1. The rule that criminal statutes must be strictly construed
does not require that the words be given their narrowest meaning,
or that the evident intent be disregarded. P.
300 U. S.
48.
2. A bank teller who, for the purpose of concealing a shortage
in his cash, withholds deposit slips which in the ordinary course
of business will go to the bookkeeping department for entry, as a
result whereof the ledger understates the amount of the bank's
liability to the depositors, violates R.S., § 5209, as amended,
which denounces as a misdemeanant
"any officer, director, agent, or employee of any Federal
reserve bank, or a member bank . . . who makes any false entry in
any book, report, or statement of such . . . bank, with intent in
any case to injure or defraud . . ."
Pp.
300 U. S.
48-49.
To hold the statute broad enough to include deliberate action
from which a false entry by an innocent intermediary necessarily
follows, gives to the words employed their fair meaning and is in
accord with the evident intent of Congress. To hold that it applies
only when the accused personally writes the false entry or
affirmatively directs another to do so would emasculate the
statute, defeat the very end in view.
84 F.2d 943 reversed; D.C. affirmed.
Certiorari, 299 U.S. 531, to review a judgment reversing a
judgment of conviction for violation of R.S., § 5209.
Page 300 U. S. 42
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 5209, R.S., [
Footnote
1] as amended by Act Sept. 26, 1918, c. 177, § 7, 40 Stat. 967,
972 (U.S.C. Title 12, § 592) provides:
Page 300 U. S. 43
"Any officer, director, agent, or employee of any Federal
reserve bank, or of any member bank . . . who makes any false entry
in any book, report, or statement of such Federal reserve bank or
member bank, with intent in any case to injure or defraud such
Federal reserve bank or member bank, or any other company, body
politic or corporate, or any individual person, or to deceive any
officer of such Federal reserve bank or member bank, or the
Comptroller of the Currency, or any agent or examiner appointed to
examine the affairs of such Federal reserve bank or member bank, or
the Federal Reserve Board . . . shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof in any district court of
the United States shall be fined not more than $5,000 or shall be
imprisoned for not more than five years, or both, in the discretion
of the court."
Count 3 of an indictment in the United States District Court,
Western District of Texas, charged that respondent, Giles, while
employed as teller by the Commercial National Bank of San Antonio,
Texas, a member of the Federal Reserve National Bank of Dallas,
did
"unlawfully, knowingly, willfully, fraudulently, and feloniously
make and cause to be made in a book of the said The
Commercial National Bank of San Antonio, Texas, known as the
Individual Ledger, in the account designated 'S.A. Public Service
Company,' under date of 'Jul 25 33,' in the column bearing the
printed heading 'Balance,' being the fifth entry from the top of
the column aforesaid, and directly opposite the machine printed
date thereon 'July 25 33,' a certain false entry in the following
figures, to-wit, '7,874.07,' which said entry so made as aforesaid,
purports to show and does in substance and effect indicate and
declare that The Commercial National Bank of San Antonio, Texas,
was indebted and liable to the San Antonio Public Service Company
in the amount of Seven Thousand Eight Hundred Seventy-Four
Page 300 U. S. 44
Dollars and Seven Cents ($7,874.07) on July 25, 1933, whereas in
truth and in fact said indebtedness and liability on said date was
a different and much larger amount."
Count 4 made a like charge relative to the account of the
National Life & Accident Insurance Company.
He was tried, found guilty, and sentenced under both counts. The
point for our decision is whether the trial court erred in refusing
to direct a verdict of not guilty. The essential facts are not in
dispute.
From the evidence it appears:
Giles, once bookkeeper for the Commercial National Bank, became
first paying and receiving teller with custody each day of some
$35,000 cash. His duty was to receive deposits and place
accompanying slips or tickets where they would reach the
bookkeepers for entry. Eighteen months prior to the alleged
offense, he discovered shortage in his cash, but made no report to
his superiors. To cover up the shortage, he resorted to the
practice of withholding selected deposit slips for three or four
days before permitting them to reach the bookkeeping department.
This caused the ledger to show false balances. Other shortages
occurred; July 25, 1933, the total stood at $2,650.
On that day, he accepted deposits with proper tickets from San
Antonio Public Service Company and National Life & Accident
Insurance Company for $1,985.79 and $663.27, respectively,
accompanied by cash and checks. Together, these approximated his
shortage. He withheld both tickets from the place where they should
have gone and secreted them. If placed as usual and as his duty
required, they would have reached the bookkeeper during the day.
Entries on the ledger would have shown the depositors' true
balances.
The Bank closed July 29th. The slips never reached the
bookkeeper. The individual ledger accounts at the
Page 300 U. S. 45
end of the 25th and thereafter understated the liability of the
Bank to the depositors.
The respondent acknowledged his purpose in withholding the
deposit tickets was to prevent officers and examiners from
discovering his shortage. Some excerpts from his testimony are in
the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 300 U. S. 46
At the conclusion of the evidence, counsel moved for a directed
verdict of not guilty. This was denied. The jury found guilt under
both counts; an appeal, with many assignments of error, went to the
Circuit Court of Appeals.
That court declared:
"The serious question presented for decision is whether the law
will support a conviction on an indictment charging that defendant
caused the false entries to be made."
"Of course, in a sense, one who makes a false entry causes it to
be made. If he makes an entry himself or directs another to make
it, an allegation in the indictment that he caused it to be made
may be treated as surplusage and harmless, but where the defendant
has neither made a false entry nor directed another to do so, the
same allegation is material and injurious. A charge that one has
caused a false entry to be made is very much broader than the
charge that he made it. . . . We consider the allegation of the
indictment that defendant
Page 300 U. S. 47
did 'cause to be made a certain false entry in a book of the
bank,' charged a degree and classification of the offense not
within the letter or intent of the law. . . . The evidence in the
record conclusively shows that defendant neither made the false
entries nor did anything that could be considered as a direction to
the bookkeeper to make them. Without the charge that he caused the
entries to be made, he could not have been convicted. It follows
that it was prejudicial error to overrule the motion for a directed
verdict of acquittal."
Dissenting, one judge said:
"This statute plainly intends to punish the falsification of
bank records with intent to deceive or defraud. If false entries
are deliberately produced, although through an ignorantly innocent
agent, the bank employee
Page 300 U. S. 48
who concocts the plan and achieves the result is, in my opinion,
guilty. This innocent bookkeeper was the teller's real, though
unconscious, agent in making the entries; as truly so as if the
false entries had been requested in words. . . . The present case
is not one of a mere failure to prevent a consequence, but is one
of contriving that consequence and so fathering it as to make it
wholly the contriver's own. The bookkeeper, in making these false
entries, was doing the will of the teller, though he did not know
it. The false entries are in law the acts of the teller, who
planned them and did all he needed to do to produce them."
Counsel for the respondent now affirm:
"There is no dispute as to the facts. . . . The act committed by
the defendant was the withholding by him and the failure by him to
turn over to the Bookkeeping Department in the usual course of the
bank's business a deposit slip."
He did not cause any false entry to be made. Personally he made
no such entry; he did not affirmatively direct one. By withholding
the ticket, he prevented an entry; he caused none.
The rule, often announced, that criminal statutes must be
strictly construed does not require that the words of an enactment
be given their narrowest meaning, or that the lawmaker's evident
intent be disregarded.
United States v. Corbett,
215 U. S. 233,
215 U. S. 242.
Here, the purpose to insure the correctness of bank records by
prescribing punishment for any employee who, with intent to
deceive, etc., deliberately brings about their falsification is
plain enough. The statute denounces as criminal one who with
intent, etc., "makes any false entry." The word "make" has many
meanings, among them "To cause to exist, appear or occur,"
Webster's International Dictionary, (2d Ed.). To hold the statute
broad enough to include deliberate action from which a false entry
by
Page 300 U. S. 49
an innocent intermediary necessarily follows gives to the words
employed their fair meaning, and is in accord with the evident
intent of Congress. To hold that it applies only when the accused
personally writes the false entry or affirmatively directs another
so to do would emasculate the statute -- defeat the very end in
view.
Morse v. United States, 174 F. 539, 547, 553 -- Circuit
Court of Appeals, Second Circuit -- gave much consideration to an
indictment and conviction under R.S. § 5209. The court said:
"It is true that the defendant did not make any of the entries
in the books or reports with his own pen. All of them were made by
the employees of the bank as part of their routine work. If it were
necessary to prove against a director that he actually made the
entry charged to be false, conviction under the statute would be
impossible, as these entries are invariably made by subordinates in
the executive department. Congress was not seeking to punish the
ignorant bookkeeper who copies items into the books as part of his
daily task, but the officers who conceived and carried out the
fraudulent scheme which the false entry was designed to conceal. It
is wholly immaterial whether such officer acts through a pen or a
clerk controlled by him. . . . It seems to us that defendant is as
fully responsible for any false entries which necessarily result
from the presentation of these pieces of paper which he caused to
be prepared as he would if he had given oral instructions in
reference to them or had written them himself."
We agree with the view so expressed in that opinion.
United
States v. McClarty, 191 F. 518 and 523, apparently is in
conflict with our conclusion.
The record leaves us in no doubt that the false entries on the
ledger were the intended and necessary result of respondent's
deliberate action in withholding the deposit tickets. Within the
statute, he made them.
Page 300 U. S. 50
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals must be reversed.
The District Court will be affirmed.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Sec. 5209, R.S., Title LXII, National Banks, c. 3:
"Every president, director, cashier, teller, clerk, or agent of
any association, who embezzles, abstracts, or willfully misapplies
any of the moneys, funds, or credits of the association; or who,
without authority from the directors, issues or puts in circulation
any of the notes of the association; or who, without such
authority, issues or puts forth any certificate of deposit, draws
any order or bill of exchange, makes any acceptance, assigns any
note, bond, draft, bill of exchange, mortgage, judgment, or decree;
or who makes any false entry in any book, report, or statement of
the association, with intent, in either case, to injure or defraud
the association or any other company, body politic or corporate, or
any individual person, or to deceive any officer of the
association, or any agent appointed to examine the affairs of any
such association, and every person who with like intent aids or
abets any officer, clerk, or agent in any violation of this
section, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be
imprisoned not less than five years nor more than ten."
[
Footnote 2]
"My actual shortage was $2,650.00 that had shown up without my
having any responsibility for it. The only way it could be carried
was holding out deposit tickets to offset the shortage in the cash,
and on the 25th of July withholding these two deposits, the San
Antonio Public Service and the National Life & Accident, and
depositing the two tickets that had been held over from the
21st."
"Asked if I selected those two deposit slips that day to
withhold them because they, together, made up the amount of the
shortage, that was the reason I selected those two, because it
covered the amount of the shortage."
"The bank got the money for both of those deposits. I did not
make any false entries with reference to those items. It is true
that all I did was simply put the deposit slips in the cigar box
and withheld them for the time being, until I could recover the
shortage. I did not make any report to any bookkeeper. As to how
the bookkeeping department received its information on which they
keep their books, the bookkeepers came in three or four times a day
and lots of days oftener, and took the deposit tickets and checks
out of the drawers. The business of the day was represented by the
tickets and checks. I would put those in the drawers; I had a
special drawer for them, divided into sections. As to whether I
took them to the bookkeepers or they came to the drawers whenever
they wanted to and get them, they came and got them whether I was
there or not. I had no control or direction whatever over the
bookkeeping department or any bookkeeper. Mr. Crowther had control
and direction over the bookkeepers; really, Mr. Roberts handled
them, but Mr. Crowther was over the bookkeepers. If the entries
were made on any given date showing the balance of any depositors,
etc., I did not have anything whatever to do with making the
entries or causing them to be made. They simply came to the drawers
and got the checks and deposit slips, and from that made up their
entries. These two deposit slips that were withheld and stuck in
the cigar box that day would have gone right on into the books in
time if the bank had not closed. They were simply withheld that way
to make my cash balance; that was the only way I had of doing that.
I withheld deposit tickets from time to time in order that my cash
shortage would not be discovered."
"With regard to the two deposits that are directly in question
in this case, one to the National Life & Accident Company and
one to the San Antonio Public Service Company, each on the 25th of
July, 1933, I withheld those two deposit tickets from the
bookkeepers. Asked if, instead of putting them in the drawer with
the balance of the deposit tickets for that day, I put them in a
different place where I knew the bookkeepers would not look for
them, yes, sir, I put them in the cigar box. The bookkeepers had
nothing to do with the cigar box. The bookkeepers would go to the
regular place where the deposit slips were kept to get them. The
reason I put the two deposit tickets in the cigar box was for the
sole and only purpose of keeping them from the bookkeepers to keep
them from going through, to keep them from going on the account of
the depositors."
"Asked if, by putting deposit slips in a place where he would
not get them and I knew he would not get them, I had that much
control over the bookkeepers, yes, sir, by holding them out, of
course, he would not get them."
"Q. Now, I show you one of the Government's Exhibits, which is
the individual ledger account of the San Antonio Public Service
Company in the right hand column, the 5th line from the top of the
page, an entry under date of July 25th, 1933, under the column head
'new balance' which is the last balance of that account shown for
July 25th, 1933, of $7,874.07; was that the true balance of that
account on that date?"
"A. That was the true balance of everything that went through to
the account."
"Q. That is right, but was that a true balance on the account;
do the figures, 7,874.07, represent the liability of the Commercial
National Bank to the San Antonio Public Service Company at the
close of business on July 25th, 1933?"
"A. No, sir; the deposit slip was in my cage of $1,985.79."
"Q. And then this entry of $7,874.07 is not correct, because you
did not let the bookkeepers have the deposit ticket?"
"A. We often held deposit tickets over."
"Q. But you withheld it for a purpose, didn't you?"
"A. Yes, sir."
"Q. Your intention in withholding it was so that it would not go
on the ledger sheet, wasn't it?"
"A. Yes, sir; I put it in the cigar box."
"I did not make any entries or figures of any sort from which
the bookkeepers might have got it off the entries. The only entry I
ever made was in the depositor's pass book. I therefore made no
other entries."