!loS
815
FEDERAL REPORTER.
"Volume II, Number 27; Trade-Mark, 1892: by Lew Rosen: New York, Saturday, April 15, 1893. Ten cents a copy; $4 a year in advance;" and thereupon, on the !lame page, Is a picture of a cab, horse, driver, and the figure of a female,together (underneath the said picture), with the word "Tenderloineuse,,, and the said paper consists of twelve pages, minute descriptions of which, with the pictures therein and thereon, would be offensive to the court, and improper to spread upon the records of the court, because of their obscene, lewd, and Indecent matters; and the said paper on the said 24th day of April, In the year one thousand, eight hUlldred and ninety-three, was inclosed In a wrapper and addressed as follows,-that is to say: "Mr. Geo. Edwards, P. O. Box 510, Summit, N. J.,"-agalnst the peace of the United States, and their dignity, and contrary to the statute of the United States In such cases made and provided.' " "A distinction," the court continued, "Is attempted to be taken between the Rosen Case and the one at bar, for the reason, as Is stated, that the Indictment In the former case contained a direct charge that the defendant did deposit In the post office a certain obscene, lewd, and lascivious paper, whereas In this case no such charge Is made, but only that the defendant knowingly deposited, etc., a printed book and pamphlet, 'the character of which Is so obscene, lewd, and lascivious that said book would be offensive if set forth In full in this indictment.' In other· words, it is Said that, when an indictment contains a charge that a book 'is so obscene, lewd, and lascivious' that it would be offensive to set it forth in full in the Indictment, it Is· not thereby charged that the book was In fact obscene, lewd, or .lascivious. It takes stronger eyes than we possess to discover any real and material difference In the meaning of the two expressions. The plain English of an allegation that a book is so obscene and Indecent as to be offensive if set forth in full in an Indictment, and placed upon the records of the court, is that the book Is obscene In fact and to the degree described. No one denies that there are degrees of obscenity, any more than that two and two make four; but, when a book Is stated to be so obscene that It would be offensIve if set forth in full in an indictment, such allegation imports a sufficient degree of obscenity to render the production nonmailable and obscene under the statute. This indictment is sufficient, because it does, In fact, contain a charge that the book was obscene, to the knowledge of the defendant, who knowingly and willfully, with such knowledge, deposited It In the mail, and thus violated the statute. No one, on reading the third·and fifth counts of the indictment, could come to any other conclusion In regard to their meaning, and, when this Is the case, an indictment is good enough."
Obviously, the words "obscene" and "of an indecent character" are treated in this opinion as convertible expressions, equivalent in meaning; and certainly an indictment charging that a paper or letter is obscene, lewd, or lascivious, and unfit to be spread upon the records of the court, was treated as good. Without extending the discussion further, it is sufficient to say that we conclude there was no error in the ruling and judgment of the court. Affirmed. UNITED STATES v. BERRY et al. (DistrIct Court, W. D, Virginia. November 19, 1897.) F,USE ENTRIES BY BANK OFFICER-INDICTMENT.
Under Rev. St. § 5209, prohibiting "every * * * cashier * * * of any" national bank from making "any false entry In any * * * report * * * with Intent to injure or defraud," etc., and' prescribing a like penalty for "every persoll who, with lil,e Intent, .aids or abets any officer," etc., the Intent is a material Ingredient under each clause; and therefore an Indictment which, after duly charging the act and Intent In respect to the cashier, merely charges another person with aiding and abetting him to make said false entries "in manner and form as aforesaid," Is open to demurrer.
UNITED STATES V. BERRY.
209
Indictment for violating section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. On demurrer to the indictment and each couut thereof. A. J. Montague, U. S. Atty. Caskie & Coleman and W. H. Mann, for defendants. PAUL, District Judge. The indictment in this case against the defendants, .T. D. Berry and Charles L. Mosby, is for violating the provisions of section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which prohibits "every president, director, cashier, teller, clerk. or agent of any association" (to wit, any national banking association) from making "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 prescribes a like penalty for "every person who, with like intent, aids or abets any officer. clerk, or agent in any violation of this section." It is charged that in 26 separate instances these defendants (one of them, T. D. Berry, being the president, and the other, Charles L. Mosby, being the cashier, of a national banking association, namely, the First National Bank of Bedford City) did commit one of the acts prohibited by the said section of the Revised Statutes of the United States, by making a false entry in a report of the said association, with intent to injure and defraud, etc. The indictment consists of 52 counts; there being 2 counts to each of the 26 instances in which it is charged that the defendants violated the provisions of section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of the United States quoted above. In the first, third, and every other odd-numbered count of the said indictment, the defendants are charged jointly with committing the offense of making the false entries in the reports of the association. In the second, fourth, and every other even-numbered count in the indictment, Charles L. Mosby is charged with committing the offense of making the false entries in the reports of the association, and T. D. Berry is charged with aiding and abetting him therein. One of these even-numbered counts will serve as an illustration of all the other even-numbered counts charging that Mosby made the false en· tries, and that Berry aided and abetted him therein: "Second Count. And the grand jurors aforesaid, upon their oaths aforesaid, do further present that the said Charles L. Mosby heretofore, to wit, the 18th day of July, A. D. 1894, at Bedford City, in the district and circuit aforesaid, the cashier of the First National Bank of Bedford City. Virginia, a banking association theretofore established, and then existing and doing business, under and by virtue of the laws of the said United States concerning national banks, and that the said association, on the day last aforesaid, made to the comptroller of the currency of the said United States a certain report of the condition of the said association at the close of business on the said 18th day of .July, 181)4, according to a certain form theretofore prescribed by the comptroller of the currency of the said United States for the time being, the same being a report which It was then and there, to wit, on the day and year last aforesaid, by law, the duty of the said association to make to the said comptroller, and being then and there duly v.erified and attested as required by law. And the grand- jurors aforesaid, upon theIr oaths aforesaid, do further present that the said Charles L. 85F.-14
210:
85 FEDERAL' REPORTER. .,
MoslJy. being cashier of said aforesaid, h;eretofore, to wit, oD . !he 18th day of July, 1894, at said City, and within the district aforesaid. unlawfully and feloJiiously did make a certilJn falsll entry In said report so J,llade as aforesaid, that Is to say, a certain false entry on page three of said report; under the head of 'Checks and Other Cash Items,' In substance and to the effect that at the close of business o:p.. the day and year last aforesaid the said association then and there held and had In Its possession 'checks and drafts on banks, etc., in' said Bedford City, In the sum of $27,301.98, and that the amount due to said association from said bank or banks in said Bedford City was in the sum last aforesaid, which Is faIse, In this:. that in truth the checks and drafts on banks in said Bedford Oity held by said association were not of the sum last aforesaid, but of a dif1!erent and much greater sum, to Wit, the sum of $30,900; and a certain other false entry on page one of said report, under the head of 'Resources,' in substance and to the effect that the amount of cash moneys thell on hand and in the possession of said association, consisting of 'bills of other national banks,' fractional paper currency, nickels and cents, gold coln,gold treasury certificates, slIver dollars, slIver treasury certificates, fractional slIver coin, and legal-tender notes, was in the sum of $9,919.12, which Is false, In this:. that in truth the amount of said cash moneys was of a different and mUCh. smaller sum, to wit, the sum of $3,919.12; he, the said Charles L. Mosby, cashier as aforesaid, then and there, at the time and place of so making the said false entry in said report as aforesaid, well knowing the said entry to be then and there false as aforesaid, and thereby Intending to Injure and defraud the said association and certain persons to the grand. jurors unknown, and to of the said association, and any agent appointed deceive any officer or by the comptroller of the currency to examine the affairs of said association. And the grand jurors aforesaid, upon their oaths aforesaid, do further present that T. D. Berry, being then and there president of the association aforesaid, In the district and clrquit l1,foresaid, heretofore, to wit, on the day and year last aforesaid, at said Bedford Oity, and within the jurisdiction of this court, unlawfully and feloniously did aid, abet, Incite, counsel, and procure said Charles L. Mosby. cashier 'of the said association, so' as aforesaid to make said false entries in manner and form as aforesaid, to do and commit, contrary to the form or the statute·ofthe United States In such case made and provided, and against the peace and (lignUy or the said Uulted States."
The prinCipal ground of demurrer to the 26 even-numbered counts of. the indictment which charge Charles L. :Mosby with malting the false entries in the report of the association, and charge T. D. Berry with aiding and 'abetting him therein, is that each and all of the said counts fail to charge that such aiding and abetting of the said Charles' L. Mosby by the said T. D. Berry was· done with intent to injure, defraud, and deceive, and so forth.· It is contended in the able argument of the United States attornev that each of the said counts in the indictment specifically t1harges Berry. the aider and abettor, with the intent to injure, defra"ud, and deceive, inasmuch as it charges Mosby, the principal, with making the false entries in the report with the intent to injure, defraud, and deceive, and charges Berry with doing everything it charges Mosby with doing, and in the manner and form in which it charges that Mosby did it. The contention is that the words "in manner. and form" are sufficient to aver the intent aided and abetted Mosby in making the false enwith tl'ies charged to him. The intent to injure, defraud, and deceive is made by the statute a material ingredient of the offense. Without such intent to injure, defraud. and deceive, the acts which Berry is charged with committing would not fall within the provisions of the statute. In U. S. v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S. 542, at page 558, it is said, "Every ingredient of which the crime is composed must be accurately'
UNITED STATEBV. BERRY.
211
and clearly alleged." In the same case it is said, itA crime is made up of acts and intent, and these must be set forth in the indictment with reasonable particularity of time, place, and circumstance." In U. S. v. Bettilini, 1 Woods, 654, Fed. Cas. No. 14,587, it is said, "In all indictments upon statutes, all the circumstances which can· stitute the definition of the offense in the act must be set forth so as to bring the defendant precisely within it." "(1) Where intent is to be proved in order to illustrate the character of the act, * * * the intent must be averred, and must be attached to all the material allegations. (2) Where the intent is to be prima facie inferred from the facts stated, * * * intent, unless part of the statutory definition, need not be specifically averred." Whart. PI. & Prac. § 163a. In U. So v. Voorhees, 9 Fed. 143, where this same section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of the United States was under consideration, the court held that the intent to injure, defraud, and deceive is a necessary element of each of the offenses created by the act. This being so, it must be averred in the indictment. The language of the court is as follows:
"But we think that * * * the falr construction of the act, and the latter part of the section, which provides that anyone who aids or abets an otficer in doing any of the acts with like intent shall be similarly punished, must be to IIlake It necessary to allege and prove the intent as to all."
The United States attorney states that this indictment was drawn in accordance with the indictment in the- case of Cochran v. U. S., 157 U. S. 286, 15 Sup. Ct. 628, and that it was not alleged in that indictment that the aiding and abetting was done with intent to injure, defraud, and deceive, but that the count charging one of the defendants with aiding and abetting was as it is in this indictment. An inspection of that case shows that the failure to allege the intent to injure, defraud, and deceive was not raised, was never before the court, and was not passed upon. That decision, therefore, in this respect, is, of course, not binding authority. The demurrer to the 26 counts in the indictment numbered 2, 4, and so on, in even numbers, to 52, inclusive, must be sustained, on the ground that they fail to allege that Berry, in aiding and abetting Mosby in the making of the false entries charged, did so with the intent to injure, defraud, and deceive, and so forth. This holding of the court renders it unnecessary to discuss the several other grounds of demurrer assif:,rned to these counts of the indictments. But the court will say that it has carefully considered all of the other grounds of demurrer which have been so elaborately and ably argued byconnsel for the defendants, and does not think any of them is well taken. The grounds of demurrer urged to the other 26 counts in the indictment, numbered in the odd numbers, from 1 to 51, in· clusive.are not well taken, and the demurrer, as to these counts, is overruled.
212
85 FEilERAL REPORTER. UNITED STATES (Circuit Court, E. D. Virginia.
v. WOOD. February 15, 1898.)
CUSTOMS DUTIES-VAI,UATION-l\'IARKET VALUE-OATS IN BAGS.
In determining the market value of an article purchased abroad In usual coverings, such as oats in bags, the customs administrative act of June 10, 1890, requires (section 19) that the value of the article as a whole, Including the covering, shall be taken, though the covering, if separately imported, would be free of duty.
This was an appeal from a decision of the board of general appraisers reversing the action of the collector of the port of Richmond in respect to the amount of duty assessed upon certain oats imported in bags. n. Rand Wellford, Ass't U. S. Atty., and Walter A. Donaldson, for the United States. SIMONTON, Circuit Judge. In the matter of the application of the collector of customs, Richmond, Va., for review of the decision {If the board of United States general appraisers rendered January 13, 1897 (G. A. 3,769), upon protest 29,453b, of T. W. Wood & Sons, against the decision of said collector as to the amount of duty exacted upon certain oats, in sacks, imported per steamship Shenandoah and Durham City, entered December 3, 1895, and January 10, 1896, reo spectively. This case comes-up on the application of Charles M. Wallace, Esq., collector for the port of Richmond, praying a review of a decision of the board of United States general appraisers. On 3d December, 1895, T. W. Wood & Sons imported, through Richmond, white oats, from Atherstown, England, contained in 56 bags, made of burlaps. On 10th January, 1896, the same firm imported, through Richmond, oats of th{l same kind, and for the same place, in 250 bags made of burlaps. Under paragraph 190 of the tariff act then in force (Act 1894; 28 Stat. 522), the duty on oats is fixed at 20 per cent. ad valorem. The collector, in assessing this value, included the cost of the bags. The importers protested against this action, and the matter came before the board of general appraisers, who found that the merchandise consisted of oats in burlaps bags (that is to say, "bags for grain made of burlaps," within the meaning of that phrase as used in paragraph 424i of the act of 1894); that this paragraph includes such bags in the free list. And the board held that coverings of imported goods, which are usual and necessary coverings, and which are made free of duty by specific enumeration, eo nomine, are not assessable for. duty, but are exempt from duty under the free list which particularly describes them; that this specific description takes such coverings out of the provisions of the cus· toms administration act of June 10. 1890, § 19 (26 Stat. 131). The application of the collector brings this decision here for review. The law in force at the dates of these importations required a duty to be assessed on them of 20 per cent. ad valorem. The question with the collector therefore was, what was the value of the 56 bags of oats in the first importation, and of the 250 bags of oats in the second importation? How was he to get at the ad valorem? The