Defendant-appellant, Vincent Edward Winel, Jr., also known as James Lewis, was charged with co-defendants Allan T. Solomon, also known as Paul Baer, and Morton Schulman, also known as Fred Evans, in a seventeen-count indictment with mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S. C.A. § 1341. After the withdrawal of eight of the seventeen counts and trial by a jury, all defendants were found guilty on the remaining nine counts, each of which alleged a specific fraudulent act and use of the mails in perpetration thereof. The trial court denied motions for arrest of judgment and for a new trial and sentenced all three defendants to various terms of imprisonment, Winel to two years’ imprisonment on each of the nine counts, the sentences to be served concurrently. All commenced appeal to this court but subsequently thereto defendants Solomon and Schulman moved to dismiss their appeals, such motions being granted. This appeal, then, concerns only the defendant Vincent Ed *647 ward Winel, Jr. He claims two grounds of error entitling him to reversal:
I. Government’s Exhibit 42 was received into evidence without proper foundation;
II. Motion for judgment of acquittal should have been sustained for there was insufficient evidence upon which to base a judgment of conviction.
We affirm.
We believe it would make for a better understanding hereof if we considered appellant’s claims of error in reverse order. In doing so, we direct attention to the general rule that the evidence must be viewed in a light most favorable to the government as the prevailing party. All reasonable inferences must be resolved in favor of the government. Koolish v. United States, 8 Cir., 1965,
Although appellant Winel claims the record does not hold sufficient evidence to implicate him in the aforementioned scheme, from the record it is perfectly clear that:
1. Appellant and co-defendant Solomon traveled to Nassau, Bahamas, in September or October of 1963 and rented office space in a small building that also housed the United Mutual Bank of the Bahamas.
2. Appellant kept office hours at an office in the bank building during October 1963.
3. Appellant had access to the telephone calls and correspondence coming in to the “bank”.
4. Appellant endorsed a check drawn on an account the Bahamas Company had in a St. Louis bank, using the assumed name “James Lewis”, the same name under which credit references were furnished.
5. Numerous phone calls were exchanged between the Bahamas Company in St. Louis and “Mr. Lewis” at the “bank” in the Bahamas.
6. Phone calls requesting credit information were placed by vendors to the “bank” in the Bahamas and these vendors were given favorable credit references concerning the Bahamas Company by one who had at times identified himself as “Mr. Lewis”.
Faced with this uncontradicted evidence (no one of the three defendants testified), it is impossible for us to say that the government has not met the substantial burden of proof required of it in a mail fraud prosecution. See United States v. Morley, 7 Cir., 1938,
We now consider appellant’s first ground of error; that is, that the trial court received into evidence Government’s Exhibit 42 without requiring the proper identification. Exhibit 42 is a reply portion of a printed credit inquiry postcard upon which there is entered a handwritten credit reference. It is appellant’s contention that the card does not qualify as a business record under 28 U. S.C.A. § 1732(a), nor was there sufficient other evidence of authenticity to justify its admission. The government recognized that Exhibit 42 could not qualify as a business record under the tests established by 28 U.S.C.A. § 1732 (a) but urged that circumstantial evidence other than identification of the handwriting or signature on the reply card justified admission.
It has long been recognized that one of the principal situations where the authenticity of a letter is provable by circumstantial evidence arising out of the letter’s context, other than proof of handwriting or the business records exception, is where it can be shown that the letter was sent in reply to a previous communication. See, e. g., Malouff v. Pope, 8 Cir., 1925,
After the original cards requesting credit were marked, the sender of the credit request, the auditor of a St. Louis hotel, was asked:
“Q. Well, * * * can you tell us from your own personal knowledge whether a credit request was sent out pursuant to these requests for credit made by Mr. Baer [defendant Solomon] ?
“A. Yes, they were.”
This evidence stands uncontradicted.
The record also indicates fully the manner in which credit requests were handled, how a credit response became part of the hotel’s permanent records, and how it was kept in the hotel auditor’s custody. It is not necessary that there be direct testimony of placing in the mails or removing from the mails if there is a full showing of the customs and usage relating to this type of communication. Stevens v. United States, 5 Cir., 1962,
This case is affirmed.
