Two issues are presented in this direct appeal of a judgment of guilty under an indictment charging the defendant with embezzling and converting union funds, 29 U.S.C. § 501(c) (Count I), and making false statements of material facts in a labor organization annual report, 29 U.S.C. § 439(b) (Counts II and III): First, whether by writing and cashing forged checks on the local union’s bank account the defendant embezzled or converted funds of the union, or only funds of the bank. Second, whether Count I of the indictment, which charged embezzlement by both presenting forged checks to the bank and converting cash dues and initiation fees belonging to the union, should be dismissed on the ground that it is duplicitous. We decide both of these issues against the defendant and therefore affirm the judgment.
James R. Pavloski was, during all relevant times, the Treasurer of Local No. 195 of the United Paper Workers International Union. The funds of the local union (hereinafter “the union”) were deposited in a checking account with the Wood City National Bank of Wisconsin Rapids. The account contract between the union and the bank required that checks be signed by both Pavloski and the union president.
Pavloski converted to his own use cash received by him as treasurer of the union as dues and initiation fees. In addition, on twenty-three separate occasions between November 1972 and September 1975, Pavlo-ski signed his own name and also forged the union president’s signature on a union check and then presented the check to the bank for payment. The bank, not detecting the forgeries, honored the checks, paid Pav-loski, and debited the union’s account. The union failed to detect the forgeries when it received its periodic bank statements and canceled checks, which was not surprising since Pavloski, as the union’s treasurer, looked after the account.
I.
In arguing that the check forging activities did not constitute embezzling or converting moneys and funds of the union, Pavloski relies on the commercial law doctrine (Price v. Neal, 3 Burr. 1354, 97 Eng. Rep. 871 (K.B.1762)) now codified in Wis. Stats. §§ 403.418, 404.213 and 404.401, adopting U.C.C. §§ 3-418, 4-213 and 4-401, that a drawee bank pays its own funds, not those of its depositor, when it honors a forged check. Because of this doctrine, he argues, in legal effect he did not embezzle the union’s funds, but rather converted funds of the bank.
Similar arguments have been rejected in cases brought under 18 U.S.C § 641 when, as here, the check itself, the piece of paper, is the property of the drawer, on the ground that the appropriation of “property” consisting of the piece of paper is enough to satisfy the statute.
United States v. Lee,
Moreover, “funds” of the union were converted to the use of Pavloski when the bank debited the account of the union, as it did
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when each forged check was honored. That these reductions in funds were temporary would not exonerate Pavloski from liability, although in any event it appears unlikely that the union would be able to recover from the bank in view of its delay in discovering the forgeries and reporting them to the bank. See Wis.Stats. § 404.406(2)(b), adopting U.C.C. § 4-406(2)(b); cf.
Wussow v. Badger State Bank,
The common law doctrine on which Pav-loski relies does not, therefore, place his conduct outside the statute or the indictment. Our decision is consistent, we note, with
United States v. Daley,
II.
Pavloski also argues that Count I of the indictment, charging the converting and embezzling by means of the forged checks and skimming cash dues and initiation fees, is duplicitous. Rule 7(c), Fed.R.Crim.P., however, provides that a single count may allege “that the means by which the defendant committed the offense are unknown or that he committed it by one or more specified means.” Ordinarily embezzlement is accomplished by “several separate transactions [that] may form a single, continuing scheme, and may therefore be charged in a single count.”
United States v. Daley, supra,
Rule 7(c) necessarily contemplates that two or more acts, each one of which would constitute an offense standing alone, may be joined in a single count. The rule does not, however, sanction “duplicity,” which is “the joining in a single count of two or more distinct and separate offenses.”
United States v. Starks,
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Pavloski’s arguments regarding jury instructions and the denial of a motion in limine are subsumed in the issue discussed in the text.
