128 F. 111 | M.D. Ala. | 1904
(after stating the facts as above). The gravamen of all the counts, stripped of legal phraseology, is that the cashier or teller, as the case may be, made false - entries on the books of the aggregate of his “cash items,” by including therein a particular
In the first part of section 5209 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3497] Congress made embezzlement, abstraction, and willful misapplication of the money, funds, and credit of any national banking association, and other specific acts, by which the funds or credit of a national banking association could be unlawfully imperiled, criminal offenses against the United States; and then, at the end of the section, created the offense of making “any false entry” with intent to deceive, etc. At the same time, and in the act of which this section forms a part, Congress enacted very comprehensive regulations for the business of national banking associations. This act, carried forward in appropriate sections of the Revised Statutes, invests the Comptroller of the Currency with large visitorial power over them, empowers him, among other things, to appoint examiners to ascertain and report upon their condition, to appoint receivers of such associations, in certain contingencies, and also to call upon them for special reports, according to forms prescribed by the Comptroller, showing their condition, etc., and requires these reports to be published in the place -where the bank does business — all this that the public, as well as the government, may be informed of the condition of the bank, and act accordingly in their dealings with it. Having thus enacted safeguards for the preservation of the funds and credit of the association, and declared criminal penalties for transgression of regulations in those respects, Congress did not have to 'go over, and cannot be held by any legitimate construction to have intended to go over, the same ground, when it created the offense of making “any false entry.” The several misdemeanors which the section creates apply to separate and distinct offenses. Clearly, that part of the section which creates the offense of making “any false entry” was not designed to cover other criminal breaches of duty, for which the law had already provided in prior parts of the section; but had other objects in view.
One important purpose of this provision as to “any false entry” was undoubtedly to stimulate integrity on the part of the officials in the conduct of their business. This the provision secures, as far as law can effect such a result, by forbidding bank officers, under penalties, to misstate by “any false entry” what they do. Another dominant purpose was, by enforcing true entries, to spread upon the books of the bank accurate statements of things done by the bank officers, to the end that bank examiners might be the better enabled thereby to trace and determine accurately, day by day, the actual condition and conduct of the business of the bank. The duty with which we are here concerned is the duty not to enter a false statement of the aggregate amount of “cash items.” The cashier’s books are not intended to furnish, and are not kept to show, the history or the origin of paper
If we stop a moment to consider what the “item” is which must enter into the cash statement, it will be seen at once that the good or bad faith in which the paper is taken, or its value or worthlessness, cannot determine whether the entry of the “item” as to it, or its inclusion under the aggregate of “cash items,” is true or false, in the sense of this provision of tlie statute. One of the meanings of item is, “an article; single entry; anything which can form part of a detail; the particulars of an account.” The detail, or particular here — the “item” — is on what account the sum stated has been paid out. This check is the thing which forms part of the detail — the “item” — which shows what was done with the bank’s money as to it. The inclusion in the cash of a perfectly good check drawn on the bank, if that check has not in fact entered into any transaction of the cashier upon which he parted with money of the bank, would constitute a “false entry,” if included in the “cash items” with intent to deceive. On the other hand, knowingly entering or including in the “cash items” an item based on a “valueless and fraudulent” check, if it were in fact received in a transaction with the cashier at the time the entry is made, and he paid out the amount of money included in the “item” on account of it, and truly entered or included the item in his “cash item,” could not constitute a false entry. It is immaterial here, therefore, whether or not the check was in fact “worthless and fraudulent.”
The cashier, by including the item here in his “cash items,” did not declare or' represent that the check upon which the item was based was good or supported by honest consideration. The entry makes no representation whatever as to that. The legal effect of the entry is but a written .representation to whom it may concern that the cashier, in an actual transaction, had received the check, and that the amount stated was the basis of one item, which went with others to make up the aggregate “cash items” which the entry declared the cashier had at the time. The r.everal counts assail the truth of the entry solely on the ground that the amount of one of the items which entered into the aggregate “cash items” was based on a check or paper which was fraudulent and worthless, and known to be so at the time of the entry. The cashier in that event would be equally bound, as in the case of a good check bona fide received, in stating his-transactions upon the books, to make a proper “cash item” as to such check, irrespective
What constitutes the basis of “proper cash items” on the books of the cashier or teller is not defined by law. It depends on the particular bank’s mode of paying out its cash and keeping the account with its cashier. The indictment is silent as to the custom of the Eufaula National Bank in this respect. Many large banks do not treat checks-drawn on it and paid by the cashier as any part of the “proper cash items” of the cashier, as the checks are delivered by the cashier or teller to- some other officer, who credits him and charges them to other accounts. Such banks include in the “proper cash items” of the cashier only money or papers due from other persons or banks, which are immediately available to bring in cash, and remain uncollected in the hands of the cashier or teller. In the absence of any custom of banking of which the court can take judicial notice, or statements in the indictment showing that the words “cash items” were used in the technical instead of their ordinary sense, the words of the indictment do not by any means exclude, as the basis of “proper cash items,” a paid check drawn on the bank by a depositor in funds, if the cashier has parted with the bank’s money for it. “Proper cash items” in a cashier’s accounts ordinarily include not only money on hand, bul everything for which he has paid out the association’s cash during a
To prevent confusion, it is proper to add that the “proper cash items” above referred to must not be confounded with “checks and other cash items” which the association is required to state under the head of “Resources” in the forms prescribed by the Comptroller of the Currency for reports of the “condition” of the bank.- The purpose of these reports is to enable him to ascertain whether the bank is solvent by comparing its “resources” with its “liabilities.” A check drawn on the cashier’s bank by a depositor who has funds to meet it, and paid by the cashier out of its cash, is far from being an asset or resource. It is only evidence of a debt paid. For that very reason, however, as it diminishes the cash, such a check would be a proper item of the cashier’s accounts with the bank, while it would be misleading and out of place in a statement of “resources” in a report made to the Comptroller. The intentional inclusion in such a report, under the head of “checks and other cash items,” of a check drawn against deposits in a bank and paid by it, or of one drawn on another.bank and cashed by the cashier, who knew the check was “worthless and fraudulent,” without accompanying it by a true statement as to its value, \yould subject the officer signing the report to indictment, under another provision of the statute, for making a false report. That, however, is quite a different offense from making a false entry on the books of the bank, which is here charged.
It is unnecessary to discuss other objections raised to the indictment, since that already discussed is fatal to it. The demurrers are sustained.