The federal mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, prohibits the
use of the mails to execute
"any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or
property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
representations, or promises."
Petitioners Gray, a former Kentucky official, and McNally, a
private individual, along with one Howard Hunt, the former chairman
of the Commonwealth's Democratic Party, were charged with violating
§ 1341 by devising a scheme to defraud the Commonwealth's citizens
and government of their "intangible right" to have the
Commonwealth's affairs conducted honestly, and to obtain money by
means of false pretenses and the concealment of material facts.
After informing the jury of the charges, the District Court
instructed the jury that the defendants' alleged scheme could be
made out either by finding: (1) that Hunt had
de facto
control over the award of the Commonwealth's workmen's compensation
insurance contract; that he obtained commission payments from the
company awarded this contract which were mailed to a company he
owned and controlled with petitioners, without disclosing his
ownership interest to commonwealth officials; and that petitioners
aided in the scheme; or (2) that Gray had supervisory authority
over the insurance when his company received payments; that he did
not disclose his interest in the company to commonwealth officials;
and that McNally aided and abetted him. The jury convicted
petitioners, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, relying on a line
of decisions holding that § 1341 proscribes schemes to defraud
citizens of their intangible rights to honest and impartial
government.
Held: The jury charge permitted a conviction for
conduct not within the reach of § 1341. Pp.
483 U. S.
356-361.
(a) The language and legislative history of § 1341 demonstrate
that it is limited in scope to the protection of money or property
rights, and does not extend to the intangible right of the
citizenry to good government. The argument that, because the
statutory phrases "to defraud" and "for obtaining money or property
by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or
promises" appear in the disjunctive, they should be construed
independently, so that "a scheme or artifice to defraud"
Page 483 U. S. 351
may include a scheme designed to deprive parties of intangible
rights is not persuasive. The words "to defraud" commonly refer to
wronging one in his property rights by dishonest methods, and there
is nothing to indicate that Congress meant to depart from this
common understanding when it enacted § 1341 in its present form.
Rather, the statute was amended to include the second phrase simply
to make it clear that it reaches false promises and
misrepresentations as to the future as well as other frauds
involving money or property. Pp.
483 U. S.
356-360.
(b) A state officer does not violate § 1341 if he chooses an
insurance agency to provide the State's insurance, but specifies
that the agency must share its commissions with another agency in
which the officer has an ownership interest, and hence profits from
the commissions. Here, there was no charge and the jury was not
required to find that the Commonwealth itself was defrauded of any
money or property or would have paid a lower premium or secured
better insurance in the absence of the alleged scheme. In fact, the
commissions Hunt and Gray received were not the Commonwealth's
money. Nor was the jury charged that, to convict, it must find that
the Commonwealth was deprived of control over how its money was
spent. Indeed, it would have paid the insurance premium to some
agency, and Hunt and Gray simply asserted control that the
Commonwealth might not otherwise have made over the payment of
insurance commissions. Moreover, although the Government relies in
part on the assertion that petitioners obtained property by means
of false representations to the company awarded the insurance
contract, there was nothing in the charge that required such a
finding. Pp.
483 U. S.
360-361.
790 F.2d 1290, reversed and remanded.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and BRENNAN, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and
SCALIA, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in
Parts I, II, and III of which O'CONNOR, J., joined,
post
p.
483 U. S.
362.
Page 483 U. S. 352
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action involves the prosecution of petitioner Gray, a
former public official of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and
petitioner McNally, a private individual, for alleged violation of
the federal mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341. [
Footnote 1] The prosecution's principal
theory of the case, which was accepted by the courts below, was
that petitioners' participation in a self-dealing patronage scheme
defrauded the citizens and government of Kentucky of certain
"intangible rights," such as the right to have the Commonwealth's
affairs conducted honestly. We must consider whether the jury
charge permitted a conviction for conduct not within the scope of
the mail fraud statute.
We accept for the sake of argument the Government's view of the
evidence, as follows. Petitioners and a third individual, Howard P.
"Sonny" Hunt, were politically active in the Democratic Party in
the Commonwealth of Kentucky during the 1970's. After Democrat
Julian Carroll was elected Governor of Kentucky in 1974, Hunt was
made chairman of the state Democratic Party and given
de
facto control over selecting the insurance agencies from which
the Commonwealth would purchase its policies. In 1975, the Wombwell
Insurance Company of Lexington, Kentucky (Wombwell), which since
1971 had acted as the Commonwealth's agent for securing a workmen's
compensation policy, agreed with Hunt that, in exchange for a
continued agency relationship, it would share any resulting
commissions in excess of $50,000 a year with other insurance
agencies specified by him. The commissions in question were paid to
Wombwell by the large insurance
Page 483 U. S. 353
companies from which it secured coverage for the
Commonwealth.
From 1975 to 1979, Wombwell funneled $851,000 in commissions to
21 separate insurance agencies designated by Hunt. Among the
recipients of these payments was Seton Investments, Inc. (Seton), a
company controlled by Hunt and petitioner Gray and nominally owned
and operated by petitioner McNally.
Gray served as Secretary of Public Protection and Regulation
from 1976 to 1978, and also as Secretary of the Governor's Cabinet
from 1977 to 1979. Prior to his 1976 appointment, he and Hunt
established Seton for the sole purpose of sharing in the
commissions distributed by Wombwell. Wombwell paid some $200,000 to
Seton between 1975 and 1979, and the money was used to benefit Gray
and Hunt. Pursuant to Hunt's direction, Wombwell also made excess
commission payments to the Snodgrass Insurance Agency, which in
turn gave the money to McNally.
On account of the foregoing activities, Hunt was charged with
and pleaded guilty to mail and tax fraud and was sentenced to three
years' imprisonment. Petitioners were charged with one count of
conspiracy and seven counts of mail fraud, six of which were
dismissed before trial. [
Footnote
2] The remaining mail fraud count was based on the mailing of a
commission check to Wombwell by the insurance company from which it
had secured coverage for the State. This count alleged that
petitioners had devised a scheme (1) to defraud the citizens and
government of Kentucky of their right to have the Commonwealth's
affairs conducted honestly, and (2) to obtain, directly and
indirectly, money and other things
Page 483 U. S. 354
of value by means of false pretenses and the concealment of
material facts. [
Footnote 3]
The conspiracy count alleged that petitioners had (1) conspired to
violate the mail fraud statute through the scheme just described,
and (2) conspired to defraud the United States by obstructing the
collection of federal taxes.
After informing the jury of the charges in the indictment,
[
Footnote 4] the District Court
instructed that the scheme to defraud the
Page 483 U. S. 355
citizens of Kentucky and to obtain money by false pretenses and
concealment could be made out by either of two sets of findings:
(1) that Hunt had
de facto control over the award of the
workmen's compensation insurance contract to Wombwell from 1975 to
1979; that he directed payments of commissions from this contract
to Seton, an entity in which he had an ownership interest, without
disclosing that interest to persons in state government whose
actions or deliberations could have been affected by the
disclosure; and that petitioners, or either of them, aided and
abetted Hunt in that scheme; or (2) that Gray, in either of his
appointed positions, had supervisory authority regarding the
Commonwealth's workmen's compensation insurance at a time when
Seton received commissions; that Gray had an ownership interest in
Seton and did not disclose that interest to persons in state
government whose actions or deliberations could have been affected
by that disclosure; and that McNally aided and abetted Gray (the
latter finding going only to McNally's guilt).
The jury convicted petitioners on both the mail fraud and
conspiracy counts, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the
convictions. 790 F.2d 1290 (CA6 1986). In affirming the substantive
mail fraud conviction, the court relied on a line of decisions from
the Courts of Appeals holding that the mail fraud statute
proscribes schemes to defraud citizens of their intangible rights
to honest and impartial government.
See, e.g., United States v.
Mandel, 591 F.2d 1347 (CA4 1979),
aff'd in relevant
part, 602 F.2d 653 (en banc),
cert. denied, 445 U.S.
961 (1980). Under these cases, a public official owes a fiduciary
duty to the public, and misuse of his office for private gain is a
fraud. Also, an individual without formal office may be held to be
a public fiduciary if others rely on him "
because of a special
relationship in the government'" and he in fact makes governmental
decisions. 790 F.2d at 1296 (quoting United States v.
Margiotta, 688 F.2d 108, 122 (CA2 1982), cert.
denied, 461 U.S. 913 (1983)). The Court of Appeals held that
Hunt was such a
Page 483 U. S. 356
fiduciary because he
"substantially participated in governmental affairs and
exercised significant, if not exclusive, control over awarding the
workmen's compensation insurance contract to Wombwell and the
payment of monetary kickbacks to Seton."
790 F.2d at 1296.
We granted certiorari, 479 U.S. 1005 (1986), and now
reverse.
The mail fraud statute clearly protects property rights, but
does not refer to the intangible right of the citizenry to good
government. As first enacted in 1872, as part of a recodification
of the postal laws, the statute contained a general proscription
against using the mails to initiate correspondence in furtherance
of "any scheme or artifice to defraud." The sponsor of the
recodification stated, in apparent reference to the antifraud
provision, that measures were needed
"to prevent the frauds which are mostly gotten up in the large
cities . . . by thieves, forgers, and rapscallions generally, for
the purpose of deceiving and fleecing the innocent people in the
country. [
Footnote 5]"
Insofar as the sparse legislative history reveals anything, it
indicates that the original impetus behind the mail fraud statute
was to protect the people from schemes to deprive them of their
money or property.
Durland v. United States, 161 U.
S. 306 (1896), the first case in which this Court
construed the meaning of the phrase "any scheme or artifice to
defraud," held that the phrase is to be interpreted broadly insofar
as property rights are concerned, but did not indicate that the
statute had a more extensive reach. The Court rejected the argument
that
"the statute reaches only such cases as, at common law,
would
Page 483 U. S. 357
come within the definition of 'false pretences,' in order to
make out which there must be a misrepresentation as to some
existing fact, and not a mere promise as to the future."
Id. at
161 U. S. 312.
Instead, it construed the statute to "includ[e] everything designed
to defraud by representations as to the past or present, or
suggestions and promises as to the future."
Id. at
161 U. S. 313.
Accordingly, the defendant's use of the mails to sell bonds which
he did not intend to honor was within the statute. The Court
explained that
"[i]t was with the purpose of protecting the public against all
such intentional efforts to despoil, and to prevent the post office
from being used to carry them into effect, that this statute was
passed. . . ."
Id. at
161 U. S.
314.
Congress codified the holding of
Durland in 1909, and
in doing so gave further indication that the statute's purpose is
protecting property rights. [
Footnote 6] The amendment added the words "or for
obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent
pretenses, representations, or promises" after the original phrase
"any scheme or artifice to defraud." Act of Mar. 4, 1909, ch. 321,
§ 215, 35 Stat. 1130. [
Footnote
7] The new
Page 483 U. S. 358
language is based on the statement in
Durland that the
statute reaches "everything designed to defraud by representations
as to the past or present, or suggestions and promises as to the
future." 161 U.S. at
161 U. S. 313.
However, instead of the phrase "everything designed to defraud,"
Congress used the words "[any scheme or artifice] for obtaining
money or property."
After 1909, therefore, the mail fraud statute criminalized
schemes or artifices "to defraud" or "for obtaining money or
property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representation,
or promises. . . ." Because the two phrases identifying the
proscribed schemes appear in the disjunctive, it is arguable that
they are to be construed independently, and that the
money-or-property requirement of the latter phrase does not limit
schemes to defraud to those aimed at causing deprivation of money
or property. This is the approach that has been taken by each of
the Courts of Appeals that has addressed the issue: schemes to
defraud include those designed to deprive individuals, the people,
or the government of intangible rights, such as the right to have
public officials perform their duties honestly.
See, e.g.,
United States v. Clapps, 732 F.2d 1148, 1152 (CA3 1984);
United States v. States, 488 F.2d 761, 764 (CA8 1973).
As the Court long ago stated, however, the words "to defraud"
commonly refer "to wronging one in his property rights by dishonest
methods or schemes," and "usually signify the deprivation of
something of value by trick, deceit, chicane or overreaching."
Hammerschmidt v. United States, 265 U.
S. 182,
265 U. S. 188
(1924). [
Footnote 8] The
codification of the holding in
Durland
Page 483 U. S. 359
in 1909 does not indicate that Congress was departing from this
common understanding. As we see it, adding the second phrase simply
made it unmistakable that the statute reached false promises and
misrepresentations as to the future, as well as other frauds
involving money or property.
We believe that Congress' intent in passing the mail fraud
statute was to prevent the use of the mails in furtherance of such
schemes. The Court has often stated that, when there are two
rational readings of a criminal statute, one harsher than the
other, we are to choose the harsher only when Congress
Page 483 U. S. 360
has spoken in clear and definite language.
United States v.
Bass, 404 U. S. 336,
404 U. S. 347
(1971);
United States v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp.,
344 U. S. 218,
344 U. S.
221-222 (1952).
See also Rewis v. United
States, 401 U. S. 808,
401 U. S. 812
(1971). As the Court said in a mail fraud case years ago: "There
are no constructive offenses; and before one can be punished, it
must be shown that his case is plainly within the statute."
Fasulo v. United States, 272 U. S. 620,
272 U. S. 629
(1926). Rather than construe the statute in a manner that leaves
its outer boundaries ambiguous and involves the Federal Government
in setting standards of disclosure and good government for local
and state officials, we read § 1341 as limited in scope to the
protection of property rights. If Congress desires to go further,
it must speak more clearly than it has.
For purposes of this action, we assume that Hunt, as well as
Gray, was a state officer. The issue is thus whether a state
officer violates the mail fraud statute if he chooses an insurance
agent to provide insurance for the State, but specifies that the
agent must share its commissions with other named insurance
agencies, in one of which the officer has an ownership interest and
hence profits when his agency receives part of the commissions. We
note that, as the action comes to us, there was no charge and the
jury was not required to find that the Commonwealth itself was
defrauded of any money or property. It was not charged that, in the
absence of the alleged scheme, the Commonwealth would have paid a
lower premium or secured better insurance. Hunt and Gray received
part of the commissions, but those commissions were not the
Commonwealth's money. Nor was the jury charged that, to convict, it
must find that the Commonwealth was deprived of control over how
its money was spent. Indeed, the premium for insurance would have
been paid to some agency, and what Hunt and Gray did was to assert
control that the Commonwealth might not otherwise
Page 483 U. S. 361
have made over the commissions paid by the insurance company to
its agent. [
Footnote 9]
Although the Government now relies in part on the assertion that
petitioners obtained property by means of false representations to
Wombwell, Brief for United States 20-21, n. 17, there was nothing
in the jury charge that required such a finding. We hold,
therefore, that the jury instruction on the substantive mail fraud
count permitted a conviction for conduct not within the reach of §
1341.
The Government concedes that, if petitioners' substantive mail
fraud convictions are reversed, their conspiracy convictions should
also be reversed.
Id. at 36, n. 28.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Page 483 U. S. 362
|
483
U.S. 350 ast|
* Together with No. 86-286,
Gray v. United States, also
on certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 1341 provides in pertinent part:
"Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or
artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of
false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, . . .
for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice or attempting
so to do, [uses the mails or causes them to be used], shall be
fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than five years,
or both."
[
Footnote 2]
The six counts dismissed were based on the mailing of Seton's
tax returns. The Court of Appeals held that mailings required by
law cannot be made the basis for liability under § 1341 unless the
documents are themselves false,
see Parr v. United States,
363 U. S. 370
(1960), and that the six counts were properly dismissed, since the
indictment did not allege that Seton's tax returns were false. The
Government has not sought review of this holding.
[
Footnote 3]
The mail fraud count also alleged that petitioners' fraudulent
scheme had the purpose of defrauding the citizens and government of
Kentucky of their right to be made aware of all relevant facts when
selecting an insurance agent to write the Commonwealth's workmen's
compensation insurance policy. The District Court did not instruct
on this purpose, holding that it was subsumed in the purpose to
deny the right to honest government.
[
Footnote 4]
The instruction summarized the charges as follows:
"Count 4 of the Indictment charges in part that the defendants
devised a scheme or artifice to:"
"(a)(1) defraud the citizens of the Commonwealth of Kentucky and
its governmental departments, agencies, officials and employees of
their right to have the Commonwealth's business and its affairs
conducted honestly, impartially, free from corruption, bias,
dishonesty, deceit, official misconduct, and fraud; and,"
"(2) obtain (directly and indirectly) money and other things of
value, by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations,
and promises, and the concealment of facts."
"And for the purpose of executing the aforesaid scheme, the
defendants, James E. Gray and Charles J. McNally, and Howard P.
'Sonny' Hunt, Jr., and others, did place and cause to be placed in
a post office or authorized deposit for mail matter, matters and
things to be sent and delivered by the Postal Service, and did take
and receive and cause to be taken and received therefrom such
matters and things and did knowingly cause to be delivered thereon
and at the place at which it was directed to be delivered by the
person to whom it was addressed, matters and things."
"(b) Defraud the United States by impeding, impairing, and
obstructing and defeating the lawful governmental functions of the
Internal Revenue Service of the Treasury Department of the United
States of America in the ascertainment, computation, assessment and
collection of federal taxes."
Brief for United States 9-10, n. 8.
The Government concedes that it was error for the District Court
to include the instruction on tax fraud in the substantive mail
fraud instruction,
see id. at 11, n. 9, but the effect of
that error is not now at issue.
[
Footnote 5]
Cong.Globe, 41st Cong., 3d Sess., 35 (1870) (remarks of Rep.
Farnsworth). These remarks were made during the debate on H.R.
2295, the recodification legislation introduced during the 41st
Congress. Representative Farnsworth proceeded to describe a scheme
whereby the mail was used to solicit the purchase by greedy and
unwary persons of counterfeit bills, which were never
delivered.
The recodification bill was not passed by the 41st Congress, but
was reintroduced and passed by the 42d Congress with the antifraud
section intact. Act of June 8, 1872, ch. 335, §§ 149 and 301, 17
Stat. 302 and 323.
[
Footnote 6]
Prior to
Durland, Congress had amended the statute to
add language expressly reaching schemes of the period, many of the
same nature as those mentioned by Representative Farnsworth in
1870,
see n 5,
supra, dealing or pretending to deal in counterfeit
currency under such names as "green coin" or "green cigars." Act of
Mar. 2, 1889, ch. 393, § 1, 25 Stat. 873. The addition of this
language appears to have been nothing more than a reconfirmation of
the statute's original purpose in the face of some disagreement
among the lower federal courts as to whether the statute should be
broadly or narrowly read.
See Rakoff, The Federal Mail
Fraud Statute, 18 Duquesne L.Rev. 771, 790-799, 808-809 (1980).
Some of the language added in 1889 was removed in 1948 in an
amendment (Act of June 25, 1948, ch. 645, § 1341, 62 Stat. 763)
designed to remove surplusage without changing the meaning of the
statute.
See H.R.Rep. No. 304, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., A100
(1947). Post-1948 amendments to the statute have been technical in
nature. The last substantive amendment of the statute, then, was
the codification of the holding of
Durland, and other
changes not relevant here, in 1909.
[
Footnote 7]
The new language was suggested in the Report of the Commission
to Revise and Codify the Criminal and Penal Laws of the United
States, which cited
Durland in the margin of its Report.
See S. Doc. No. 68, 57th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 2, 63, 64
(1901). The sponsor of the 1909 legislation did not address the
significance of the new language, stating that it was
self-explanatory. 42 Cong.Rec. 1026 (1908) (remarks of Sen.
Heyburn).
[
Footnote 8]
Hammerschmidt concerned the scope of the predecessor of
18 U.S.C. § 371, which makes criminal any conspiracy "to defraud
the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any
purpose."
Hammerschmidt indicates, in regard to that
statute, that while
"[t]o conspire to defraud the United States means primarily to
cheat the Government out of property or money, . . . it also means
to interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful governmental
functions by deceit, craft or trickery, or at least by means that
are dishonest."
265 U.S. at
265 U. S. 188.
Other cases have held that § 371 reaches conspiracies other than
those directed at property interests.
See, e.g., Haas v.
Henkel, 216 U. S. 462,
216 U. S. 480
(1910) (predecessor of § 371 reaches conspiracy to defraud the
Government by bribing a Government official to make an advance
disclosure of a cotton crop report);
Glasser v. United
States, 315 U. S. 60 (1942)
(predecessor of § 371 reaches conspiracy to defraud the United
States by bribing a United States attorney). However, we believe
that this broad construction of § 371 is based on a consideration
not applicable to the mail fraud statute.
In
Curley v. United States, 130 F. 1 (CA1 1904), cited
with approval in
Haas v. Henkel, supra, the court
stated:
"Quite likely, the word 'defraud,' as ordinarily used in the
common law and as used in English statutes and in the statutes of
our states, enacted with the object of protecting property and
property rights of communities and individuals, as well as of
municipal governments, which exist largely for the purpose of
administering local financial affairs, has reference to frauds
relating to money and property."
130 F. at 6-7. The court concluded, however, that
"[a] statute which . . . has for its object the protection of
the individual property rights of the members of the civic body is
one thing; a statute which has for its object the protection and
welfare of the government alone, which exists for the purpose of
administering itself in the interests of the public, [is] quite
another."
Id. at 7. Section 371 is a statute aimed at protecting
the Federal Government alone; however, the mail fraud statute, as
we have indicated, had its origin in the desire to protect
individual property rights, and any benefit which the Government
derives from the statute must be limited to the Government's
interests as property holder.
[
Footnote 9]
JUSTICE STEVENS would affirm the convictions even though it was
not charged that requiring the Wombwell agency to share commissions
violated state law. We should assume that it did not. For the same
reason, we should assume that it was not illegal under state law
for Hunt and Gray to own one of the agencies sharing in the
commissions, and hence to profit from the arrangement, whether or
not they disclosed it to others in the state government. It is
worth observing, as well, that it was not alleged that the mail
fraud statute would have been violated had Hunt and Gray reported
to state officials the fact of their financial gain. The violation
asserted is the failure to disclose their financial interest, even
if state law did not require it, to other persons in the state
government whose actions could have been affected by the
disclosure. It was in this way that the indictment charged that the
people of Kentucky had been deprived of their right to have the
Commonwealth's affairs conducted honestly.
It may well be that Congress could criminalize using the mails
to further a state officer's efforts to profit from governmental
decisions he is empowered to make or over which he has some
supervisory authority, even if there is no state law proscribing
his profiteering or even if state law expressly authorized it. But
if state law expressly permitted or did not forbid a state officer
such as Gray to have an ownership interest in an insurance agency
handling the State's insurance, it would take a much clearer
indication than the mail fraud statute evidences to convince us
that having and concealing such an interest defrauds the State and
is forbidden under federal law.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE O'CONNOR joins as to Parts I,
II, and III, dissenting.
Congress has broadly prohibited the use of the United States
mails to carry out "any scheme or artifice to defraud." 18 U.S.C. §
1341. The question presented is whether that prohibition is
restricted to fraudulent schemes to deprive others of money or
property, or whether it also includes fraudulent schemes to deprive
individuals of other rights to which they are entitled.
Specifically, we must decide whether the statute's prohibition
embraces a secret agreement by state officials to place the State's
workmen's compensation insurance with a particular agency in
exchange for that company's agreement to share a major portion of
its commissions with a list of agents provided by the officials,
including sham agencies under the control of the officials
themselves.
The same question of statutory construction has arisen in a
variety of contexts over the past few decades. In the public
sector, judges, State Governors, chairmen of state political
parties, state cabinet officers, city aldermen, Congressmen and
many other state and federal officials have been convicted of
defrauding citizens of their right to the honest services of their
governmental officials. [
Footnote
2/1] In most of these cases,
Page 483 U. S. 363
the officials have secretly made governmental decisions with the
objective of benefiting themselves or promoting their own
interests, instead of fulfilling their legal commitment to provide
the citizens of the State or local government with their loyal
service and honest government. Similarly, many elected officials
and their campaign workers have been convicted of mail fraud when
they have used the mails to falsify votes, thus defrauding the
citizenry of its right to an honest election. [
Footnote 2/2] In the private sector, purchasing
agents, brokers, union leaders, and others with clear fiduciary
duties to their employers or unions have been found guilty of
defrauding their employers or unions by accepting kickbacks or
selling confidential information. [
Footnote 2/3] In other cases, defendants
Page 483 U. S. 364
have been found guilty of using the mails to defraud individuals
of their rights to privacy and other nonmonetary rights. [
Footnote 2/4] All of these cases have
something in common -- they involved what the Court now refers to
as "intangible rights." They also share something else in common.
The many federal courts that have confronted the question whether
these sorts of schemes constitute a "scheme or artifice to defraud"
have uniformly and consistently read the statute in the same,
sensible way. They have realized that nothing in the words "any
scheme or artifice to defraud," or in the purpose of the statute,
justifies limiting its application to schemes intended to deprive
victims of money or property.
I
The mail fraud statute sets forth three separate prohibitions.
It prohibits the use of the United States mails for the purpose of
executing
"[1]
any scheme or artifice to defraud, [2]
or
for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent
pretenses, representations, or promises, [3]
or to sell,
dispose of, loan, exchange, alter, give away, distribute,
Page 483 U. S. 365
spurious coin, obligation, security, or other article, or
anything represented to be or intimated or held out to be such
counterfeit or spurious article. . . ."
18 U.S.C. § 1341 (emphasis and brackets added).
As the language makes clear, each of these restrictions is
independent. One can violate the second clause -- obtaining money
or property by false pretenses -- even though one does not violate
the third clause -- counterfeiting. Similarly, one can violate the
first clause -- devising a scheme or artifice to defraud -- without
violating the counterfeiting provision. Until today, it was also
obvious that one could violate the first clause by devising a
scheme or artifice to defraud, even though one did not violate the
second clause by seeking to obtain money or property from his
victim through false pretenses.
Cf. Streep v. United
States, 160 U. S. 128,
160 U. S.
132-133 (1895). Every court to consider the matter had
so held. [
Footnote 2/5] Yet, today,
the Court, for all practical purposes, rejects this longstanding
construction of the statute by imposing a requirement that a scheme
or artifice to defraud does not violate the statute unless its
purpose is to defraud someone of money or property. I am at a loss
to understand the source or justification for this holding.
Certainly no canon of statutory construction requires us to ignore
the plain language of the provision.
In considering the scope of the mail fraud statute, it is
essential to remember Congress' purpose in enacting it. Congress
sought to protect the integrity of the United States mails by not
allowing them to be used as "instruments of crime."
United
States v. Brewer, 528 F.2d 492, 498 (CA4 1975).
See
Durland v. United States, 161 U. S. 306,
161 U. S.
314
Page 483 U. S. 366
(1896);
Parr v. United States, 363 U.
S. 370,
363 U. S. 389
(1960);
Gouled v. United States, 273 F. 506, 508 (CA2),
aff'd, 255 U. S. 298
(1921).
"The focus of the statute is upon the misuse of the Postal
Service, not the regulation of state affairs, and Congress clearly
has the authority to regulate such misuse of the mails.
See
Badders v. United States, 240 U. S. 391 . . . (1916)."
United States v. States, 488 F.2d 761, 767 (CA8 1973),
cert. denied, 417 U.S. 909 (1974). Once this purpose is
considered, it becomes clear that the construction the Court adopts
today is senseless. Can it be that Congress sought to purge the
mails of schemes to defraud citizens of money, but was willing to
tolerate schemes to defraud citizens of their right to an honest
government, or to unbiased public officials? Is it at all rational
to assume that Congress wanted to ensure that the mails not be used
for petty crimes, but did not prohibit election fraud accomplished
through mailing fictitious ballots? Given Congress' "broad
purpose," I
"find it difficult to believe, absent some indication in the
statute itself or the legislative history, that Congress would have
undercut sharply that purpose by hobbling federal prosecutors in
their effort to combat"
use of the mails for fraudulent schemes.
McElroy v. United
States, 455 U. S. 642,
455 U. S. 655
(1982).
The limitation the Court adopts today shows no fidelity to
Congress' words or purpose. The Court recognizes that the "money or
property" limitation of the second clause may not actually apply to
prosecutions under the first clause.
See ante at
483 U. S. 358.
But where else can such a limitation be derived from? A few
examples of the types of frauds that have been prosecuted under the
"intangible right" theory reveal that these schemes constitute
"fraud" in every sense of the word, and that the "intangible right"
theory plays an indispensable role in effectuating Congress' goal
of preserving the integrity of the Postal Service.
In
States, supra, two candidates running for the office
of Committeeman in St. Louis, Missouri, used the United States
mails in their scheme to falsify voter registration affidavits
Page 483 U. S. 367
in order to carry out an extensive fraudulent write-in scheme.
The candidates had their campaign workers fill in the affidavits
with fictitious names and addresses, making sure that the mailing
addresses were accessible to the campaign. Applications for
absentee ballots were filed, and when they arrived through the
mail, they were filled in with the candidates' names and mailed
back. The candidates and one of their aides were convicted of mail
fraud for having devised a scheme to defraud the voters, the
residents, and the Board of Election Commissioners. The Court of
Appeals affirmed the convictions, rejecting the defendants'
arguments that they had not defrauded anyone, since they never
sought money or property. The court explained that the term
"defraud" must be "construed to further the purpose of the statute;
namely, to prohibit the misuse of the mails to further fraudulent
enterprises." 488 F.2d at 764.
In
United States v. Rauhoff, 525 F.2d 1170 (CA7 1975),
the defendant was part of a scheme that used the United States mail
to facilitate its paying the Illinois Secretary of State
approximately $50,000 a year in return for the Secretary's awarding
the State's license plate contract to a certain company. In
response to the argument that all parties to the scheme were
reaping profits, and that nobody was defrauded, the Court of
Appeals explained that the victims of the scheme were the "people
of Illinois, who were defrauded of their right to have the business
of the office of the Secretary of State conducted free from
bribery."
Id. at 1175. Although it was not proved that the
State or its citizens lost any money, it was and is clear that this
was a scheme to defraud under § 1341.
There are scores of other examples of such schemes, which,
although not depriving anyone of money or property, are clearly
schemes to defraud, and are clearly within the scope of Congress'
purpose in enacting the mail fraud statute.
See nn.
483
U.S. 350fn2/1|>1-5,
supra. Discussing the peculiar
facts of each of them would only confirm the observation that fraud
is "as old as falsehood, and as versatile as human ingenuity."
Weiss v.
Page 483 U. S. 368
United States, 122 F.2d 675, 681 (CA5),
cert.
denied, 314 U.S. 687 (1941). But, taken as a whole, these
cases prove just how unwise today's judicial amendment of the mail
fraud statute is.
II
The cases discussed above demonstrate that the construction the
courts have consistently given the statute is consistent with the
common understanding of the term "fraud," and Congress' intent in
enacting the statute. It is also consistent with the manner in
which the term has been interpreted in an analogous federal
statute; the way the term was interpreted at the time of this
statute's enactment; and the statute's scant legislative history.
There is no reason, therefore, to upset the settled, sensible
construction that the federal courts have consistently
endorsed.
The term "defraud" is not unique to § 1341. Another federal
statute, 18 U.S.C. § 371, uses the identical term in prohibiting
conspiracies to "defraud the United States," and the construction
we have given to that statute should be virtually dispositive here.
In
Haas v. Henkel, 216 U. S. 462
(1910), the Court, dealing with the predecessor to § 371, rejected
the argument that there could be no conspiracy to defraud in the
absence of contemplated monetary or property loss.
"The statute is broad enough in its terms to include any
conspiracy for the purpose of impairing, obstructing or defeating
the lawful function of any department of Government."
Id. at
216 U. S. 479.
Again, in
Hammerschmidt v. United States, 265 U.
S. 182 (1924), the Court described the scope of the
statute as prohibiting not only conspiracies to
"cheat the Government out of property or money, but it also
means to interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful governmental
functions by deceit, craft or trickery, or at least by means that
are dishonest."
Id. at
265 U. S. 188.
[
Footnote 2/6] It is thus clear
that a
Page 483 U. S. 369
conspiracy to defraud the United States does not require any
evidence that the Government has suffered any property or pecuniary
loss.
See also United States v. Barnow, 239 U. S.
74,
239 U. S. 79
(1915).
There is no basis for concluding that the term "defraud" means
something different in § 1341 (first enacted in 1872) than what it
means in § 371 (first enacted in 1867). Although § 371 includes the
words "in any manner or for any purpose," those words only modify
the underlying act -- fraud, and if that term does not include
nonproperty interests, then our longstanding interpretation of §
371 is unjustified. In any event, § 1341 itself includes the
expansive phrase "any scheme or artifice to defraud."
The Court nonetheless suggests that interpreting the two
statutes differently can be justified because § 371 applies
exclusively to frauds against the United States, while § 1341
benefits private individuals.
Ante at
483 U. S.
358-359, n. 8. This argument is wide of the mark. The
purpose of § 1341 is to protect the integrity of the United States
Postal Service, and, as I have explained, it is ludicrous to think
that a Congress intent on preserving the integrity of the Postal
Service would have used the term "defraud" in a narrow sense, so as
to allow mailings whose purpose was merely to defraud citizens of
rights other than money or property. There is, therefore, no reason
to believe that Congress used the term "defraud" in a more limited
way in § 1341 than it did in § 371. [
Footnote 2/7]
Page 483 U. S. 370
The Court is correct in pointing out that Congress intended to
go beyond any common law meaning of the word "defraud" in enacting
§ 371.
See ante at
483 U. S.
358-359, n. 8, citing
United States v. Keitel,
211 U. S. 370,
211 U. S. 393
(1908). But we have also rejected the argument that the common law
meaning of the term "defraud" confines the scope of § 1341.
See
Durland v. United States, 161 U. S. 306
(1896).
Examination of the way the term "defraud" has long been defined,
and was defined at the time of the statute's enactment, makes it
clear that Congress' use of the term showed no intent to limit the
statute to property loss.
Cf. Saint Francis College v.
Al-Khazraji, 481 U. S. 604
(1987) (looking to contemporaneous dictionary definitions in
construing the word "race"). For example, Justice Story cites the
definition of "fraud" as "applied to every artifice made use of by
one person for the purpose of deceiving another," or as "any
cunning, deception, or artifice used to circumvent cheat, or
deceive another." 1 J. Story, Equity Jurisprudence § 186, pp.
189-190 (1870). Similarly, the law dictionaries of the era broadly
defined the type of interests subject to deprivation by fraudulent
action. One leading dictionary stated that "[t]o defraud is to
withhold from another that which is justly due to him, or to
deprive him of a right by deception or artifice." 1 Bouvier's Law
Dictionary 530 (1897). Another dictionary defined "defraud" as
"[t]o cheat; to deceive; to deprive of a right by an act of
fraud . . . to withhold from another what is justly due him, or to
deprive him of a right, by deception or artifice."
W. Anderson, A Dictionary of
Page 483 U. S. 371
Law 474 (1893).
See also 1 Burrill's Law Dictionary
658-659 (1859). [
Footnote 2/8]
It is, in fact, apparent that the common law criminalized frauds
beyond those involving "tangible rights." For example, in a case
remarkably similar to the one before us, a public official was
convicted for depriving the government of his honest services.
See Trial of Valentine Jones, 31 How. St. Tr. 251 (1809).
The case has been abstracted as follows:
"A, a commissary-general of stores in the West Indies, makes
contracts with B to supply stores, on the condition that B should
divide the profits with A. A commits a misdemeanor."
J. Stephen, Digest of The Criminal Law, Art. 121, p. 85 (3d ed.
1883). By the same token, the crime of fraud has often included
deceptive seduction, although that crime often includes no property
or monetary loss.
See State v. Parker, 114 Wash. 428, 195
P. 229 (1921);
cf. United States v. Condolon, 600 F.2d 7
(CA4 1979) (fraudulent scheme to seduce women supported wire fraud
conviction). Of course, even if the term was not that expansively
defined at common law, we have held that Congress went beyond the
common law definitions in enacting this statute.
Durland,
161 U.S. at
161 U. S.
313-314.
In a recent decision upholding the mail fraud conviction of an
Illinois judge, despite the absence of proof that anyone suffered
loss of tangible property, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh
Circuit reaffirmed the broad meaning of the word "defraud."
United States v. Holzer, 816 F.2d 304 (1987). Writing for
the court, Judge Posner explained:
"Fraud in its elementary common law sense of deceit -- and this
is one of the meanings that fraud bears
Page 483 U. S. 372
in the statute,
see United States v. Dial, 757 F.2d
163, 168 (7th Cir.1985) -- includes the deliberate concealment of
material information in a setting of fiduciary obligation. A public
official is a fiduciary toward the public, including, in the case
of a judge, the litigants who appear before him, and if he
deliberately conceals material information from them, he is guilty
of fraud. When a judge is busily soliciting loans from counsel to
one party, and not telling the opposing counsel (let alone the
public), he is concealing material information in violation of his
fiduciary obligations."
"
* * * *"
"Second, the systematic and long-continued receipt of bribes by
a public official, coupled with active efforts to conceal the
bribe-taking from the public and the authorities . . . is fraud
(again in its elementary sense of deceit, and quite possibly in
other senses as well), even if it is the public, rather than
counsel, that is being kept in the dark. It is irrelevant that, so
far as appears, Holzer never ruled differently in a case because of
a lawyer's willingness or unwillingness to make him a loan, so that
his conduct caused no demonstrable loss either to a litigant or to
the public at large.
See, e.g., United States v. Keane,
622 F.2d 534, 541, 546 (7th Cir.1975);
United States v.
Lovett, 811 F.2d 979, 985 (7th Cir.1987);
United States v.
Manton, 107 F.2d 834, 846 (2d Cir.1939). How can anyone prove
how a judge would have ruled if he had not been bribed?"
Id. at 307-308. The general definition of the term
"defraud" does not support, much less compel, today's decision.
Even if there were historical evidence of a limited definition
of "fraud," the Court's holding would reflect a strange
interpretation of legislation enacted by the Congress in the 19th
century. Statutes like the Sherman Act, the civil rights
legislation, and the mail fraud statute were written in broad
general language on the understanding that the courts would
Page 483 U. S. 373
have wide latitude in construing them to achieve the remedial
purposes that Congress had identified. The wide open spaces in
statutes such as these are most appropriately interpreted as
implicit delegations of authority to the courts to fill in the gaps
in the common law tradition of case-by-case adjudication. The
notion that the meaning of the words "any scheme or artifice to
defraud" was frozen by a special conception of the term recognized
by Congress in 1872 is manifestly untenable. As Judge Posner put
it:
"The argument depends on the view that the meaning of fraud in
the mail-fraud statute was frozen by the conception of fraud held
by the framers of the statute when it was first passed back in the
nineteenth century. This seems to us the opposite and equally
untenable extreme from arguing that fraud is whatever strikes a
judge as bad, but, in any event, the 'intangible rights' concept
that the argument attacks is too well established in the courts of
appeals for us to disturb."
Holzer, 816 F.2d at 310.
Finally, there is nothing in the legislative history of the mail
fraud statute that suggests that Congress intended the word "fraud"
to have a narrower meaning in that statute than its common meaning
and the meaning that it has in § 371. As originally enacted in
1872, the statute had but one class of prohibition: use of the
mails as part of "any scheme or artifice to defraud." Act of June
8, 1872, ch. 335, § 301, 17 Stat. 323. The second clause, which
prohibits "any scheme . . . for obtaining money or property by
means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or
promises," was added in 1909. Act of Mar. 4, 1909, ch. 321, § 215,
35 Stat. 1130. The purpose of the second clause was to codify this
Court's holding in
Durland that the Act prohibits false
promises even if they did not qualify as "fraud" at common law.
See Durland, 161 U.S. at
161 U. S.
312-314. There is no evidence to suggest that Congress
sought to limit the scope of the original prohibition, and its use
of the disjunctive "or" demonstrates that it was adding to, not
modifying, the original prohibition.
See
Reiter
v.
Page 483 U. S. 374
Sonotone Corp., 442 U. S. 330,
442 U. S. 339
(1979);
see also Streep v. United States, 160 U.S. at
160 U. S.
132-133.
Reviewing the general history of Congress' reactions to the
courts' decisions interpreting the mail fraud statute also supports
the reading the lower courts have attributed to § 1341. The general
language in the mail fraud statute has repeatedly been construed to
cover novel species of fraud, and Congress has repeatedly amended
the statute in ways that support a broad interpretation of its
basic thrust. That long history is accurately summarized in the
following observations:
"First enacted in 1872, the mail fraud statute, together with
its lineal descendant, the wire fraud statute, has been
characterized as the 'first line of defense' against virtually
every new area of fraud to develop in the United States in the past
century. Its applications, too numerous to catalog, cover not only
the full range of consumer frauds, stock frauds, land frauds, bank
frauds, insurance frauds, and commodity stock frauds, but have
extended even to such areas as blackmail, counterfeiting, election
fraud, and bribery. In many of these and other areas, where
legislatures have sometimes been slow to enact specific prohibitory
legislation, the mail fraud statute has frequently represented the
sole instrument of justice that could be wielded against the
ever-innovative practitioners of deceit."
"During the past century, both Congress and the Supreme Court
have repeatedly placed their stamps of approval on expansive use of
the mail fraud statute. Indeed, each of the five legislative
revisions of the statute has served to enlarge its coverage."
Rakoff, The Federal Mail Fraud Statute, 18 Duquesne L.Rev.
772-773 (1980).
III
To support its crabbed construction of the Act, the Court makes
a straightforward but unpersuasive argument. Since there is no
explicit, unambiguous evidence that Congress actually
Page 483 U. S. 375
contemplated "intangible rights" when it enacted the mail fraud
statute in 1872, the Court explains, any ambiguity in the meaning
of the criminal statute should be resolved in favor of lenity. The
doctrine of lenity is, of course, sound, for the citizen is
entitled to fair notice of what sort of conduct may give rise to
punishment. But the Court's reliance on that doctrine in this case
is misplaced for several reasons.
To begin with,
"although 'criminal statutes are to be construed strictly . . .
this does not mean that every criminal statute must be given the
narrowest possible meaning in complete disregard of the purpose of
the legislature.'"
McElroy v. United States, 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 658,
quoting
United States v. Bramblett, 348 U.
S. 503,
348 U. S.
509-510 (1955). Especially in light of the statutory
purpose, I believe that § 1341 unambiguously prohibits all schemes
to defraud that use the United States mails -- whether or not they
involve money or property.
In any event, this asserted ambiguity in the meaning of the word
"defraud," if it ever existed, was removed by judicial construction
long ago. Even if Chief Justice Taft's opinion for the Court in the
Hammerschmidt case was not sufficient to make it perfectly
clear that a fraud on the public need not deprive it of tangible
property, the series of Court of Appeals' opinions applying this
very statute to schemes to defraud a State and its citizens of
their intangible right to honest and faithful government,
notwithstanding the absence of evidence of tangible loss, removed
any relevant ambiguity in this statute. Surely these petitioners
knew that it would be unlawful to place Kentucky's insurance
coverage with an agent who would secretly make hundreds of
thousands of dollars available for the private use of petitioners,
their relatives, and their paramours. This is, indeed, a strange
application of the doctrine of lenity. [
Footnote 2/9]
Page 483 U. S. 376
I recognize that there may have been some overly expansive
applications of § 1341 in the past. With no guidance from this
Court, the Courts of Appeals have struggled to define just when
conduct which is clearly unethical is also criminal. In some
instances, however, such as voting fraud cases, the criminality of
the scheme and the fraudulent use of the mails could not be
clearer. It is sometimes difficult to define when there has been a
scheme to defraud someone of intangible rights. But it is also
sometimes difficult to decide when a tangible loss was caused by
fraud. The fact that the exercise of judgment is sometimes
difficult is no excuse for rejecting an entire doctrine that is
both sound and faithful to the intent of Congress.
IV
Perhaps the most distressing aspect of the Court's action today
is its casual -- almost summary -- rejection of the accumulated
wisdom of the many distinguished federal judges who have
thoughtfully considered and correctly answered the question these
cases present. The quality of this Court's work is most suspect
when it stands alone, or virtually so, against a tide of
well-considered opinions issued by state or federal courts. In
these cases, I am convinced that those judges correctly understood
the intent of the Congress that enacted this statute. Even if I
were not so persuaded, I could not join a rejection of such a
longstanding, consistent interpretation of a federal statute.
See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fink, 483 U. S.
89,
483 U. S. 101
(1987) (STEVENS, J., dissenting);
Citicorp
Industrial Credit, Inc. v.
Page 483 U. S. 377
Brock, 483 U. S. 27,
483 U. S. 40
(1987) (STEVENS, J., dissenting);
Runyon v. McCrary,
427 U. S. 160,
427 U. S. 189
(1976) (STEVENS, J., concurring).
In the long run, it is not clear how grave the ramifications of
today's decision will be. Congress can, of course, negate it by
amending the statute. Even without congressional action,
prosecutions of corrupt officials who use the mails to further
their schemes may continue, since it will frequently be possible to
prove some loss of money or property. [
Footnote 2/10] But many other types of fraudulent use
of the mail will now be immune from prosecution. The possibilities
that the decision's impact will be mitigated do not moderate my
conviction that the Court has made a serious mistake. Nor do they
erase my lingering questions about why a Court that has not been
particularly receptive to the rights of criminal defendants in
recent years has acted so dramatically to protect the elite class
of powerful individuals who will benefit from this decision.
I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See, e.g., United States v. Holzer, 816 F.2d 304 (CA7
1987) (county judge);
United States v. Silvano, 812 F.2d
754 (CA1 1987) (city budget director);
United States v.
Barber, 668 F.2d 778 (CA4) (State Alcoholic Beverage Control
Commissioner),
cert. denied, 459 U.S. 829 (1982);
United States v. Margiotta, 688 F.2d 108 (CA2 1982) (party
leader),
cert. denied, 461 U.S. 913 (1983);
United
States v. Diggs, 198 U.S.App.D.C. 255, 613 F.2d 988 (1979)
(Congressman),
cert. denied, 446 U.S. 982 (1980);
United States v. Mandel, 591 F.2d 1347 (CA4 1979)
(Governor of Maryland),
cert. denied, 445 U.S. 961 (1980);
United States v. Brown, 540 F.2d 364 (CA8 1976) (city
building commissioner);
United States v. Bush, 522 F.2d
641 (CA7 1975) (city Director of Public Relations),
cert.
denied, 424 U.S. 977 (1976);
United States v. Keane,
522 F.2d 534 (CA7 1975) (city alderman),
cert. denied, 424
U.S. 976 (1976);
United States v. Staszcuk, 502 F.2d 875
(CA7 1974) (city alderman),
cert. denied, 423 U.S. 837
(1975);
United States v. Isaacs, 493 F.2d 1124 (CA7)
(ex-Governor of Illinois and ex-Director of Illinois Department of
Revenue),
cert. denied, 417 U.S. 976 (1974);
United
States v. Classic, 35 F. Supp.
457 (ED La.1940) (election commissioner).
Some private defendants have also been convicted of devising
schemes through which public servants defraud the public.
See,
e.g., United States v. Lovett, 811 F.2d 979 (CA7 1987)
(bribing mayor);
United States v. Alexander, 741 F.2d 962
(CA7 1984) (bribing judge),
overruled on other grounds in
United States v. Ginsburg, 773 F.2d 798, 802 (CA7 1985) (en
banc);
United States v. Rauhoff, 525 F.2d 1170 (CA7 1975)
(bribing State Secretary of State);
United States v.
Faser, 303 F.
Supp. 380 (ED La.1969) (scheme to bribe state officials).
In
Shushan v. United States, 117 F.2d 110 (CA5),
cert. denied, 313 U.S. 574 (1941), the Fifth Circuit
upheld the mail fraud prosecution of a member of a Louisiana parish
levy board for receiving kickbacks from the underwriters of a plan
to refund outstanding bonds of the levy district. Explaining why it
rejected the argument that no actual fraud had occurred because the
refunding operation had actually been profitable to the levy board,
the court stated:
"No trustee has more sacred duties than a public official, and
any scheme to obtain an advantage by corrupting such an one must in
the federal law be considered a scheme to defraud."
117 F.2d at 115.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See, e.g., United States v. Girdner, 754 F.2d 877 (CA10
1985) (candidate for state legislature);
United States v.
Odom, 736 F.2d 104, 116, n. 13 (CA4 1984) (sheriff);
United States v. Clapps, 732 F.2d 1148, 1153 (CA3) (party
chairman),
cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1085 (1984);
United
States v. States, 488 F.2d 761 (CA8 1973) (candidates for city
office),
cert. denied, 417 U.S. 909 (1974).
[
Footnote 2/3]
See, e.g., United States v. Price, 788 F.2d 234 (CA4
1986),
cert. pending sub nom. McMahan v. United States,
No. 86-632;
United States v. Boffa, 688 F.2d 919, 930-931
(CA3 1982);
United States v. Curry, 681 F.2d 406 (CA5
1982) (chairman of political action committee);
United States
v. Bronston, 658 F.2d 920 (CA2 1981) (attorney),
cert.
denied, 456 U.S. 915 (1982);
United States v. Von
Barta, 635 F.2d 999 (CA2 1980) (securities trader),
cert.
denied, 450 U.S. 998 (1981);
United States v.
Bohonus, 628 F.2d 1167 (CA9) (insurance manager),
cert.
denied, 447 U.S. 928 (1980);
United States v. Bryza,
522 F.2d 414 (CA7 1975) (purchasing agent),
cert. denied,
426 U.S. 912 (1976);
United States v. George, 466 F.2d 508
(CA7) (purchasing agent),
cert. denied, 414 U.S. 827
(1973);
United States v. Procter & Gamble
Co., 47 F. Supp.
676 (Mass.1942) (attempt to bribe competitor's employee).
[
Footnote 2/4]
See, e.g., United States v. Condolon, 600 F.2d 7 (CA4
1979) (wire fraud conviction related to bogus talent agency
designed to seduce women);
United States v. Louderman, 576
F.2d 1383 (CA9) (scheme to fraudulently obtain confidential
personal information),
cert. denied, 439 U.S. 896 (1978);
see also United States v. Castor, 558 F.2d 379, 383 (CA7
1877) (fraudulent information on application for liquor license),
cert. denied, 434 U. S. 101
(1978).
[
Footnote 2/5]
See, e.g., Clapps, supra, at 1152;
States,
supra, at 764,
United States v. Frankel, 721 F.2d
917, 920 (CA3 1983);
United States v. Scott, 701 F.2d
1340, 1343-1344 (CA11),
cert. denied, 464 U.S. 856 (1983);
Margiotta, supra, at 121;
United States v.
Halbert, 640 F.2d 1000, 1007 (CA9 1981);
United States v.
Classic, 35 F. Supp.
457 (ED La.1940);
see also ante at
483 U. S.
358.
[
Footnote 2/6]
"To conspire to defraud the United States means primarily to
cheat the Government out of property or money, but it also means to
interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful govern mental
functions by deceit, craft or trickery, or at least by means that
are dishonest. It is not necessary that the Government shall be
subjected to property or pecuniary loss by the fraud, but only that
its legitimate official action and purpose shall be defeated by
misrepresentation, chicane or the overreaching of those charged
with carrying out the governmental intention."
Hammerschmidt v. United States, 265 U.S. at
265 U. S.
188.
It is extraordinary that the only support the Court presents for
its narrow definition is some language in
Hammerschmidt, see
ante at
483 U. S. 358,
even though
Hammerschmidt itself goes on to expressly
reject the notion that fraud is limited to interference with
monetary or property rights.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The prohibition against employing "any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud" in connection with transactions on a National
Securities Exchange similarly does not require proof that specific
individuals have suffered tangible losses.
See SEC v. Texas
Gulf Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d 833, 848 (CA2 1968),
cert.
denied sub nom. Coates v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976 (1969). By its
terms, that language is broad enough to "reach any person engaged
in any fraudulent scheme."
Chiarella v. United States,
445 U. S. 222,
445 U. S. 240
(1980) (Burger, C.J., dissenting).
See also Myzel v.
Fields, 386 F.2d 718, 739 (CA8 1967),
cert. denied,
390 U.S. 951 (1968);
A. T. Brod & Co. v. Perlow, 375
F.2d 393, 397 (CA2 1967).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Although there are surely cases and commentaries to be found
which describe "fraud" in a more limited manner, none has been
brought our attention that rejects the broader interpretations
cited here. There is, of course, no doubt that the term "defraud"
includes money and property interests, and the cases referring to
such interests do not conflict with my understanding of the
statute.
[
Footnote 2/9]
When considering how much weight to accord to the doctrine of
lenity, it is appropriate to identify the class of litigants that
will benefit from the Court's ruling today. They are not
uneducated, or even average, citizens. They are the most
sophisticated practitioners of the art of government among us.
There is an element of fiction in the presumption that every
citizen is charged with a responsibility to know what the law is.
But the array of government executives, judges, and legislators who
have been accused, and convicted, of mail fraud under the
well-settled construction of the statute that the Court renounces
today are people who unquestionably knew that their conduct was
unlawful.
Cf. Nash v. United States, 229 U.
S. 373,
229 U. S. 377
(1913).
[
Footnote 2/10]
When a person is being paid a salary for his loyal services, any
breach of that loyalty would appear to carry with it some loss of
money to the employer -- who is not getting what he paid for.
Additionally,
"[i]f an agent receives anything as a result of his violation of
a duty of loyalty to the principal, he is subject to a liability to
deliver it, its value, or its proceeds, to the principal."
Restatement (Second) of Agency § 403 (1958). This duty may
fulfill the Court's "money or property" requirement in most
kickback schemes.
Of course, "the fact that a scheme may or may not violate State
law does not determine whether it is within the proscriptions of
the federal statute."
United States v. Edwards, 458 F.2d
875, 880 (CA5),
cert. denied sub nom. Huie v. United
States, 409 U.S. 891 (1972).
See Margiotta, 688 F.2d
at 124;
Mandel, 591 F.2d at 1361;
Brown, 540 F.2d
at 374, n. 7;
Bush, 522 F.2d at 646, n. 6. The mail fraud
statute is a self-contained provision, which does not rely on any
state enactments for its force.
Cf. 18 U.S.C. § 1952 (b)
(defining "unlawful activity" with reference to state law). The
lack of a state statute forbidding the underlying conduct does not
immunize a defendant from prosecution when he or she uses the
United States mails as part of the scheme.