Commonwealth v. Pryor

1 Vaux 54
CourtRecorder of Philadelphia
DecidedJuly 1, 1846
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Vaux 54 (Commonwealth v. Pryor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Recorder of Philadelphia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Pryor, 1 Vaux 54 (philarec 1846).

Opinion

The responsibility of deciding on the facts presented m this case, has been thrown upon me by the counsel for the commonwealth and for the defendants, without argument. This is the more to be regretted, as from their high professional character, it is beyond question that this responsibility would have been more intelligently discharged, had I enjoyed the benefit of their several views in regard to the facts adduced in support of this charge.

It appears from the testimony of James T. Leet, who is a disinterested witness, that in November, 1842, Pryor called on him, and asked if he (Leet) and Smith Law, in whose business house witness was employed, wanted “to trade in bonds and mortgages?” to which witness replied, “yes, if they were good.” Pryor stated they were, and offered two from Joel T. Thorn to Walter Ross, which are offered in evidence. Mr. Leet then employed Mr. Pryor as his and Mr. Law’s agent, to make searches and other inquiries, which are part of the business of conveyancers. Mr. Pryor consented to [55]*55act as the conveyancer of Messrs. Leet and Law, and for which services he was paid by them. He, Pryor, gave information, which was believed by his principals to be such, as resulted from his professional inquiries, as their paid agent, that Thorn had property, and that against all his property, naming it, there was then but $3900 held. The property which Pryor represented Thorn to own, was worth very much more than these incum-brances. To substantiate these facts, as reported by Pryor, Thorn was produced, and they together called on Leet and Law, and half a dozen times “assured him that there then existed no other liens against this property.” Upon these representations, Leet and Law paid $1000, and received both a special and a general judgment to cover all the property of Thorn.

For the $1000 thus paid by James T. Leet and Smith Law, to Thorn, they each received a mortgage for $500, of which mortgage Joel T. Thorn was the assignor, and Walter Ross, his father-in-law, the assignee, and which said mortgages the said Walter Ross then assigned to Leet and Law on the 10th day of December, 1842. From the evidence of Walter Ross, who was originally joined with the present defendants in this charge, but who was subsequently discharged, and called by the commonwealth as a witness, it appears, that for neither of the two mortgages thus assigned by him to Leet and Law, did he ever receive one cent of consideration, nor did one cent of consideration pass upon which the original mortgages were based. That he knew of no other transaction of any like kind between himself and Thorn; that Thorn did not owe him any sum of money at this time.

[56]*56It is also in evidence that on the 27th day of February, 1843, Joel T. Thorn filed his petition for the benefit of the bankrupt law, and in his said petition he does not return the said Leet and Law as among his creditors; and it farther appears that the said mortgage and judgment entered on the bonds accompanying them are valueless. It is farther in evidence that during the years 1841 and 1842, there existed against the property of Thorn, which Pryor represented to be clear of all incumbrances, except the $ 3900, judgments and other liens amounting to nearly $20,000. This is a concise statement of the facts, upon which is founded a charge of conspiracy, to cheat and defraud the said James. T. Leet and Smith Law.

There can be but little doubt that fraud existed in the operations between these parties.

If James T. Leet be a credible witness, and his character as such has not been attempted to be impeached, we must regard his testimony as veritable. He says that Samuel Pryor volunteered the sale of the mortgages in question — that on his representation, as to the value of these mortgages, he was employed as the agent of both Mr. Leet and Mr. Law, in which capacity, he reiterated the opinion he had expressed, as to the worth of these securities, and stated that Thorn’s property was clear of incumbrance, save $3900. He produced no searches, which it was his duty to have both made and exhibited, but to support his assertions, he brings with him Thorn, for whose benefit, the money to be obtained by the sale of the mortgages, wras to accrue. They both assure Messrs. Leet and Law, that the property is clear of all liens save $ 3900. The falsity of [57]*57their statement must have been known to Pryor at the time he made it, for it appears by evidence, that on the 26th day of October, 1842, hardly a month before these assurances were given by Prior, that Joel T. Thom executed an indenture of mortgage to Lewis Peterson, William H. Schreiner and Samuel Pryor, as trustees of one Harriet Aitken, conditioned for the payment of $ 1600, on a property in Schuylkill Eighth near Pine street, upon which property was another and prior lien of $1650, which last lien, Pryor stated was all, except that of the Franklin Fire Co., on the Schuylkill Eighth and Vine street houses, the incumbrances against the property of Thom. It is impossible to attribute this to any mistake or error of judgment, or even negligence, for if Pryor had acted as it was his duty to have done, and made regular searches of the proper records, in order to protect the interests entrusted to his skill and care, he would have found, that at the very time he made the assertion that $ 3900 was all the indebtedness for which Thorn's property was liable, that he, Pryor, had a lien for a trust estate of $1000, and that some 12 or $15,000 besides, were entered against it.

That Thorn knew of these incumbrances cannot be doubted, for the fictitious mortgages given by him to his father-in-law, which, in themselves, amounted to several thousand dollars, together with those apparently fairly given, and duly entered in the proper offices, amounted together to far more than he represented as due to Messrs. Leet and Law.

The object Thorn had in making these representations is evident, for he, in about two months thereafter, applied for the benefit of the bankrupt law; and, in his appli[58]*58cation, he made no return of these mortgages, notwithstanding the affirmation attached to the said petition. The factitious mortgages given to Ross, and his assigning them, when no considerations passed, although he, Ross, signed and sealed a falsehood, by the request and at the instance of Thorn, both go to show that Thorn was willing and capable from his experience and practice, to deceive.

That Pryor agreed to aid. Thorn in his deception, is plain, for the facts show it. How far they agreed together and conspired to cheat Messrs. Leet and Law, by these false representations, under the guise of an honesty assumed to be both individual and professional, is to be decided by a jury of their country. To say that Pryor acted only as a conveyancer, as a professional agent of Leet and Law, and therefore not to be held answerable for the frauds of Thorn, is to give an immunity to professional men, which no correct-minded man would desire to sanction. It is not the policy of our laws to cover with any such professional cloak, acts which tend to injure innocent persons, destroy fair dealing and bring reproach upon the impartiality of justice. I never will consent to give to any man, whose acts will so illy bear investigation, as those of Pryor in this case, the protection which he may claim as arising out of his professional character.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Vaux 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pryor-philarec-1846.