48 F. 828 | E.D. Wis. | 1882
The defendants have been convicted, under section 5430 of the Revised Statutes, of the offense of having in their possession an obligation engraved and printed after the similitude of an obligation issued under the authority of the United States, with intent to sell or oth
It was shown on the trial by the testimony of a bank expert that the instrument which the defendants had in their possession and attempted to exchange for money, resembles in color, style of printing and engraving, and in general appearance, a 5-20 government bond. The same witness testified that in form and size it differs from a genuine government bond, and, in fact, examination of the instrument shows that it purports to he, not an obligation of the United States, but an obligation of the United States Silver Mining Company, of Denver, Colo., by which that company acknowledges itself to be indebted to the bearer in the sum of $1,000, payable at, the American Exchange National Bank, in the city of New York, March 1,1890, with interest at 7 per cent. On the face of the instrument is printed in large gilt letters the word “gold,” and interest coupons, payable semi-annually, are annexed. At the foot of the bond and of each coupon are printed the words “ Pros’!” and “ Seo’y,” with spaces left before each of those words for signatures; hut no signatures are written or printed in the spaces thus loft for the purpose, so that on the face of the paper it appears to be an unexecuted instrument.
On the trial the court hold that to constitute the offense declared in the statute referred to, it was not essential that the fraudulent or fictitious obligation should in terms purport to he an obligation of the United States. And following the ruling, as here produced in manuscript, of Judge Caluweli., of the eastern district of Arkansas, in U. S, v. Wilson, understood to he unreported, the court charged the jury that—
“To constitute an offense under the statute it is not necessary that the similitude between the false and the true security should be such as to deceive experts, bank officers, or cautious men. It is sufficient if the alleged fraudulent bond bears such a likeness or resemblance to one of the genuine bonds of the United States as to be calculated to deceive an honest, sensible, and unsuspecting man of ordinary observation and care, dealing with a man supposed to be iionest. If it does, then the similitude required by law to make out the offense exists. ”
The court further charged the jury that, where the similitude is of the character stated, the offense is not disproved by showing that the alleged fraudulent bond bears no signature, or that careful examination discloses that it does not purport to he a bond of the United States, hut that, on the contrary, it purports to he a bond issued by some mining company. There was clearly no error in holding that to constitute the offense it is not essential that the fraudulent bond or instrument should on its face purport to be an obligation of the United States. The language of the clause in section 5480, upon which the indictment is based, is that every person “who hasrin his possession or custody, except under authority from the secretary of the treasury or other proper officer, any obligation or other security engraved and printed after the similitude of any obligation or other security issued under the authority of the United States, with intent to sell or otherwise use the same,” shall he punished, etc. The object of this statute evidently was to make it unlawful lor
Very forcible argument was made by the learned district attorney that the instrument in question, though bearing no signature, may be as effectually used for the purposes of deception and fraud as in case it purported to be executed or signed. This may be so, but, after all, the court cannot supply omissions in the statute, but must accept and construe the statute as we find it; and if the ease in hand does not come within the letter and meaning of the statute, it is the duty of the court so to decide. The instrument in evidence is not an obligation or other security, and does not purport to*be such, because it was never executed or signed by anybody, and therefore it is not such an instrument as the statute covers. In that respect it is no more than a blank piece of paper. It was also argued by the district attorney that the fact that the instrument in evidence was not signed or executed should be treated bj^ the court as merely a fact entering into