OPINION OF THE COURT
The question for decision is whether the appellants’ conduct constituted a violation of paragraph four of 18 U.S.C. § 2314:
Whoever, with unlawful оr fraudulent intent, transports in interstate or foreign commerce any traveler’s checks bearing a forged countersignature . .. shall be finеd ... or imprisoned ... or both.
Convicted in a bench trial, McGovern and Scull argue in this appeal that the government failed to prove the predicate of the federal statutory offense: common law forgery. Appellants contend that the existence of authоrity to sign another’s name to an instrument defeats a forgery charge, and that here appellant McGovern, purchaser of the traveler’s checks, authorized appellant Scull to sign McGovern’s name to the checks. We will affirm essentially for the reasons set fоrth by Chief Judge Weber. United States v. McGovern,
I.
In the modern idiom, the appellants’ fascinating plan could be dubbed “CITISCAM,” because the participants devised a nоvel method of defrauding Citibank Corporation and certain businesses. The motive for the operation was the existence of an $1,800 debt McGovern owed an increasingly impatient Scull. The scheme was obvious: McGovern would buy $2,400 (for good measure) in traveler’s checks from a bank; Scull would sign McGovern’s name to the checks and cash them and McGovern would claim to the bank that he had lost the checks, knоwing that according to highly advertised traveler’s check policy the issuer would promptly “refund” his “lost” checks. If the scheme was successful, either the businesses or the issuer of the checks would bear the loss.
Citibank, one of the planned victims under the scheme, issued the cheеks to McGovern through a Niagara Falls, New York, bank. The purchase agreement that McGovern signed stated:
The purchaser agrees to sign each check in the upper left corner at the time of purchase with the same signature used in signing this agreement; and to countersign each check in the lower left corner when cashed, in the presence of the person cashing it.
Not attuned to the consequences of crossing state lines, McGovern then proceeded to Erie, Pennsylvania, thereby vesting the federal authorities with jurisdiсtion over the conspirators’ activities. There, tutored by McGovern, Scull practiced imitating McGo
II.
As explained in detail by Chief Judge Weber, forgery in § 2314 means what the term meant under common law in 1823. United States v. McGovern,
McGovern and Scull contend that under the facts, the first element cannot be established. They rely on the common law precept that authority to sign another’s name to a written instrument negates a charge of forgery regardless of fraud or falsehood in the transaction. Whatever validity this argument may have in other contexts, e. g., see United States v. Sonnenberg,
The purchaser’s agreement to sign each traveler’s check at the time of purchase and to counter-sign the checks only in the presence of the person cashing them, in our view, invalidates his attempt to authorize another to sign his name. As the fifth circuit observed in Berry v. United States,
Moreover, under the facts presented here, the businesses cashing the checks were deliberately deceived into believing that the person signing the checks was the purchaser. They, as much as Citibank, were defrauded in the transaction because Scull was impersonating McGovern. This case, therefore, differs from cases in which the person accepting the instrument was informed оf the purported authorization. If the authorization was valid, there would be no forgery and no defrauding of the cashing person. See United States v. Wilkins,
McGovеrn, the purchaser of the traveler’s checks, knew the effect his actions would have on Citibank and on the business cashing them — indeed, aрpellants conceded that this was the sole purpose of having Scull sign the checks. Scull was an imposter and possessed no аuthority to sign the checks because McGovern could not grant him this authority. When coupled with the appellants’ intent to defraud, the unauthorized signature on the otherwise legally sufficient instruments constituted common law forgery.
III.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons and as more elaborately set forth by the district court, the judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Notes
. We also reject appellants’ argument that finding their conduct to be proscribed by 18 U.S.C. § 2314 violates their rights to due process and equal protection. See generally Rose v. Locke,
