Thе United States has appealed to this court under 18 U.S.C. § 3731 from a judgment of the district court which reversed appellee’s conviction, at a non-jury trial before a magistrate, of the misdemeanor, 18 U.S.C. § 641, of conveying and disposing of property of the United States, that is, a Treasury check payable to a third person. Appellee challenges the right of the United Statеs to appeal, contending, first, that there is no statutory authorization for an appeal from the decision of a district court reviewing a decision of a magistrate rendered after a non-jury trial of a misdemeanor, and, second, that the judgment of the district court was a judgment of acquittal, appeal from which is barred by the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment. If the appeal does lie, the government contends on the merits that the district court erred in acquitting appellee.
The information charged that on or about May 3, 1976, at Cambridge, Massachusetts, appellee “wilfully, knowingly and without authority did convey and dispose of the property of the United States, to wit, a United States Treasury check payable tо Richard Foote, a thing of value, all in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641.” Appel-lee waived in writing his right to a jury trial and to trial before a district judge and consented to trial by the magistrate without a jury. 18 U.S.C. § 3401(b); Rule 2(b)(c), Rules of Procedure for the Trial of Minor Offenses before United States Magistrates.
After a brief trial the magistrate found as facts: that the government check described in the information was a United Stаtes Treasury cheek which had never been delivered to its intended payee, Richard Foote; that at the request of defendant a friend cashed the check at her bank and gave the entire proceeds to defendant; and that the defendant knew when he asked the friend to cash the check that it was a check issued by the United States and that it was stolen. The mаgistrate ruled as a matter of law that the check was the property of the United States because it had not been delivered to the payee. On this basis he found the defendant guilty, imposed a sentence of three months, and stayed execution of the sentence pending appeal.
On the appeal to the district court judge appellee arguеd, as he had argued to the magistrate, that as a matter of law the check was not the property of the United States. Saying that the general rule was that delivery of a negotiable instrument was completed when the instrument was mailed if mailing was the customary mode of delivery contemplated by the parties, Judge Skinner ruled that the check in question was not the propеrty of the United States at the time it came into the defendant’s possession. He rejected the government’s argument that the government’s allegedly special relationship to the Postal Service and its greater access to means of withdrawing its letters from the mail changed the normal rule that mailing a check effected delivery to the payee. He conсluded his decision:
*28 The judgment of conviction is REVERSED, a judgment of acquittal is to be entered, and the defendant discharged without day unless there be other process pending against him.
Judge Skinner stayed for thirty days so much of his order as discharged the appel-lee. Within the thirty day period the United States filed its notice of appeal “pursuant to Title 18, United States Code, Section 3731,” and its mоtion to stay the judgment of reversal pending appeal was allowed on May 30, 1979.
Under Section 641, if the value of the “thing of value of the United States” allegedly disposed of by the defendant does not exceed $100, the offense is a misdemeanor, and, hence, a “minor offense,” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 3401(f), which could be tried before the United States magistrate. 18 U.S.C. § 3401(a)(b). Section 3402 provides that in all cases of conviction by a United States magistrate “an appeal of right shall lie from the judgment of the magistrate to a judge of the district court of the district in which the offense was committed.” The Rules of Procedure for the Trial of Minor Offenses before United States Magistrates provide in Rule 8(d) that the defendant shall not be entitled to a trial de novo by the judge of the district court, but that the scope of appeal shall be the same as an appeal from a judgment of a district court to a court of appeals. Like Rule 4(b) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, dealing with appeals in criminal cases, Section 3402 and Rule 8(a) do not contemplate appeals by the government, nor specificаlly mention any further appeal beyond the first appeal to the district court.
While there is thus no express provision for even the defendant to appeal from a judgment of the district court affirming a magistrate’s conviction, such appeals have been allowed apparently as a matter of course.
See, e. g., United States v. Kabat,
However, deciding that the courts of appeals have jurisdiction to review final decisions of district courts on review of convictions before magistrates does not imply that the United States can appeal a decision of a district court reversing a conviction before a magistrate. The right of the United States to appeal final decisions in criminal cases is measured in full by the first paragraph of 18 U.S.C. § 3731:
In a criminal case an appeal by the United States shall lie to a court of appeals from a decisiоn, judgment, or order of a district court dismissing an indictment or information as to any one of more counts, except that no appeal shall lie where the double jeopardy clause of the United States Constitution prohibits further prosecution.
Apparently only one other reported case has considered the precise question whether Section 3731 pеrmits the government to
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appeal to the court of appeals from a judgment of a district court directing acquittal of a defendant convicted before a magistrate.
United States v. Moore,
Appellee argues that because he was acquitted in a final judgment of the district court, the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment bars the government’s appeal. The contention must be rejected.
United States v. Wilson,
In various situations where appellate review would not subject the defendant to a second trial this Court has held that an order favoring the defendant could constitutionally be appealed by the Government.
Id.
at 344,
The Double Jeopardy Clause forbids a second trial for the purpose of affording the prosecution another opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to muster in the first proceeding. This is central to the objective of the prohibition against successive trials. (Footnote omitted.)
See generally The Supreme Court, 1977 Term,
92 Harv.L.Rev. 57, 109, 113-114, 117 (1978).
Greene v. Massey,
Since the decision in the
Wilson
case,
supra,
Appellee is mistaken in arguing from
Burks, supra,
It must, therefore, be concluded that we have jurisdiction of the present appeal by the government under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3731, and that the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment does not bar the government’s prosecution of the appeal.
Conceding that it was essential for the government to prove at the trial that the government hаd a property interest in the check when it came to appellee’s hands the government contends that the district court erred in holding that because, generally, checks are “delivered” to and become the property of the payee when mailed, the government did not have any property interest in the check after it mailed it to the payee Foote. 2
The parties agree that conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 641 requires proof that a property interest of the United States was invaded.
See United States v. Alessio,
The usual check theft case involves three parties: the drawer, the thief, and the person who acсepts the forged check. When the drawer is the Government, it is the Government’s piece of paper and the thief has stolen the property of the Government and of the person he has convinced to make payment. (See Clark v. United States (6th Cir. 1920)268 F. 329 .)
*31
Clark v. United States,
This defendant, if he stole the check, was not stealing it for the value of the paper upon which it was written. He was stealing it for the purpose of unlawfully securing the sum of $44.80 that did not belong to him, and, even if it were necessary to have recourse to the intrinsic value of the paper upon which the check was written as a basis of this prosecution, its value is by no means the measure of his guilt.
When a check is issued and mailed to the payee it is not analogous either to the mailed acceptance of a mailed offer to contract or to the appropriation of specific goods to a contract of sale by shipment. 3 A check significantly remains the check оf the drawer, for that is what gives it its value in the hands of the payee or in the hands of any third party who gets it and forges the payee’s name on the back well enough to negotiate the check. The written instrument, moreover, is intended to be returned to the drawer as evidence of the drawer’s payment of the face amount of the check to the payee. It is issued for an instrumental purpose, and it is retained upon its return as a receipt. For these instrumental and record-keeping purposes the check as a piece of paper never genuinely ceases to be the property of the issuer.
The delivery of a check is at best of limited functional significance. In the absence of special agreement a check is but a conditional payment even when it has been delivered to the payee.
United States v. Johnston,
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the judgment of conviction entered on the magistrate’s decision is reinstated.
Notes
.
United States
v.
Scott,
. The government contends that the check remained its property in any event because the Postal Service is an agent of the Treasury, so that delivery to the Postal Service by the Treasury does not constitute a delivery to the payee. The latter argument, depending largely on the interpretation of Sections 153.51 and 154.14 of the Postal Service Manual as incorporated by reference in 39 C.F.R. § 111.1, was not urged in the court below nor before the magistrate. The disposition of the ownership point makes it unnecessary to discuss this point.
. For certain purposes, mailing a check to the payee in accordance with the practice between the parties may be a delivery to the payee. Mailing may be a “delivery” fixing the place of the making of a negotiable instrument for choice of law purposes,
In re Lucas’ Estate,
