James Wiggains,' the plaintiff in error, was indicted and convicted in the District Court for violating the provisions of section 150 of the Penal Code of the United States, which enacted that:
“Whoever shall have in his possession or custody, except under authority from the Secretary of the Treasury or other proper officer, any obligation or other security made or executed, in whole or in part, after the similitude of any obligation or other security issued under the authority of the United States, with intent to sell or otherwise use the same * * * shall be fined,” etc.
The specific charge against Wiggains was that he had in his possession with the unlawful intent denounced by the act what purported to be a $5 note of the national bank currency issued by the German National Bank of Northern Kansas at Beloit. The note was set out in full in the indictment. It carried on its face with the usual conspicuous display the following: “National Currency Secured by United States Bonds or other securities” — signed by the Treasurer of the United States and by the Register of the Treasury, thus: “Ellis H. Roberts, Treasurer of the United States. J. W. Lyons, Register of the Treasury.” Then followed: “The German National Bank of Northern Kansas at Beloit will pay to the bearer on demand five dollars. Beloit, Kansas, Mar. 24, 1903. -, Cashier. -, President” — no names appearing in the blank spaces.
Neither the evidence nor any of the other proceedings taken at the trial are brought here for our consideration. All we have is the indictment, a demurrer to the indictment, an order overruling the demurrer, a verdict of guilty, and the judgment on the verdict.
The defendant prosecutes this writ of error.
His only available assignment of error challenges the action of the trial court in overruling his demurrer to the indictment, and this presents the only question for our present consideration.
It is argued that the indictment was insufficient for two reasons; First, because the absence of any signatures as president and cashier of the German National Bank conclusively established that there was no such similitude to an obligation or security issued under the authority of the United States as would .bring the note within the condemnation of the act; and, second, because the absence of those signatures conclusively demonstrated that the note in the possession of Wiggains did not purport to be an obligation or other security, the possession of which was denounced by the act.
[1] The indictment definitely enough charges that the instrument in the possession of the defendant was made in part after and in similitude of an obligation or security issued under the authority of the United States of America; and probably for the purpose of the demurrer the allegation touching similitude should be treated as true, *974but as the note is set forth in the indictment we may properly enough say that in our opinion its contents and display afford ample evidence for submission to the jury of the question whether it was calculated to deceive an unsuspecting person of ordinary prudence and incline him to accept it as good money, notwithstanding the fact that no president’s or cashier’s name appeared upon it. If that question be answered in the affirmative, the similarity would be sufficiently established within the meaning of the law. United States v. Kuhl (D. C.) 85 Fed. 624, and cases cited. Certainly the court could not on a demurrer say that there was no evidence of such similarity. In any view of the matter we are of opinion that the demurrer assailing the indictment on the ground that it did not appear that the instrument found in the possession of the defendant was made in whole or in part after the similitude of an obligation or other security issued under the authority of the United States was not well taken.
[2] But it is contended that the absence of any name as president or cashier at the foot of the note showed that it did not purport to be an “obligation or security”, within the meaning of the Penal Code, and that as a result its possession by Wiggains for any purpose was not in violation of the act. There is considerable authority for the proposition that prior to 1892 the absence of some names purporting to be officers of the bank issuing the note would have been fatal to its character as such an “obligation or security.” United States v. Williams (D. C.) 14 Fed. 550; United States v. Sprague (D. C.) 48 Fed. 828; United States v. Barrett (D. C.) 111 Fed. 369. But, by an act of Congress approved July 28, 1892, 27 Stat. 322, the following amendment to the national banking act was made:
“Be it enacted,” etc., * » * “that the provisions of the Revised Statutes of the United States, providing for the redemption of national bank notes, shall apply to all national bank notes that have been or may be issued to or received by, any national bank, notwithstanding such notes may have, been lost by or stolen from the bank and put in circulation without the signature or upon the forged signature of the president or vice-president and cashier.”
By the Act of June 20, 1874, 18 Stat. 123, every national bank was required to keep on deposit in the treasury of the United States a sum of money équal to 5 per cent, of its outstanding circulation as a special fund for the redemption of that circulation, and when any of its notes should be presented for redemption the same were paid by the treasurer, and the amount so paid charged to the banks issuing them. This 'provision of the law probably contemplated the redemption of only such notes as had been actually executed and issued by the national banks; but the amendment of 1892, for reasons satisfactory to Congress, obviously sought still further to protect circulation by requiring the treasurer to redeem all national bank notes once issued by the Comptroller of the Currency to a national bank, whether they had ever been signed by the president or vice president and cashier of that bank or not. Inasmuch as the redemption is made from funds deposited by the bank to which the notes were issued, the effect of the amendment is that an unsigned note of a national bank secures to the holder the same rights of redemption as if it had been signed *975by the proper officers of the bank in the usual way, and creates a valid obligation against the bank for its ultimate payment. Such being the case, it is impossible to say that the note in question did not purport to be some obligation or security.
It is also argued that the indictment was defective because it contained no averment that the German National Bank of Northern Kansas was an incorporated bank. In view of other averments of the indictment, the absence of that particular averment did not, in our opinion, render the indictment obnoxious to a demurrer.
Binding no error in the action of the trial court, its judgment is affirmed.