Summary
holding mens rea element is implicit in the offense of tendering bad checks under Code § 58.1-637
Summary of this case from Sullivan v. CommonwealthOpinion
45847 No. 0494-87-3
Decided December 20, 1988
(1) Criminal Law — Bad Checks — Proof. — Code Sec. 58.1-637 requires the Commonwealth to prove not only that the tendered check was returned unpaid, but that the defendant was given five days written notice by registered or certified mail of its dishonor and failed to make it good.
(2) Criminal Law — Bad Checks — Proof. — Code Sec. 58.1-637 requires proof of a mens rea element in order to obtain a conviction.
Eugene Murphy, Assistant Attorney General (Mary Sue Terry, Attorney General), for appellant.
Bruce E. Welch, for appellee.
SUMMARY
The Commonwealth appealed the trial court's dismissal of the indictment charging the defendant with violation of Code Sec. 58.1-637. The trial court held that the statute was unconstitutional because it permitted conviction without proof of a mens rea or scienter element. (Circuit Court of Franklin County, B. A. Davis, Judge).
The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that a mens rea or scienter element is implicit in the statute.
Reversed and remanded.
OPINION
This appeal is pursuant to Code Sec. 19.2-398, which permits the Commonwealth to file an appeal when a trial court dismisses an indictment upon the ground that a statute is unconstitutional. Johnny Lee Hensley was indicted on a charge that he violated Code Sec. 58.1-637, which provides:
If any check tendered for any amount due under this chapter is not paid by the bank on which it is drawn and such person fails to pay the Commissioner the amount due the State within five days after the Commissioner has given him written notice by registered or certified mail or in person by an agent that such check was returned unpaid, the person by whom such check was tendered shall be guilty of larceny.
Hensley had given the Department of Taxation a $3,351.38 check that was returned for insufficient funds. Hensley moved to dismiss the indictment upon the ground that Code Sec. 58.1-637 was unconstitutional because, among other things, the statute permits a person to be convicted of a crime without the stated requirement that the Commonwealth prove a mens rea or scienter. We hold that the statute is constitutional because the requirement that the Commonwealth prove a mens rea or scienter will be read into a statute when it appears the legislature intended that such an element be proved. See Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 263 (1952); United States v. Johnson, 419 F.2d 56, 60 (4th Cir. 1969), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 1010 (1970); United States v. Parker, 522 F.2d 801, 803 (4th Cir. 1975); Maye v. Commonwealth, 213 Va. 48, 49, 189 S.E.2d 350, 351 (1972).
Hensley relies upon the case of Makarov v. Commonwealth, 217 Va. 381, 228 S.E.2d 573 (1976), where the Supreme Court found Code Sec. 40.1-29 unconstitutional. That statute provided that any employer who failed to pay his employees all wages and salaries due upon termination of employment would be guilty of a misdemeanor. The Supreme Court held that while there was no explicit proscription in Virginia's Constitution against imprisonment for debt, it nevertheless was clear that a person could not be imprisoned, absent fraud, for mere failure to pay a debt arising from a contract. The Commonwealth argued that the court could read into Sec. 40.1-29 a requirement of criminal intent, as it had done with Code Sec. 18.2-117 in Maye. The Makarov court refused to employ Maye as a precedent because in Maye the court construed a statute dealing with larceny, a crime which was derived from the common law and which presupposes a mens rea, unlike the wage and salary statute. Therefore, it would not assume that the legislature intended to include intent to defraud as an element of the offense.
We agree with the Commonwealth that since Code Sec. 58.1-637 states that a defendant shall be guilty of larceny, the statute is for the present purpose indistinguishable from Code Sec. 18.2-117, the statute construed in Maye. As the Supreme Court said in Makarov: "There (Maye), we construed a statute specifically dealing with larceny, a crime which presupposes a mens rea. But here the statute on its face deals with a naked civil debt and we cannot say the General Assembly implicitly meant to include proof of an intent to defraud as an essential element of the offense." 217 Va. at 385-86, 228 S.E.2d at 576.
The only difference between Code Sec. 18.2-117 and Sec. 58.1-637 is the added requirement in Code Sec. 58.1-637 that the Commonwealth prove notice and failure to pay within five days as an element of its case, rather than using failure to return bailed goods merely as presumptive of intent.
Code Sec. 18.2-117 provides that a person who fails to return certain bailed goods in accordance with the bailment agreement "shall be deemed guilty of larceny." In addition, if there is a written agreement as to the time for return and return is not made within five days of such time, the Commonwealth may avail itself of the presumption that the failure to return was larcenous, i.e., done with intent to deprive the bailor of possession.
(1-2) By contrast, Code Sec. 58.1-637 requires the Commonwealth to prove not only that the tendered check was returned unpaid, but also that the defendant was given five days written notice by registered or certified mail of its dishonor and failed to make it good. Hensley, in his argument before the circuit court, argued that this additional requirement amounted to a presumption of intent from failure to pay. The requirement is not, however, a presumption. It is an element of the offense. The Commonwealth must prove more to obtain a conviction under Code Sec. 58.1-637 than under Code Sec. 18.2-117. Therefore, there is no less reason to read a requirement of mens rea into the statute presented in this case than into the larceny-after-bailment statute, as was done in Maye and Parker. Here, as in Maye and Parker, we are dealing with a statute that incorporates certain common elements of a common law crime, that of larceny, into a new statutory offense. Among those elements is that of a mens rea. See, e.g., United States v. Freed, 401 U.S. 601 (1971). The circuit court's dismissal of the indictment is reversed and this case is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Koontz, C.J., and Coleman, J., concurred.