The only point, which we find it necessary to decide upon these appeals is whether the prosecution was barred by the Stat-ute of Limitation. The convictions were imder an indictment found on March 31, 1950 which cha d the defendants with . ... . , . TT . , „ „ , conspiracy to defraud the United States; 1 P that is, by impairing, obstructing, or defeating the lawful function of any department of Government”, 2 in this instance the rationing of sugar through the Office of Price Administration. It is not necessary to set out the evidence beyond saying- that the prosecution did not prove that the con-• , , , , , t-. , spiracy lasted beyond December 31, 1946; ,and that the result depends upon whether the three years period of limitation, which concededly applied to the crime, 3 began to run on January 1, 1947, or on January 1, 1950. The answer to that turns upon the following clause in the Act of 1944: “The running of any existing statute of limitations * * * shall -be suspended until three years after the termination of hostilities in the present war as proclaimed by the President”. 4 That act was an amendment of the first section of the Act of August 24, 1942; 5 and in 1948, when the Criminal Code as a whole was amended, that Act was itself put into general terms, as follows: “When the United States is at war the running of any statute of limitations =:< >:< js * >s< suspended” etc.; 6 and in that form it now appears as § 3287 of Title 18 of the United States Code, which went into effect on September 1, *646 1948. 7 If § 3287 had enlarged the period of limitation beyond the extension granted in 1944, it would govern this appeal, because the period fixed by the Act of 1944 had not expired in 1948; but the prosecution does not suggest that it did, and we shall confine our discussion to the Act of 1944.
If the words be read literally, there was no escape from holding that in computing the period of limitation of three years, one should start on January 1st, 1950, and not on January 1st, 1947; and it would of course follow that, for any crimes of the kind described, an indictment might be found at any time before January 1, 1953. On the other hand, if the clause was the same as though it read: “the bar of the statute is suspended until three years” etc., the period of limitation expired on December 31, 1949, and the indictment was too late. The word, “running,” is a colloquial term, not a “word of art,” coined ad hocand it does not appear to us that in this setting it so inexorably excludes the meaning, “bar,” that it will not bear that construction, if only so will the purpose of the Act as a whole be realized, and consequences avoided that Congress certainly would not have tolerated. We concede that in the Act of 1942, 8 which we quote in the margin, “running” did not mean “bar”; but that it was used to toll the statute of limitations until July 1st, 1945, or some earlier date; and our interpretation does therefore involve the assumption that Congress used the word in a different sense in 1944. The strength, and the only strength, of the prosecution’s argument is that we should not make that assumption, but should accept the literal meaning of the word; and to this we should yield, were it not that, (1), the construction we adopt preserves the original purpose of the Act of 1942 to extend existing periods of limitation only by the time which should elapse before the declared termination of hostilities; and that, (2), if the Act of 1944 in addition more than doubled the ex-isting period of limitation for crimes committed before January 1st, 1947, a situation resulted, which we cannot imagine that Congress would have countenanced.
In United States v. Smith,
The Senate Report 9 which accompanied the Act of 1942, declared that its “purpose” was “to suspend any existing statutes * * * applicable to * * * defraud-jng the XJ. S. * * * for the period of the war. * * * action should be taken * * * to extend the limitation statute so that frau(js may be discovered and pun-islled even after the termination of the present conflict and to insure that the limitations statute will not operate under stress 0f dm present-day events.” It was assumed that, if “the law-enforcement branch 0f the Government” had three years after june 30) 1945 or earlier, that would be time enough to “discover” any frauds which might have escaped detection, bello flag-rante. The war was then only about nine months old, and by 1944 its demands upon our resources, in personnel as well as in materiél, may have become so great that, although three years after the “shooting -war” had ended had originally been thought enough, double that time then appeared necessary. However, if Congress 'had so changed its mind, the Senate Report which accompanied the bill 10 gave no such indication, unless it was in the words: “It is clear that the bulk of the offenses * * * not be apprehended or investigated until the end of the war and will then require considerable time before they advance to the stage of litigation.” That language was certainly a most equivocal way of say-jng that accumulation of cases was so great that twice the time had become necessary to clear it up after “hostilities” had ended, And that aside, it would be unreasonable to impute to Congress a purpose to pass an *648 act providing that crimes, committed before “hostilities” had ended, should have a period of limitation made up of all the time that has elapsed before that date, plus twice the period allowed for crimes committed after “hostilities” ended. All the crimes equally became a part of “the bulk of offenses cognizable under this statute” with which the “law-enforcement branch” had to deal after December 31, 1946; and there was no' reason to suppose that the later crimes would be "apprehended or investigated” before the earlier. Indeed, so far as any speculation whatever is in order, it would be that the earlier offenses would be earlier discovered. Moreover, all such crimes would be equally injurious to the interests of the United States, so that we must not suppose that Congress would be more lenient as to a part of them than as to the rest. For these reasons we cannot see why, once it is settled that “running” means “bar” -as to crimes committed after the “termination of hostilities,” it does not mean the same thing as to crimes committed before, or to suppose that Congress meant to give the “law-enforcement branch” twice the time to detect the second that it was to have to detect the first.
We have not considered any of the other decisions upon the Act of 1944, because those decided before January 7, 1952, were superseded, when United States v. Smith, supra, was handed down, and so far as we know, the question has come up only once since that time — United States v. Showalter, D.C.,
Judgment reversed; indictment dis-missed,
Notes
. § 371 (formerly § 88) Title 18 U.S.O.
. Haas v. Henkel,
. § 3281, Title 18 U.S.O.
. 58 St. at Large, p. 667.
. 56 St. at Large, p. 747.
. 62 St. at Large, p. 828.
. 62 St. at Large, p. 862, § 20, 18 U.S.C.A. note preceding section 1.
. “The running any existmg . limitations applicable to offenses involving , , . ,. .. . . the defrauding or attempts to defraud the „ _ ______ ___t United States or any agency thereof, , . . . ,. whether by conspiracy or not, and m any , . manner, and now indictable under any ...... , , , , ... existmg statutes, shall be suspended until June 30, 1945, or until such earlier time as the Congress by concurrent resolution, or the President, may designate. This . . . .. , ’ . „ Act shall apply to acts, offenses, or trans-A , .1. . ’ - actions where the existing statute of lim. . „ 6 itations has not yet fully run, but it shall . , . , „ not apply to acts, offenses, or transactions , . j . ’ , ’ , which are already barred by the provi....... sions of existmg laws.
. Senate Report No. 1544 ; 77th Congress 2nd Session.
. Senate Report No. 1057; 78th Congress 2nd Session.
