This matter is before me on the defendant’s demurrer to the indictment and his motion for a bill of particulars.
The indictment, consisting of two counts, charges the defendant with violations of Section 215 of the Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C. A. § 338, commonly referred to as the Mail Fraud Statute. It alleges in substance that on November 8, 1938, Frank D. Fitzgerald was elected Governer of the State of Michigan ; thаt in both his primary and general election campaigns the major part of the advertising in his behalf was handled and directed by Bass-Luckoff, Inc., a Michigan corporation engaged in the advertising business in Detroit; that on and prior to November 8, 1938, Bass-Luckoff, Inc., had been fully paid for all services rendered and expenditures made by it with respect to both the primary and general election campaigns; that beginning in October, 1938, and continuously thereafter until February, 1939, the defendant Frank D. McKay and one Clarence E. Larson, since deceased, did feloniously devise and intend to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud and for obtaining money by means of false and fraudulent pretenses from Edsel B. Ford by the following means :
(a) By falsely representing that certain political organizations were then heavily indebted to Bass-Luckoff, Inc., for services rendered and amounts expended for campaign advertising in behalf of Fitzgerald, and that moneys obtained from contributors would be used to pay this outstanding indebtedness; where in truth and in fact as the defendant knew said representations were false and fraudulent in that there was at that time no such outstanding indebtedness and that any moneys so obtained from contributors were to be and were actually paid over surreptitiously to the defendant McKay for his own personal use;
(b) that after Bass-Luckoff, Inc., had been paid in full for all amounts owing to it for services rendered and sums expended in connection with said campaigns the defendant would and did cause to be placed on forms bearing the name Bass-Luckoff, Inc., certain invoices purporting to show sums of money then due and owing to BassLuckoff, Inc., for services rendered and expenditures made for campaign advertising in behalf of Fitzgerald, and did cause these invoices to be presеnted to contributors in the false and fraudulent guise of unpaid bills for the purpose of inducing the contributors to pay sums of money to BassLuckoff, Inc., in the belief that they were helping to pay off a political indebtedness owing to Bass-Luckoff, Inc.; that BassLuckoff, Inc., did not retain the money so paid by contributors but surreptitiously paid it over to defendant McKay for his оwn personal use:
(c) That the defendant McKay communicated with Harry H. Bennett and requested him to obtain from Edsel B. Ford a contribution towards the expenses of Fitzgerald’s campaigns and for the payment of debts allegedly due to Bass-Luckoff, Inc., and presented to Bennett certain of the invoices marked to show indebtedness to BassLuckoff, Inc., and represented as being unpaid expenses of the gubernatorial campaigns, whereas in truth and in fact as the defendant knew the amounts represented items of expense previously paid and were false documents prepared for the use in the execution of the scheme described.
The first count then alleges that on or about November 26, 1938, thе defendant did cause the United States' mails to be used for the purpose of executing said scheme and artifice, specifically referring to and relying upon the mailing by the Union Bank of Michigan of Grand Rapids, Michigan, to the National Bank of Detroit, at Detroit, Michigan, of a cashier’s check of the Detroit *1004 Bank of Detroit, Michigan, dated November 18, 1938, in the amount of $5,000 payable to the order of Frank McKay and endorsed by him. The second count charges the same scheme and artifice to defraud and then alleges that on or about the 1st of December, 1938, the defendant caused the United States mails to be used for the purpose of executing said scheme and artifice to defraud, specificаlly referring to and relying upon a mailing by the Union Bank of Michigan at Grand Rapids, Michigan, to the National Bank of Detroit, at Detroit, Michigan, of a check of Bass-Luckoff, Inc., drawn on the Detroit Bank of Detroit, Michigan, in the amount of $3,068 payable to the order of cash and endorsed by McKay. Photostatic copies of the two checks together with the endorsements on the reverse sides thereof are made parts of the respective counts of the indictments.
The motion for a bill of particulars consists of 15 separate requests, set out in separately numbered paragraphs. The purpose of a bill of particulars is largely to advise the defendant of what facts, more or less in detail, he will be required to meet. Thereafter in the trial of the case the Court will limit the Government in its evidence to those facts set forth in the bill of particulars. United States v. Adams Express Co., D.C.,
The Court indicated to counsel at the close of the oral argument its views as above set out and Government counsel has accordingly tendered its bill of particulars complying with this ruling. The Government contends, however, that the bill оf particulars forms no part of the indictment and can not be considered by the Court in ruling upon the demurrer heretofore filed to the indictment itself. This position is technically sound. United States v. Comyns,
It is well settled that under Section 215 of the Criminal Code it is not sufficient to merely allege and show thаt the defendant devised a scheme or artifice to defraud. The statute specifically provides that the United States mail must be used “for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice or attempting so to do.” It is vital to the commission of the offense that the use of the mail relied upon by the Government be in furtherance of the alleged scheme. The demurrer to the indictment attacks its validity on the ground that the indictment shows on its face that the use of the mails relied upon by the Government in each count was not for the purpose of executing the scheme or artifice charged, but on the contrary occurred after the completion of the alleged scheme and at a time when the fraud, if any existed, had been fully perpetrated. Defendant relies upon the well settled rule that the mailing of a letter or check, even though connected with or relating to a scheme to defraud, if not for the purpose of executing the scheme, will not support an indictment under the statute. If the scheme charged was completed before the mail was used the offense denounced by Section 215 of the Criminal Code does not exist. Stapp et al. v. United States, 5 Cir.,
The scheme charged in the indictment was one to defraud Edsel B. Ford. Count 1 relies upon the mailing on November 26, 1938, of a cashier’s check for $5,000 dated November 18, 1938, payable to Frank McKay and endorsed by him. This is obviously the proceeds оf the alleged fraudulent scheme; it is equally obvious that it is not the check of the victim. It follows that any money obtained from the victim by means of any fraudulent scheme had been obtained and was a completed transaction when the cashier’s check was issued by the Detroit Bank on November 18, 1938, and when the mailing of the cashier’s check in question took place eight days later on November 26, 1938. At that time the victim had parted with his money without power to retract.
In Count 2 the Government relies upon the mailing of a check issued by BassLuckoff, Inc., for $3,068 dated November 29, 1938, payable to the order of cash and endorsed by Frank McKay. This check is also obviously not the check of the victim, although representing the prоceeds of the alleged scheme. When it was issued on November 29, 1938, the fraud upon Ford, if any existed, had already been completed. Bass-Luckoff, Inc., had already obtained the money from the victim before issuing its own check. The mailing of the BassLuckoff check on December 1, 1938, was not for the purpose of defrauding the victim.
Even if the foregoing analysis of the situation, as derived from the allegations of the indictment and the exhibits made a part thereof, is not correct there are nevertheless additional facts which support the defendant’s contention. In Count 1 the cashier’s check of the Detroit Bank of Detroit, Michigan, carries on its reverse side two separate stamps of the Union Bank of Miсhigan, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, which bank the indictment charges mailed the check in question from Grand Rapids to Detriot. One stamp carries the letters “P.T.” while the other stamp is the usual stamp endorsing the check for collection through usual banking channels. In Count 2 the Bass-Luckoff, Inc. check likewise carries on its reverse side two separate stamps of the Uniоn Bank of Michigan one carrying the letters “P.T.” and the other being the usual endorsement of the bank for collection through banking channels. Defendant claims that the Court can take judicial notice that in each instance the stamp of the bank carrying the letters “P.T.” means that it was cashed by the bank’s paying teller, and that after being so cashed the other stаmp is the act of the bank in putting it through for collection to reimburse itself for the money so paid out. See 20 American Jurisprudence, page 91, Section 69; Belford v.
*1006
Beatty,
In relying upon and following the decision in the case of United States v. Stapp, supra, the Court is not unmindful of the earlier ruling of the same Court in Hart v. Unitеd States,
It may be contended by the Government that the foregoing ruling is based upon facts not disclosed by the allegations of the indictment or from any reasonable construction of them. Such a contention is not in the Court’s opinion well founded, but even if it should be well taken the final disposition of this case upon its subsequent trial would be the same. The bill of particulars filed by the Government states with reference to Count 1 that on November 18, 1938, Edsel B. Ford and Harry Bennett caused to be purchased from the Manufacture’s National Bank a cashier’s check for $5,000 payable to Bass-Luckoff, Inc.; that this check was deposited in the special account of Bass-Luckoff in the Detroit Bank; that on the same day Bass-Luckoff used the. proceeds of this deposit to buy from the Detroit Bank a cashier’s check of $5,000 payable to Frank D. McKay, which check was delivered to McKay who cashed it at the Union Bank of Michigan in Grand Rapids; that, the Union Bank transmitted the cashier’s check for cоllection to the National Bank of 'Detroit by first-class United States mail. With reference to Count 2 of the indictment the bill of particulars states that on November 25, 1938, Harry Bennett and Edsel B. Ford caused to be bought at the Manufacture’s National Bank a cashier’s check for $4,918 payable to Bass-Luckoff, Inc.; that this check was deposited in a special aсcount of BassLuckoff in the Detroit Bank; that on November 25, 1938, a check for $3,068 payable to Frank D. McKay was issued against the special account and sent directly to McKay; that McKay cashed this check at the Union Bank of Michigan which transmitted it for collection to the National Bank of Detroit by first-class United States mail. The facts so stated include thе facts considered by the Court as being shown by the indictment and the exhibits made a part thereof. In presenting its case to the jury the Government would be compelled to prove those facts to support the charge that the mails *1007 were used in furtherance of the alleged scheme. Accordingly, at the close of the Government’s case this Court would, fоllowing the principles hereinabove announced as being applicable to such facts, sustain the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. If the Court’s application of the law to the facts is correct, no useful purpose would be served in proceeding with the trial of this indictment.
The defendant’s demurrer to each count of the indictment is sustained and it is ordered that the indictment be dismissed.
