Schooler v. United States

Decision Date13 April 1956
Docket NumberNo. 15455.,15455.
Citation231 F.2d 560
PartiesGuy D. SCHOOLER, Appellant, v. UNITED STATES of America, Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit

Herschel G. Langdon, Des Moines, Iowa, and J. O. Watson, Jr., Indianola, Iowa, for appellant.

Roy L. Stephenson, U. S. Atty., Des Moines, Iowa (Robert J. Spayde, Oskaloosa, Iowa, and John C. Stevens, Asst. U. S. Attys., Des Moines, Iowa, on the brief), for appellee.

Before WOODROUGH and VAN OOSTERHOUT, Circuit Judges, and HULEN, District Judge.

HULEN, District Judge.

Appellant appeals from a judgment based on a jury verdict of guilt on five counts of an indictment charging violation of 18 U.S.C. § 220.1 Reversal is sought solely on the ground that the trial court erred in overruling the motion for judgment of acquittal. Our ruling must turn on the narrow issue as to what meaning shall be given to the word "acceptance" as used in the statute.

Appellant was an officer of the Hartford-Carlisle Savings Bank. Its deposits were insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Hence this Court has jurisdiction. The indictment charges in each of five counts that during 1952 appellant received and agreed to receive a fee, gift or commission from one Stevens for procuring for Stevens the acceptance of checks by the bank. Each count of the indictment charges a separate offense on a specific date. The fee or gift received by appellant was $100.00 in the offenses set out in each of the first four counts, and $500.00 in the fifth count.

The facts are not in dispute. Government Exhibit 16 is a summary showing Stevens' checks drawn on and paid by the Hartford-Carlisle Savings Bank during the period April 1, 1952, to September 30, 1952. There were 419 checks totaling $2,341,847.47. There was evidence of delayed posting on some of the checks. Had certain checks been posted when received, the Stevens account would have been overdrawn. In answer to this showing by the Government appellant offered evidence that the bank followed a practice — and a legal one — of delayed posting.2 None of Stevens' checks were paid until there was sufficient money in his account to pay them.

In each case Stevens covered his checks soon enough that, because of the bank's delayed posting custom, at no time was the bank required to return the checks for insufficient funds. In the manner of posting checks, the bank followed no different procedure with respect to any of its other accounts. This phase of the case is of minor importance on the issue presented on this appeal.

Stevens opened his account in January of 1952. Shortly thereafter he brought in a letter from the Cambridge State Bank of Cambridge, Iowa, recommending him as a proper customer for the Hartford Bank. He told appellant he was in the used car business. The bank had advised Stevens it would not pay any checks on uncollected funds. For a time Stevens brought in his deposits in the form of cash. Appellant then told Stevens that the large amounts of cash were a nuisance to the bank and asked Stevens to take his account elsewhere. Appellant testified that it was at this time that Stevens offered to pay the bank $100.00 a month to maintain the account. Stevens, as a Government witness, testified that he gave appellant sums of money — he didn't know exactly how much — and told appellant "that was for doing me a favor when I was out of town and couldn't get back, for taking care of the checks, until I could get in." Appellant testified that he put the money which Stevens left at the bank in an envelope which he kept in what they called the silver chest, and did not credit it to an account in the bank at that time because of his uncertainty about the OPA regulations concerning charges for checking account services. On October 4, 1952, when Stevens' account was closed on order of the Superintendent of Banking, a credit was made to Collection and Exchange for the cash in the envelope — amounting to $500.00.

All checks handled by the bank for Stevens were perforated with the date of payment. The bank never made any loans to Stevens.

The Government's position is that the receiving or accepting of the checks by the bank in the manner described violated the statute proscribing the receipt of a fee or gift for procuring "acceptance" of a check by a bank. There is no claim by the Government that any check of Stevens was accepted by the bank within the meaning of the term "acceptance" as used in the negotiable instrument law. On the other hand, appellant urges that since there was no "acceptance" of any check of Stevens as used in the negotiable instrument law, there was no violation of the statute.

18 U.S.C. § 220 stems from 12 U.S.C. A. § 595, which underwent its first change in the revision of the Criminal Code of 1948. Section 595, prior to 1948, applied to officers, directors and certain employees of a member of the Federal Reserve System. Section 595 did not contain the word "acceptance." In the 1948 revision the word "acceptance" was inserted, but the Act still did not extend to banks insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. In 1950 the Act was amended to include officers, directors, employees, agents or attorneys of any bank, "the deposits of which are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation."

Under the historical and revision notes to the statute we find the following:

"* * * The punishment provisions of the three sections were identical, and all other provisions thereof were similar, except that section 595 of said Title 12, relating to officers, directors, employees, or attorneys of member banks of the Federal Reserve System, did not include the terms `agent\' and `acceptance\' and did not include the phrase `or extension or renewal of loan or substitution of security.\'
* * * * * *
"Verbal changes were made for style purposes. 80th Congress House Report No. 304.
"1950 Amendment. Act Sept. 21, 1950, amended section to prohibit any officer, director, or employee of, or attorney or agent for, an insured bank from receiving fees or gifts for procuring loans." (Emphasis added.)

Can a check by "acceptance" become the substance of and represent a loan. If so, how? Under the negotiable instrument law the "acceptance" of a check has a well recognized, specific and definite meaning. Acceptance of a check must be in writing and signed by the drawee bank.

"The acceptance of a check contemplates a promise on the part of the drawee to pay the same, and is essentially different from the payment thereof. Payment is the natural and legitimate end of a check, whereas an acceptance adds to its original vitality a new element of force and strength calculated to prolong its existence and widen its sphere of usefulness. When there is an acceptance, a contractual relationship arises between the holder and the drawee and consequently there is a promise to perform; when there is a payment, there is an actual performance. It has, accordingly, been ruled that payment of a check is not acceptance within the meaning of the statutory provision that acceptance or certification of a check discharges from liability the drawer and all indorsers thereon." 7 Am.Jur., Banks § 554.
"* * * Payment and acceptance are essentially different. Payment is the natural, expected, and intended end of a check. Acceptance strengthens the vitality of a check, and serves to prolong, rather than to terminate, the life of it. * * *" Hunt v. Security State Bank, 1919, 91 Or. 362, 179 P. 248, 251.

Did Congress use the word "acceptance" in the statute pertaining to bank transactions in the negotiable instrument sense? Or is the use of this word as the Government claims:

"It is submitted that under Section 220 formal written acceptance of bills of exchange in the technical sense may be included, but to limit the statute to that definition would be to thwart the intent of the Statute to penalize bribery and graft in a large variety of banking transactions including the vast banking business of receiving and paying checks."

If we trace further the history of Section 220, it is to be seen that it has a bearing on the meaning of "acceptance" as it is used in the statute. Section 220 is based on three prior sections of the Code: 12 U.S.C.A. §§ 595, 1125, and 1315. Section 595 applied to officers, employees, etc., of Federal Reserve and member banks; Section 1125 applied to officers of Federal intermediate credit banks; and Section 1315 applied to officers of National Agricultural Credit Corporations. In the 1948 revision of United States criminal statutes, Congress consolidated these sections in 18 U.S.C. § 220. Of the three statutes referred to only 12 U.S.C.A. § 595 did not contain the word "acceptance." Their punishment provisions were practically identical. Since 18 U.S.C. § 220 is a consolidation...

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    ...sense throughout; and, where its meaning in one instance is clear, this meaning will be attached to it elsewhere. Schooler v. United States, 231 F.2d 560, 563 (8th Cir.1956), quoting 82 C.J.S., Statutes § 348. Section 3142 expanded the statutory authority for presentence orders of detention......
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