Escher v. State

1 N.W.2d 322, 140 Neb. 633, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 254
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1941
DocketNo. 31058
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 322 (Escher v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Escher v. State, 1 N.W.2d 322, 140 Neb. 633, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 254 (Neb. 1941).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

Defendant Escher, Charles B. Morearty and Zazel I. Alban were charged with conspiring to commit a felony, to wit, embezzlement. Escher was tried separately and convicted. He appeals.

The indictment charges that the three parties named were on February 27, 1936, officers and agents of the United Securities Corporation, and that beginning about February 27, 1936, and continuing until September 23, 1937, they did by a series of acts in furtherance of said conspiracy take into their possession money and property of said corporation with intent to defraud said corporation, convert to their own use and embezzle said money and property.

The trial was a lengthy one. The bill of exceptions consists of some 1,500 pages of testimony and copies of exhibits, together with a large container of exhibits, in all several hundred in number. Copies of many exhibits offered and received or offered and rejected are set out in the bill of exceptions. In several instances these exhibits, some of which are typewritten documents of many pages, are copied into the record, not once but several times. There is no excuse for this practice. Reporters should not do it; attorneys should protest it; and trial courts should protect the litigants from such a record. It adds needlessly to the expense of an appeal, increases the work of examin[635]*635ing a record in this court, and serves no purpose save the enrichment of the reporter.

The United Securities Corporation, hereinafter called the corporation, was organized in 1935. Its stock was sold to investors. Escher was a salesman engaged in that effort. It appears he was also a stockholder in the corporation. Sometime prior to February 3> 1936, Escher conceived the idea of gaining control of the corporation from its then officers. Escher employed Morearty as his attorney. Proxies for the stockholders were drafted, and Escher was instrumental in securing their signature, naming Morearty as proxy with broad powers. At the annual meeting February 3, 1936, Morearty, one Onken and Alban were elected directors, although Morearty and Alban were not stockholders. Morearty was elected president, Onken vice-president, and Alban secretary-treasurer. Some difficulty was encountered by the new officers in securing possession of the books, records and property of the corporation. But this difficulty was adjusted by a settlement in which, among other things, the old officers became the owners of the office furniture and fixtures of the corporation. Morearty’s office then became the office of the corporation. The new board gave Morearty broad powers in handling the affairs of the corporation and dealing with its assets. His salary was fixed at $75 a week. The corporation at that time had possession of some negotiable stock that its officers had secured from two Iowa women. This stock had been pledged for a loan to the corporation. It had also a block of stock in an Iowa corporation, then in receivership, but which was of material value. Immediately after gaining possession of the property, Morearty and Escher began a series of transactions over a period of months that resulted in the corporation’s assets being first converted into cash, and then transferred to Escher and Morearty, or a corporation which Morearty organized and controlled. From February, 1936, to May, 1937, the business of the corporation was largely dealings with Escher and Morearty’s corporation. But little other business [636]*636was done. When the new officers gained control of the corporation, it had $88 in cash in its bank account. More-arty and Escher went to Iowa to find out the facts about the ownership of the Iowa securities from the two women who had trusted the former officers. The expenses of this trip were paid from corporation funds. They came back and although the debt to the bank, for which the securities were pledged, was not due, these securities were ordered sold, the debt liquidated, and the difference of over $3,000 was placed to the credit of the corporation in its bank account. Next Escher was issued a corporation check for $500, and he gave his unsecured note to the corporation.

Then the stock in the Iowa corporation was sold for some $20,000, and although Morearty seems to have closed the deal, he testified that Escher made the contacts, and in any event Escher was paid $1,004.27 commission on the sale. Escher deposited the check representing this payment in a Lincoln bank, withdrew $452, and shortly thereafter Morearty deposited $452 “currency” in his Omaha account. Morearty admitted receipt of the money and testified that it was an attorney’s fee paid him for services to Escher in securing control of the corporation. A number of other checks were issued to Escher for various amounts and his unsecured notes were taken payable to the corporation.

Also, Escher would purchase securities of debatable value, and sell them to the corporation, usually at a profit to himself. These securities were taken by Morearty without more than a casual investigation as to their actual value. The corporation then sold them back to Escher at a 5 per cent, book profit to the corporation, and Escher gave the corporation his unsecured promissory notes in payment. Escher then sold the stock to other purchasers, in at least one instance at a price materially less than the purchase price. The net of these transactions was that Escher got the stock and the profit to him, and the corporation got his notes, unsecured and not collected. In at least one of these stock transactions Escher did not deliver the stock, [637]*637although he had been paid for it, and later bought it back, although the corporation never had had it. In the main the records of the company disclosed these transactions, although in at least one instance it is admitted that a “loan” of $500 was included in and carried on the books as a part of the purchase price of stocks.

Morearty also organized an investment corporation that seems to have had one or more stores in California. Escher was a salesman for the stock in that corporation. Three United Securities Corporation checks totaling $2,000 were issued to the manager of the California store, and the United Securities Corporation received in return therefor stock in the Morearty corporation. Morearty repurchased some of the stock in his investment corporation from dissatisfied stockholders and gave his personal check in the sum of $960 therefor and immediately issued a United Securities Corporation check to “cash” for the same amount which he, Morearty, indorsed and deposited, so that that stock got into the ownership of the corporation. A total of $2,960 of the corporation’s money went out for stock in Morearty’s investment corporation.

Throughout this period Morearty claims that he was working on a number of big deals which would have been to the great profit of the corporation; only one of them materialized to the actual profit of the corporation. Escher also had big deals, one of which was the refinancing of a corporation in Lincoln. By an instrument dated September 8, 1936, Escher and the corporation recited this refinancing agreement and the corporation agreed to advance Escher funds to cover his costs in carrying out the contract, and Escher agreed to give his notes therefor and to assign to the corporation his profits from the refinancing deal and to collateralize his then indebtedness to the corporation by the assignment of profits and in addition to pay the corporation a bonus of 2 per cent, of his gross profits on the refinancing deal. The assignment is attached to the instrument.

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Related

State v. Copple
401 N.W.2d 141 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 322, 140 Neb. 633, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/escher-v-state-neb-1941.