30 F. 499 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1887
The defendant is charged by the indictment in this case with willfully and knowingly depositing in the post-office of the United States, to be conveyed by mail, a circular concerning a lottery; that is to say, a circular addressed to one August Muller, entitled “Fortune, Authentisches Central Ziehungsblatt,” and concerning divers lotteries therein mentioned. Upon the trial the defendant admitted sending the circulars through the mail as charged, and a verdict of guilty was rendered; whereupon defendant entered a motion for new trial, and in arrest of sentence, on the ground that the matter sent through the mail did not concern or relate to a lottery, within the meaning of section 3894 of the Revised Statutes, under which the indictment was found. Section 3894 reads as follows:
“No letter or circular concerning lotteries, so-called ‘gift concerts,’ or other similar enterprises, offering prizes, or concerning schemes devised and intended to deceive and defraud the public, for the purpose of obtaining money under false pretenses, shall be carried in the mail. Any person who shall knowingly deposit or send anything to be conveyed by mail, in violation of this section, shall be punished by fine of not more than $500, nor less than $100, with costs of prosecution.”
The effect of this statute is to make any matter concerning lotteries unmailable, and subjects the persons sending such matter by mail to the penalty therein provided. It appears from the proof that the city of Vienna, in the empire of Austria, in 1874, issued bonds for 100 guilders each, to the amount of 30,000,000 guilders, to be refunded within 50
The circulars which the defendant sent through the mail announced the results of drawings from time to time, and announced when the next •drawing would take place, not only in regard to these Vienna city bonds, but divers other bonds issued by other European cities and governments, without interest, and payable with prizes according to schemes or drawing plans substantially like the Vienna bonds.
If these drawings determined only the time when these bonds would be paid, I should say that the mere determining of that time by lot or drawing would not give them the characteristics of a lottery; but when a city or a government, in order to make an inducement for people to buy •their bonds, holds out large prizes to be drawn by chance, or determined
The bonds in question certainly involved a lottery, within the meaning of the cases I have cited, and many more to tho same effect might also be quoted. The circular sent through the mail was intended to induce persons to purchase and deal in these bonds with the hope of becoming the lucky winners of some of the high prizes to bo distributed at each drawing; and the fact that tho purchasers of the bonds wore, by tho drawing plan, to get back their principal, and in tho aggregate what is equivalent to a very small rate of interest upon that principal, does not, as it seems to me, change the character of the transaction, or relieve it from the characteristic features of a lottery; that Is, that high prizes, out of all duo proportion to the amount of money paid for a bond, were to be drawn for, and distributed by chance among tho holders of these bonds, in the same manner as tho prizes are determined in an ordinary lottery.
The motion for a new trial is overruled, and a fine of $100 imposed upon tho defendant. I make this fine tho lowest that the statute will allow, because this seems to have been his first offense, so far as this court is advised, and the defendant has perhaps acted under the advice of counsel, upon the belief that the scheme did not impinge upon the statute of the United States.