Commonwealth v. Syren

27 A.2d 504, 150 Pa. Super. 32, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1942
DocketAppeals, 33 and 34
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 504 (Commonwealth v. Syren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Syren, 27 A.2d 504, 150 Pa. Super. 32, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Baldrige, J.,

Opinion by

The appellants formerly were engaged in the stock brokerage business in Philadelphia under the name of Syren, Bressler and Company. They were convicted of fraudulent conversion of certain securities belonging to Henrietta C. Moody of Brooklyn, New York. These two appeals seeking a new trial followed sentences imposed.

To understand the issues before us it will be necessary to refer in some detail to the evidence produced at the long trial. John Moody, the husband of Henrietta C. Moody, began purchasing securities through Wall, Syren and Bressler, predecessor of Syren, Bressler and Company, in 1927. Moody in 1933 transferred his margin account with the defendants into his wife’s name. Thereafter the defendants bought and sold securities at her instance and carried for her four different margin accounts. Later they were consolidated into one account in the name of Mrs. Henrietta C. Moody. On October 18, 1938, against the securities in her account there was a debit balance in favor of the defendants. On that date Mrs. Moody, who was ill, desired to transfer her account to another brokerage firm. She sent her son, Alfred G. S. Moody, to Philadelphia with a letter addressed to the defendants stating that she had transferred her entire account to her son Alfred G. S. Moody.

The son delivered the letter and requested defendants to give the securities in her account to P. P. Kistine and *35 Company upon their payment of the balance due. Bressler thereupon directed John H. Qlmes, their bookkeeper, to prepare a statement of Mrs. Moody’s account. It showed a credit of the following securities: Lehigh Valley Transit Company 5% Bonds of a face value of $40,000; 11,900 shares of Remington Arms Company common stock; 7,800 shares of Continental Baking Company class “B” common stock; 200 shares of Ourtiss-Wright common stock; 200 shares of Simmons Company common stock; 20 shares Eastern Malleable Iron Company common stock; and an indebtedness of $46,701.38.

Ristine and Company the next morning, through their cashier, presented a treasurer’s check of the EidelityPhiladelphia Trust Company to the defendants’ order for the amount of Mrs. Moody’s indebtedness and a request was made for delivery of the securities in her account. Bressler later informed Charles E. Land of Ristine and Company that his firm could not deliver the Moody securities as they did not have them. That evening the defendant Syren and Harold A. Brunswick, a salesman of the defendants and an old friend of the Moodys, conferred in Brooklyn with Mrs. Moody, her son Alfred G. S. Moody, and her brother-in-law William P. Hamilton, Jr., Esq., a member of the New York bar. .Syren then admitted that Mrs. Moody’s securities had been sold and when charged by Alfred Moody with having wrongfully taken them he made no denial or explanation. Instead he offered to make a partial restitution with certain stock belonging to him or defendants’ firm and to transfer to her his equitable interest in his home in Bywood, Pennsylvania.

The following morning, October 20, 1938, a meeting was held in Philadelphia at the office of Alfred G. S. Moody’s counsel, Edward P. Smith, Esq., at which defendants and their then attorney, Meyer Casman, Esq., were present. Defendants then admitted that they could not make delivery of Mrs. Moody’s securities as *36 they had been sold under her direction given in writing November 29, 1937. This alleged authority, exhibit No. 7, was a note written in the handwriting of defendants’ salesman, Brunswick, addressed to the defendant firm Syren, Bressler and Company, and read as follows:

“Gentlemen :
Please transfer my account to your private ledger.
Yours very Respectfully,
Henrietta C. Moody”

Mrs. Moody testified that she could not read the note as she was recovering from an eye operation and that she signed her name at the request of either Brunswick or Syren. Syren took the position at the meeting that this writing made Mrs. Moody a partner in the firm. Later, at the trial both Syren and Bressler testified that this letter made her a creditor. Smith disagreed with Syren’s interpretation and demanded the production of the securities immediately. Syren then in the presence of Bressler offered again to transfer to Mrs. Moody his residence and certain securities by way of a restitution. This offer was refused.

Olmes, defendants’ bookkeeper, testified that the defendants’ books showed that they sold for Mrs. Moody’s account on Nov. 28, 1936 Lehigh Yalley Transit bonds of a face value of $35,000 for $21,000, but that the bonds continued to be carried in her account. Moreover, they credited her account with interest received on these bonds long after they had been sold. On the 11,900 shares of Remington Arms Company stock carried on October 18, 1938, to the credit of Mrs. Moody’s account, all but 50 had in fact been sold by defendants and transferred out of her name.prior to November 29, 1937. Notwithstanding the previous sale of all this stock except 50 shares, her account in December 1937 was credited with $2,142 in dividends received for the full 11,900 shares. Out of the 7800 shares of Continental Baking Company class “B” stock, delivered to defendants by Mrs. Moody as collateral security for *37 a loan made to her of $4,000 on October 20, 1937, they sold 4800 shares of that stock six days later and no credit was given or other entry thereof was made in Mrs. Moody’s account. The 200 shares of CurtissWright stock were sold by the defendants on October 25, 1937, and that was not reflected in her account.

It will be observed that all of the sales were prior to Mrs. Moody’s alleged letter of authorization of November 29,1937. The defendants never delivered to Mrs. Moody or her son the stocks credited to the Moody account, or the equivalent value thereof.

The defense was that the securities in the account belonged to Mr. Moody the husband and not to Mrs. Moody; that he directed the defendants to transfer his account and the securities therein to his wife because he was having trouble with the Internal Revenue Department-respecting his income tax returns; and notwithstanding this attempted concealment he remained the owner of the securities and continued to control the account until his death in May 1938.

Syren stated that Mr. Moody in 193'6 authorized his firm to sell any or all his securities to finance the Volco Cement Corporation, which the defendants were then promoting and in which Mr. Moody' was interested as he had hoped to have his son employed by that company; that Moody had agreed also that the defendants could transfer his account to their private ledger so that there could be no purchase of stock, and no demands for money, margins, or return of the securities, but the defendants should nevertheless continue to credit his account with all dividends and interest on bonds then, belonging to him, and continue to charge against the account interest on his indebtedness just as if there had been no transfer. The defendants failed to show that the proceeds from the sale of the securities alleged to have been disposed of for the benefit of the Volco Cement Corporation, were applied to the credit of that company.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 504, 150 Pa. Super. 32, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-syren-pasuperct-1942.