Dеfendant-appellant, Paul Bonansinga, appeals from the district court’s denial of his Motion to Vacate Judgment of Conviction which was filed in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in
McNally v. United States,
— U.S. -,
*477 I.
Bonansinga was indicted in 1984 on 27 Counts arising from his alleged abusе of the offices of City Councilman of Springfield, Illinois and Commissioner of City, Water, Light & Power (CWLP). On December 6, 1984, following a jury trial, Bo-nansinga was found not guilty of 24 of the 27 Counts but was found guilty of 3 Counts of mail fraud. The defendant appealed and we reversed his convictiоn on one of the contested Counts.
United States v. Bonansinga,
Subsequently, the Supreme Court handed down its decision in
McNally v. United States,
— U.S. -,
II.
Initially, we are confronted with a jurisdictional question which, although not raised by the parties or by the district court, we are bound to address
sua sponte. Wilson v. Civil Town of Clayton, Indiana,
In
United States v. Keane,
In pertinent part, the government’s indictment of Bonansinga reads as follows:
From in or about March, 1979, and continuing to the date of the filing of this Indictment in the Central District of Illinois, and elsewhere,
PAUL R. BONANSINGA,
the Defendant herein,
together with other co-schemers devised and intendеd to devise a scheme:
(a) to defraud the citizens of the City of Springfield, the customers of CWLP, the City of Springfield, and CWLP of their money and property by collusion, corruption, dishonesty, bribery, theft, and fraud and to obtain money, property and things of value by false and fraudulent pretenc-es, representations, and promises, which money, property and things of value include, but are not limited to:
sfc * * * * *
ii) the taking of CWLP property and services valued in excess of $4,000; and
(b) to defraud the citizens of the City of Springfield, the customers of CWLP, the City of Springfield, CWLP, and the City Council of the City of Springfield of their right to the loyal, honest, and faithful services of Paul R. Bonansinga, free from the influence of corruption, collusion, partiality, dishonesty, bribery, theft, and fraud.
Specifically, thе two Counts under which sentence was ultimately imposed on Bonan-singa, Counts 23 and 24, alleged that he had obtained paint and auto supplies for his personal use from an entity known as SMW Auto Supply and that he paid for those items by mail with City of Springfield and CWLP funds. Thеse alleged abuses of office gave rise to Bonansinga’s second purported violation of the mail fraud statute, his defrauding the citizens of Springfield of the loyal, faithful, and honest service of an elected official.
Bonansinga cоntends that the government prosecuted him under two separate and distinct theories of mail fraud, one permissible and one not, and that because it is impossible to determine which theory the jury accepted, his conviction must be set asidе. In actuality, however, the indictment charges but a single scheme to defraud which had the dual effect of depriving the public of
both
tangible (money and property) and intangible (honest and faith
*479
ful service) rights. As this court concluded in the similar case of
United States v. Wellman,
Alternаtively, Bonansinga argues that if his indictment, in part under an intangible rights theory of mail fraud, does not necessitate that his conviction be overturned, the jury instructions tendered by the district court permitted the jurors to conclude erroneously that depriving the сitizenry of Springfield of honest government service could, in and of itself, support a conviction for mail fraud. This argument is unpersuasive for two reasons. First, as stated above, the only evidence presented at trial that Bonansinga defrauded Springfield residents of their right to “good government” was evidence that Bonansin-ga had procured, for his personal use, paint and auto supplies which he then paid for with CWLP funds, a plain violation of the mail fraud statute. And second, this court’s decision in Wellman upheld the very same instructions Bonansinga challenges here. 5 As we stated in Wellman:
The charge, to the jury permitted conviction if it found either a “scheme to defraud” or that Wellman obtained money through “false pretenses, representations and promises.” Because the instruction merely tracks the statutory languagе, without more it is plainly a correct statement of law. What is crucial is that the “scheme to defraud” was not defined in such a way as to allow conviction for conduct which was not an of *480 fense. The jury instruction defining “scheme to defraud” was fully cоnsistent with McNally.
Id. (emphasis added). Wellman counsels to look beyond the face of an indictment to its substance in order to determine whether an alleged scheme to defraud does in fact involve money or property as McNally requires. The scheme alleged in the instant cаse involved just such an attempt to deprive innocent persons of tangible property rights and Bonansinga’s participation in the scheme was, in turn, the only evidence introduced in support of the government’s intangible rights theory. Accordingly, we are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, as was the district court, that Bonansinga was convicted of conduct which, consistent with McNally, is in derogation of the mail fraud statute.
III.
The district court’s denial of relief is therefore
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Notwithstanding that Bonansinga had already completed serving his sentence when he filed his Rule 35 motion, the district court held thе motion timely because Rule 35 permits correction of an illegal sentence "at any time.” Bo-nansinga, however, was not contesting his sentence, rather he sought to vacate his judgment of conviction. Accordingly, Rule 35 did not provide the district court with jurisdiction to entertain Bonansinga’s motion. See infra.
. Entitled "Frauds and swindles,” the mail fraud statute provides, in part:
Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent prеtenses, representations or promises ... places in any post office or authorized depository for mail matter, any matter or thing whatever to be sent or delivered by the Postal Service, ... or knowingly causes to be delivered by mail ... any such thing, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1341.
. In Wellman, the defendant was charged with participating in a scheme “to 'defraud M-Chem of its right to have safe and authorized equipment for the storage and shipment of hazardous chemicals’ ” and with "obtain[ing] money by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises.” Id. at 1463. Thus, as in the instant case, while the scheme charged in Wellman could fairly be characterized as involving both tangible and intangible elеments, we concluded that viewed in its totality the defendant’s conduct in Wellman amounted to a typical "garden variety fraud” and was therefore precisely the sort of conduct Congress intended to proscribe. Id.
.
The instant case is easily distinguished from two other
post-McNally
decisions of this court. Both
United States v. Holzer,
. Thе district court instructed the jury that in order to find Bonansinga guilty of mail fraud the government had to prove the following propositions beyond a reasonable doubt:
First, that the defendant willfully and knowingly devised or participated in a scheme to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false pretenses, representations, or promises, as outlined for you in the summary of the indictment; and
Second, that the defendant used the United States Postal Service by mailing, or causing to be mаiled, some matter or thing for the purpose of carrying out the scheme to defraud.
Insofar as it is relevant, the district court’s summary of the indictment appears below:
Specifically, it is charged that from about March, 1979, continuing until July 24, 1984, in the Central District of Illinois and elsewhere, the defendant, together with co-schemers, devised and participated in a scheme to defraud CWLP and the City of Springfield of the honest services of the defendant as Commissioner of CWLP and further to defraud CWLP of its money and property by theft and fraud and to obtain money and property by false and fraudulent pretenses.
Bonansinga argues that the words "and further,” as used by the district court in summarizing the indictment, demonstrate that the scheme charged contained two distinct elements either of which could have been the basis for his conviction. On the contrary, the phraseology employed by the district court would seem to require the jury to find that Bonansinga deprived the public of both tangible and intangible rights in order to be guilty of violating the mail fraud statute. As discussed both supra and infra, so long as the jury found Bonansinga guilty of illegally obtaining money and property by use of the mails, his conviction must stand.
