Commonwealth v. Vanbuskirk

39 A.2d 311, 155 Pa. Super. 613, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 540
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 24, 1944
DocketAppeals, 250 and 252
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 A.2d 311 (Commonwealth v. Vanbuskirk) 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. Vanbuskirk, 39 A.2d 311, 155 Pa. Super. 613, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 540 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, .P. J.,

The defendants, VanBuskirk and Barfod, were tried together on t'wo joint bills of indictment to April Sessions 1941, Philadelphia County. The one (No. 329) charged them, as officers of a certain corporation, to wit, Coal Operators Casualty Company, (a casualty insurance company), with embezzlement and fraudulent conversion, in eight counts, under different applicable sections of phe Penal Code, but all covering the same transaction, and therefore subjecting each of them to but one sentence. The other (No. 330) charged them with conspiracy to defraud Coal Operators- Casualty Company for the benefit ,of themselves and of the United States Plate Glass and Liability Insurance ¡Company of Philadelphia, a corporation of which they were officers and the record owners. The court withdrew from the jury the fifth and sixth counts of No. 329, charging fraudulent conversion by the defendants, acting with certain associates, but left the other six counts of No. 329, and No. 330 to the 'jury, which rendered general verdicts pf guilty on both indictments. The defendants were sentenced on No. 329 only, and took these separate appeals from their respective sentences.

*617 The six counts of Indictment No. 329 may be grouped under three sections of The Penal 'Code, viz.: Nos. 1 and 2 charged-embezzlement by them as officers of a corporation, in violation of section .827; Nos. 3 and 4 charged embezzlement by them as officers of a casualty insurance company, in violation of section 828 — see also Act of May 17, 1921, P. L. '682, sec. 345; and Nos. 7 and 8 charged them with fraudulent conversion of certain property belonging to the said Coal Operators Casualty Company. Nos. 1, 3 and 7 charged that the defendants had appropriated to their pum use the property so embezzled or fraudulently converted by them; while Nos. 2, 4 and 8 charged that .the property so embezzled or fraudulently converted by them had been appropriated, applied or converted to the use of the United States Plate Glass and Liability Insurance Company aforesaid.

The subject matter charged as having been embezzled or fraudulently converted by the defendants consisted of United State Treasury bonds of various issues and denominations, of' the par' value of $274,800, and Federal Land Bank bonds of the par value of $25,000, all the property of Coal Operators Casualty Company, and having a market value in excess of $325,000. For convenience we shall call them U. S. bonds of the par. value of $299,800, as they were referred to on the trial.

The evidence on the trial revealed the following facts:

In June, 1938,' the defendants became the owners of all the stock of a plate glass insurance corporation, chartered in this State in 1867, known as United States Plate Glass Insurance Company of Philadelphia. See Acts of April 12, 1867, P. L. 1165, and April 4, 1868, P. L. 1869, p. 1352. Its capital stock when they obtained control consisted of 1000 shares of a par value of $100 a share. By appropriate action, it seems, they changed the name of the corporation to United States Plate Glass and Liability Insurance Company, but did *618 not change or enlarge its corporate purpose and authority, to wit, ‘effecting insurance upon plate glass of all kinds and description’. It had no authority to do business anywhere but in the State of Pennsylvania. They also changed the capitalization to 20,000 shares of a par value of $5 a share, and deposited 19,000 shares of the stock with J. W. Sparks & Co. of Philadelphia, as security for a loan or loans to the company or themselves — the books do not show which,

VanBuskirk was the president of the corporation and Barfod, the secretary and treasurer. They owned all the stock between them equally; assigning a few shares to others who acted as directors, with and for them.

The report of the company — which we shall call U. S. Plate Glass — for the year 1939 filed with the Insurance ¡Commissioner of the Commonwealth showed net premium receipts of $21,840.06, losses incurred of $10,-616.95, and underwriting expenses of $53,623.47, or a net loss for the year on its insurance writing of $42,-900.36. The net premium receipts for 1940 were $15,-052.77, and losses paid $10,379.08. The annual statement for 1940, printed in the record, Commonwealth’s Exhibit 'No. 19, pp. 605a-608a, does not show the assets of the company nor its underwriting expenses and net loss for that year.

On August 1, 1940 the company’s books showed cash on hand, or in bank, of $182.62. It owned United States Government bonds of the value of $521.09. Premium receipts of $2,466.70 were due it. Its only other tangible assets were mortgage bonds of the Roseld Avenue Deal 'Corporation of a par value of $175,000, out of an issue of $375,000, covering an apartment house in Deal, N J., and a piece of real estate at 1424 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, which was carried on the company’s books at a valuation of $157,519.54, and was subject to a mortgage of $170,000. In addition VanBuskirk had made certain commitments for the purchase of all *619 the shares of two ‘investment’ corporations, viz., Trusteed Industries Shares Management Corporation and Transcontinent Shares Corporation, for the sum of $215,000 of which $92,500, was said to have been paid down, which called for the payment of $11,000 every three months until the whole was paid, of which approximately $75,000 was unpaid on August 1, 1940. The interest of VanBuskirk or U. S. Plate Glass in these shares, subject to a prior assignment to the sellers, was transferred to J. W. Sparks & Co., as security for a loan of about $143,000, of which no record appeared on the books of U. S. Plate Glass.

The income from the insurance business of the company was insufficient to meet the underwriting expenses, let alone the commitments made by VanBuskirk as above mentioned, the taxes on the Philadelphia real estate, the interest on the mortgage, etc.

As a consequence it owed taxes on its real estate of $6,512.18, exclusive of penalties; rent on its Philadelphia office for six months at $75 per month; rent on its New York office, (although it had no authority to do business there), occupied by VanBuskirk, for five or six months at $300 per month; Hotel Essex, Philadelphia, for rooms, meals, etc. at least $1,200. And its available cash and U. 'S. bonds were less than $1,000.

Accordingly, in the early part of August, 1940, and perhaps earlier, the defendants looked around to see if they could find some prosperous casualty insurance company which they could purchase with the idea of effecting a merger with U.. S. Plate Glass, and their attention fell on Coal Operators Casualty Company, of Greensburg, Pa., a company engaged in writing workmen’s compensation insurance. Coal Operators — as we shall call it — had assets as of June 30, 1940 of $1,319,-481.55, of which $213,826.01 was cash'; $411,146.60, U. S. bonds; $372,544.09, state and municipal bonds; $114,-120.20, railroad bonds; $77,172.50, public utility bonds; *620

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Bluebook (online)
39 A.2d 311, 155 Pa. Super. 613, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-vanbuskirk-pasuperct-1944.