UNITED STATES v. WALSH, TRADING AS KELP LABORATORIES
No. 718
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided May 19, 1947
331 U.S. 432
Argued April 29, 1947
Eugene W. Miller argued the cause and filed a brief for appellee.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal brings before us
Appellee does business in San Diego, California, under the name of Kelp Laboratories. An information has been filed, charging appellee with having given a false guaranty in violation of
Appellee moved to dismiss the information on the ground that it did not state an offense. The argument was that
But
Nor do we find any interstate limitation of the type which appellee proposes in the reference made in
It is true, of course, that the guaranty referred to in
It is significant that
We thus conclude that
So construed,
The judgment of the District Court is accordingly
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting.
Stretch the Food and Drugs Act as we will, I cannot make it cover this charge as a crime. The statutory scheme is to make a crime of “The introduction or delivery for introduction into interstate commerce” of adulterated or misbranded goods. 52 Stat. 1042,
But since many shippers buy goods of others and do not know their precise ingredients, Congress allowed an escape for the violator, provided he acted in good faith and could trace the responsibility to another. This he must do by producing a signed guaranty or undertaking, and the statute requires that it shall be conditioned “to the effect, in case of an alleged violation of section 331 (a), that such article is not adulterated or misbranded . . . or to the effect, in case of an alleged violation of section 331 (d), that such article is not an article” forbidden shipment by stated paragraphs of the Act. (Emphasis added.) 52 Stat. 1043,
It will be noticed that Congress not only provided but repeated that the statutory bond required is “in case of an alleged violation” by introducing or delivering for introduction of goods in interstate commerce. No such violation has been alleged here; these goods were never introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate
Of course, if the assured had committed this offense and had fallen back on the guarantor, the statute which reached the assured would not be sufficient. To punish the responsible person, it was made a crime to give a false guaranty “referred to in” the statute. 52 Stat. 1042,
The Government now seeks to exact criminal responsibility on a guarantee, expressly conditioned only “in case of violation,” in a case of no violation. Until a violation is alleged, the guaranty plays no statutory role at all. It might afford a cause of action if false, but that is quite different from making it a crime. For it is no guaranty at all for criminal prosecution purposes if violation of neither
I do not think we should take such liberties in expanding criminal statutes in which the sovereign once was considered under a duty to be explicit and the subject entitled to the doubt.
