacks caused the county any pecuniary loss.
IV.
We conclude that the mail fraud convictions of James and Shelton are invalid. As set out above, both petitioners were also convicted of several counts of violating the Hobbs Act, which convictions are not challenged. James was convicted of twenty-three counts of mail fraud and three counts of extortion. He was given consecutive six month sentences and fined $1000 on each count, for a total of thirteen years and $26,000. He began serving his sentences on November 8,1984. Shelton was convicted of thirty-seven counts of mail fraud and three counts of extortion. He was sentenced to consecutive five month sentences on each count, for a total of sixteen and one-half years. He began serving his sentence on March 8, 1985. The Government urges us to vacate the sentences on the Hobbs Act counts and remand the case to the district court to permit the court to increase the sentences on those counts. We do not believe vacation and remand with respect to the extortion counts is appropriate.
See generally United States v. Pisani,
We reverse the decisions below and remand with instructions to grant the motions for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The Second Circuit has concluded that
McNally
applies retroactively when a petitioner seeks relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
See Ingber v. Enzor,
. Although the change in circuit law was based on a Supreme Court decision handed down after the petitioner's conviction, the Court expressly stated that it was not deciding the retroactive application of its own decision due to the unusual procedural posture of the case before it.
. In both Strauss and Bonnette the court made separate inquiries into whether the intervening decision could be applied retroactively in collateral proceedings, and whether collateral relief was available. In Strauss, the court considered Davis only in the context of the availability of collateral relief, see
. In view of the Court’s conclusion in
Davis,
. Shelton was also charged with doing "fifty-fifty splits” in some instances. See infra at 1495. A "split deal” was an alleged scheme whereby suppliers on occasion would send in a phony invoice for goods that were never delivered, and then would split the payment with Shelton. In such a scheme, the county would necessarily be defrauded of money. However, Shelton was not convicted of any split deals. See infra at 1496.
. We reject out of hand the Government's argument that the indictment is sufficient because it alleges a pecuniary fraud by charging that James, by obtaining kickbacks, received money to which he was not entitled. This is, in effect, an assertion of the constructive trust theory disapproved in Part II B, supra.
We likewise reject the Government’s attempt to analogize the fraud alleged in this case to those cases in which the charged deprivation of intangible rights was, by the very nature of the fraud involved, necessarily inextricably intertwined with the victim’s loss of money or property.
See, e.g., United States v. Piccolo,
. The Government attempts to distinguish Baldinger, arguing that the record here does not reflect prejudice to the defense strategy. We disagree with the Government’s assessment of the record. Particularly significant to the issue of whether James had notice that the Government had to prove loss of money or property by the fraud victims, i.e. county citizens, is the Government’s closing argument.
“The instructions will tell you what we must prove. You have agreed in voir dire to follow those instructions and not require us to prove things that the law does not require us to prove, because we didn’t put any evidence on as to those things. For example, we're not required to prove, ladies and gentlemen, it isn’t an element, where the money came from that this defendant took. That’s not an element We didn’t put any evidence on to try to prove that. The only issue is did he take money. That’s the only issue. Not specifically where it came from."
Rec., vol. V, at 4 (emphasis added).
. We note that Shelton moved for a Bill of Particulars setting out which items the Government alleged the county had paid for but had never received. The motion was denied, presumably because the distinction between mere kickbacks and split deals was simply not relevant when the underlying theory of fraud was the deprivation of intangible rights, which could be achieved by either type of conduct.
