Lead Opinion
Mаyer appeals from his sentence following conviction by a jury of four counts of using false documents in a matter within the jurisdiction of the district court, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001 (1982). He was charged with submitting fictitious letters of recommendation for the district court to consider when it sentenced him on an unrelated conviction. We reverse.
Before entering the сourtroom for his sentencing hearing, Mayer gave his attorney four letters of recommendation for submission to the court. The attorney gave the letters to the judge’s secretary. The judge testified that he read the letters prior to the sentencing hearing and that his sentencing was influenced to some degree by the letters. The purported authоrs of the letters testified that they had not signed or authorized the letters, and there was other evidence that the letters were spurious.
Mayer’s pretrial motion to dismiss the indictment was denied. A guilty verdict was returned in his first trial. Mayer then moved successfully for a new trial. Upon retrial he was again found guilty on all four counts.
I
Title 18, Section 1001 provides:
Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of аny department or agency of the United States knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact, or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent statеment or entry, shall be fined not more that $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
The text of section 1001 could be interpreted not to apply to any false statements or false documents presented in a matter within the jurisdiction of a court, especially in light of 18 U.S.C. § 6 (1982). Section 6 states that the term “department means one of the executive departments ... unless the context shows that such term was intended to describe the executive, legisla
The Supreme Court’s construction of the statute in Bramblett did not suggest that any exception existed for a false statement or document offered in the course of a judicial proceeding and did not suggest any rationale for setting the boundaries оf such an exception. However, lower courts have for many years since Bramblett suggested or found that such an exception exists.
In Morgan v. United States,
We are certain that neither Congress nor the Supreme Court intended the statute to include traditional trial tactics within the statutory terms “conceals or covers up.” Wе hold only, on the authority of the Supreme Court construction, that the statute does apply to the type of action with which appellant was charged, action which essentially involved the “administrative” or “housekeeping” functions, not the “judicial” machinery of the court.
Id.
In 1967, the Sixth Circuit squarely held that “§ 1001 does not apply to the introduction of false documents as evidence in a criminal proceeding.” United States v. Erhardt,
In 1974, the Second Circuit reversed a section 1001 conviction for filing a false affidavit during a civil action in federal court to which the Government was not a party. United States v. D'Amato,
Thus, the adjudicative functions exception to section 1001 has been suggested or recognized by appellate decisions since 1962, not long after the Supreme Court decided that section 1001 applies to matters within the jurisdiction of the judicial branch.
This court has indicated generally that section 1001 should not be extended “to its literal breadth,” and should not be permitted to swallow up perjury and other federal statutes that proscribe making false representations to specific governmеnt agencies or concerning certain government activities. United States v. Bedore,
Instead, properly construed, [section 1001] serves as a catch-all, reaching those false representations that might “substantially impair the basic functions entrusted by law to [the particular] agency,” but which are not prohibited by other statutes. The legislative history reveals nо evidence of an intent to pyramid punishment for offenses covered by another statute as well as by § 1001.
United States v. Rose,
We have addressed issues relating to the adjudicative functions exception in three
Warning: A false or dishonest answer to a question in this affidavit may be punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both.
It was subsequently shown that Powell had over $20,000 in a bank account. We affirmed her section 1001 conviction. Id. at 457.
We noted that other courts “restrict [the] use” of section 1001 in the judicial branch to housekeeping as opposed to adjudicative functions, citing Abrahams, but we were “not persuaded that there [was] any restriction against [the statute’s] use” in a case such as Powell’s, since her alleged “misrеpresentation did not occur during a judicial proceeding.” Id. We held that the matter of deciding that a defendant is indigent and entitled to counsel involves a housekeeping function.
In United States v. Gonzalez-Mares,
The defendant in Gonzalez-Mares was also charged with making a false statement to the magistrate at the time of sentencing, but that statement was prosecuted as an obstruction of justice in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1503 (1982). The decision to prosecute under section 1503 was consistent with a scheme in which frauds perpetrated upon a сourt in its adjudicative capacity must be prosecuted as perjury, obstruction of justice, or contempt, and not as false statements in violation of section 1001.
Most recently, in United States v. Plascencia-Orozco,
In the present case, we conclude that Mayer’s sentencing hearing constituted a “judicial proceeding” for purposes of section 1001, and that the district judge’s sentencing determination constituted an adjudicative function. The judge’s role in sentencing is not a housekeeping or adminis
However, the government contends that even if section 1001 does not apply to representations made to the court during the sentencing hearing itself, it applies to documents regarding sentencing that are submitted to the judge in chambers. The government argues that there is a distinction between misrepresentations to judges performing adjudicative functions within a courtroom, and misrepresentations to judges who are performing the same adjudicative functions outside the courtroom.
Yet this is a distinction without a difference. The fraudulent letters in Mayer’s case were submitted to the judge and were intended to influence him in sentencing. It makes no diffеrence whether the judge received and read the letters before or during the sentencing proceeding. The letters were intended to influence the outcome of a judicial proceeding, even if they were not presented to the court within the four walls of the courtroom. We see no basis for distinguishing between representations or submissions to a judge in chambers to influence his judicial decisions and representations made in open court. We cannot adopt the government’s argument that section 1001 applies to the informal submissions in this case even if it would not apply to submissions in open court.
Since we conclude that the sentencing process was pаrt of the trial court’s adjudicative functions, and that regardless of how they were submitted, Mayer’s fictitious letters of recommendation were intended to serve as evidence in the court’s sentencing determination, section 1001 does not cover Mayer’s conduct. We therefore reverse Mayer’s conviction under section 1001.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Congress has since abolished the "two-witness” rule for proof of perjury prosecutions. See 18 U.S.C. § 1623(e) (1982); United States v. Jessee,
. Any reasons underlying the recognition of a "judicial functions” exception to the application of § 1001 in the judicial branch would appear to apply to quasi-judicial functions (as opposed to “housekeeping" or "administrative” functions) performed еlsewhere. Adjudicatory hearings before agencies in the Executive Branch and proceedings before legislative courts are very similar in function and procedure to proceedings in federal courts. Procedure is often similar in legislative and quasi-legislative hearings. No similar exception to § 1001 has been recognized in such proceedings, however. See Stein v. United States,
. We have held, however, that the mere fact that another statute proscribes the same conduct does not necessarily preclude the application of section 1001. United States v. Duncan,
18 U.S.C. § 401 provides in part that:
A court of thе United States shall have power to punish by fine or imprisonment, at its discretion, such contempt of its authority, and none other, as—
(1) Misbehavior of any person in its presence or so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice____
18 U.S.C. § 1503 provides in part that:
Whoever corruptly ... endeavors to influence, obstruct, or impede, the due administration of justice, shall be fined not more than*1391 $5,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The origin of the adjudicative functions exception relied on here was dictum in Morgan,
The one decision which sets forth a rationale is United States v. D’Amato,
Because the decisions provide no policy or other reasons underlying the exception as applied to criminal cases, I see no compelling reason for extending the exception beyond the exact holdings of those cases. None of the decisions reсognizing the exception has dealt with submission of documents to the court at the sentencing stage, or indeed at any stage subsequent to trial.
I do not agree with the view that this court’s opinion in United States v. Gonzales-Mares,
In the course of this panel’s consideration of the casе I have supported affirm-
