UNITED STATES v. FRUEHAUF ET AL.
No. 91
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 11, 1961. Decided February 20, 1961.
365 U.S. 146
Louis Nizer argued the cause for appellees. With him on the briefs were Charles Seligson, Cyrus R. Vance,
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
On June 17, 1959, an indictment in two counts was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against appellees Roy Fruehauf, Fruehauf Trailer Co., Burge Seymour, Associated Transport, Inc., and Brown Equipment and Manufacturing Co. (hereinafter referred to collectively as the Fruehauf-Seymour group)1 and appellee Dave Beck. The first count, based on
The second count, based on
“[O]n the basis of the disclosure by the Court of what the Court understands to be a judicial admission by the government,” the court then asked, again, whether appellees wished to be heard on a motion to dismiss. At this point, government counsel interposed “to communiсate one thought to the Court that may not have been communicated by my brief.” He stated:
“Despite the fact that there is the repeated use of the word ‘loan’ in the government‘s advance outline before the Court, caused by the fact that the government‘s case in large part is as asserted by these defendants as the trial will reflect as it proceeds, nevertheless the government‘s position on the loan, and I hope to make this clear as the trial progresses, is actually twofold.
“A loan, if your Honor please, is something that relates to a state of mind between the person who is receiving the money and the person who is giving the money, and again the repayment which actually occurred in this case is only one aspect of whether or not the transfer of funds between one party or from one party to another is actually a loan.
“Now, to be quite specific, I will simply say that the position that the government takes is thаt the
government has called this a loan, and in reiterating the facts as we know them from the defendants, the defendants having repeatedly used the word ‘loan,’ we say that this is not necessarily so, because in fact any loan when it is made, to prove the fact that it was a loan, goes through certain stages, and is accompanied by certain attributes and here those items were not present in this case.”
After adverting to the size of the “loan,” the fact that no collatеral was given, and the facts that the “loan” could not be processed through financial institutions, that no interest was paid between the corporations although the transaction purported to require its payment, and that Beck did not in fact pay the 4% interest due under the terms of his note to Brown, government counsel concluded: “That is our first position. And the second position is that even if this is a loan as a matter of law it is still encompassed within the statute.” The district judge replied:
“I do not think that anything you said detracts from the argument that you made in your memorandum, that you are going to prove that this was a loan, and on that basis I intend to entertain an application with respect to the dismissal of the indictment.”
All of the appellees moved to dismiss on the ground, among others, that the transaction between Beck and the Fruehauf-Seymour group, being a “loan,” was not within the prohibition of the statute. Argument on the motion was had, and government counsel reiterated his position:
“The COURT: Assuming that this case was tried and the Court was disposed to frame special interrogatories to the jury, and one of those interrogatories was, Was the transaction a loan, and the jury brought back the answer No: do you think the Court could allow that answer to stand on the basis of the facts
as you have set them forth in your brief, or wouldn‘t the Court have to set aside the finding as being contrary to the evidence and the weight of the evidence?
“Mr. GUZZETTA: Your Honor, in the context of thе remarks I made after you read in open court my brief, I would say that that would not be an erroneous finding by them.
“The COURT: In other words, your position is that despite the facts which you set forth this could be held to be not a loan? When I say the facts you set forth, I mean the facts in your memorandum.
“Mr. GUZZETTA: As I tried to indicate, . . . the government‘s position is twofold. If it wasn‘t a loan, if the jury determine on the basis of the facts which they hear that this was—that the outer clothing, fabricated by one highly complex intercorporate transaction, didn‘t make this transfer a loan, clearly, it would come within the statute. There would be no problem in my mind at all. Secondly, if the jury decided that it was a loan, I wouldn‘t say that that would preclude them from finding a verdict of guilty because . . . a loan is encompassed under the statute.”
The District Court granted the motions to dismiss the indictment as to all of the appellees. It ruled:
“I am convinced that the language which I read into the record from the Government‘s brief is a judicial admission that this transaction was a loan. I have no doubt in my own mind at least, that in a trial either to the court or the jury, in a preliminary hearing where the defendants have not yet subjected themselves to jeopardy, if the Government established the facts which it recounted in its brief that it intended to prove, a finding by a jury to the contrary would have to be set aside, nor could the Court
find to the contrary. Those facts, in my view, notwithstanding the qualifications attempted orally, and despite those qualificаtions and accepting those qualifications, those facts, in my view, establish that the transaction was a pure and simple loan.
“. . . Having found as I do on the Government‘s judicial admission that the transaction was a loan, we must then resolve whether the transaction as a loan was violative of the statute as it was at the time of the transaction, and I am of the opinion that it was not.”
From this oral ruling the Government brought the case here by direct appeal pursuant to the
On this record, the question put to the Court for our direct review under
We do not reach that question on this appeal. For we cannot but regard it—abstracted as it has become, in the course of these proceedings, from the immediate considerations which should determine the disposition of appellees’ motions to dismiss an indictment incontestably valid on its face—as other than a request for an advisory opinion. Such opinions, such advance expressions of legal judgment upon issues which remain unfocused because they are not pressed before the Court with that clear concreteness provided when a question emerges precisely framed and necessary for decision from a clash of adversary argument exploring every aspect of a multi-faced situation embracing conflicting and demanding interests, we have consistently refused to give. See Parker v. Los Angeles County, 338 U. S. 327; Rescue Army v. Municipal Court, 331 U. S. 549; United Public Workers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S. 75; Alabama State Federation of Labor v. McAdory, 325 U. S. 450; Arizona v. California, 283 U. S. 423.
Nor dоes the record raise questions concerning the sufficiency of the indictment which would require, in an appropriate case, that the case be sent to the Court of Appeals, pursuant to
The core of the difficulty in the present case is that the record does not preclude the Government from attempting to prove that the transaction in question came within the statutory ban by reason of any or all possible theories. Of course, an undertaking by counsel here, however honorable its impulse, cannot bind the Government in the future. And the District Court‘s ruling, insofar as it purports to close any avenues open to the Government under the indictment—not in view of specifications made in a bill of particulars or an opening statement, but on the basis of a “judicial admission” culled from a pretrial memorandum—was impermissible and constitutes an insufficient basis to justify the exercise of this Court‘s jurisdiction on direct appeal.
We do not think, however, that the purpose of Rule 15 of this Court, under which the Government filed the Jurisdictional Statement whiсh brought the case here, requires us to penalize the Government by dismissing this appeal, simpliciter. This Court has the power, expressly provided in
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, dissenting.
The dismissal of the indictment in this case was placed squarely upon the district court‘s construction of a criminal statute. Specifically, the court ruled that a loan of money did not fall within the prohibition of § 302 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 (before its amendment in 1959). In bringing the appeal directly here, the Government eliminated from the case any possible questions other than the correctness of the district court‘s construction of the underlying statute—to which this Court‘s jurisdiction is limited under the Criminal Appeals Act.
I think the issue whether a loan of money came within the proscriptions of the statute is before us now and should be decided. I further think this is the only issue properly before us. However, since the Court thinks otherwise, I am persuaded that an expression of my views on the subject would not be appropriate.
