Charles W. Baker and A. S. Waller, commander and clerk, respectively, of the local camp of the Woodmen of the World at Rossville, Tenn., were indicted on six counts, charged in each of them with use of the mails in furtherance of a scheme to defraud an organization known as the Sovereign Camp of the Woodment of the World. Waller was acquitted, but Baker was convicted on four counts. He insists here that the proceeding was void, because the indictment was not returned by' a lawfully constituted grand jury.
The question was raised below by plea in abatement filed immediately after the return of the indictment and before any other plea had been entered. The grand jury was summoned under an order directing the drawing of the names of 71 persons from the jury box for jury service at the May, 1924, term, without designating that any of them should be drawn as grand jurors. Prom those summoned there were selected and sworn under direction of the court, as the clerk testified, the first 21 for grand jury service. Defendant says that, as it was not stated in the order that the 71 persons or any number of them were to be summoned as grand jurors, there could not be a legal grand jury constituted of those persons. Section 284 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1261), relied on by defendant, provides:
“No grand jury shall be summoned to attend any district court unless the judge thereof, in his own discretion or upon a notification by the district attorney that such jury will be needed, orders a venire to issue therefor,” etc. The purpose of this, as decided in Breese v. United States, 203 F. 824, 122 C. C. A. 142, was economic, and not that grand jurors should be summoned as such. Besides, the question is settled in this jurisdiction by Abramson et al. v. United States (C. C. A.) 2 F. (2d) 595, where it was ruled that there was a substantial compliance with the requirements of the statutes if qualified persons whose names had been drawn from the box and duly summoned by the marshal for jury service were under orders of- the court placed on the grand jury list. We see no reason to change this ruling.
Nor is the indictment bad for duplicity. While it is stated that the scheme was intended to defraud, not only the Sovereign Camp, but Robinson, Mahan, Gurkin, and various others who were members of and interested in the Woodmen, it is not charged in terms that the three individuals named were to be defrauded by means of the surrender of their policies, although such not improbable result might be inferable. The order might be defrauded, whether or not the individuals named were also cheated in their individual capacities. The gist of the offense was not the devising of the scheme to defraud," but the causing of a letter to be mailed in furtherance of it. The scheme, as set out in the .first count, was to defraud the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World. In perfecting it, the indictment shows that certain members of the organization were induced by false representations to surrender their policies. But that was merely incidental to or a part of the scheme to defraud the order, in furtherance of which the mails were used. Hence there was in fact but one offense charged in each count, and that the one upon which defendant was tried.
Two of the counts charged defendant with causing to be mailed certain papers at Rossville, Tenn., addressed to the Woodmen of the World at Omaha, Neb., and the other two related to the receipt of papers containing cheeks in payment of total disability benefits, all in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme. It is said that it was not shown that the letters were received through the mail. The envelopes were not preserved, but the *62letters were identified by a receiving stamp, and Lackey, an employee in tbe general office of the Woodmen at Omaha, testified that they came through the mails, although he seemed to base the statement on the fact that the head office received papers from several thousand subordinate lodges, and practically all of such papers came by mail. When interrogated by the court, however, he said, speaking particularly as to whether he knew the papers in question were so received, “I do by reason of this stamp (referring to a private stamp put on the file by witness).” This testimony, with that showing who prepared the papers, with whom they were left for forwarding, who received the cheeks in payment of the disability benefits, cashed them, etc., and even defendant’s own testimony, leaves no room for doubt as to the mailing of the papers by defendant and his receipt of the cheeks, as respectively alleged in the four counts on which he was convicted.
Complaint is made of the admission of some of the evidence. We have given consideration to the various questions discussed under this assignment, and conclude that there was no prejudicial error committed. The testimony as to transactions between defendants and the order, whereby they collected for themselves permanent disability benefits, is not subject, we think, to the objection of incompeteney, because it tended to prove an offense committed more than three years before the finding of any indictment. The scheme with which defendants were charged was unique; it required ingenuity. A similar scheme, devised and successfully executed by defendants immediately before this one was conceived, would seem to be admissible in evidence, as tending to show they devised this scheme and what its purpose was. But, if we assume that the testimony was incompetent, the fact remains that the court finally excluded it, and directed the jury not to consider it, in which circumstances it is not believed to have been prejudicial, in view of the overwhelming proof of the purposes of the scheme otherwise adduced.
The final assignment of excessive punishment requires no discussion. Defendant was convicted on four counts. The prison sentences run concurrently; the fines are cumulative. The result is that he received a sentence of three years in the penitentiary and was adjudged to pay fines amounting to $4,000. This is not excessive punishment.
Judgment affirmed.