Frieden v. United States

5 F.2d 556, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2710
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1925
Docket2317
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 5 F.2d 556 (Frieden v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frieden v. United States, 5 F.2d 556, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2710 (4th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

The defendants, Harry Frieden, Samuel Frieden, Louis Frieden, Ellis Frieden, and Charles Seher, were convicted on all of the counts of two indictments which were consolidated on trial. Hyman Frieden, indicted with them, was acquitted. One indictment charged the partners Harry Frieden, Samuel Frieden, and Louis Frieden with conspiracy to conceal the assets of a partnership known as the Frieden Company, adjudicated bankrupt on December 17, 1923. Ellis Frieden and Charles Seher, two employees of the copartnership, were charged with aiding and abetting the conspiracy. The first count set out a conspiracy in anticipation of bankruptcy; the second count laid the charge after bankruptcy.

Both counts of the other indictment charged the members of the partnership with concealment of assets after bankruptcy, and the other defendants with aiding and abetting the crime.

There was no error in consolidating the indictments: They related to the same transactions; the evidence was practically the same; and separate trials would have been a waste of time. Showalter v. United States, 260 F. 719, 171 C. C. A. 457.

The motion to direct a verdict of acquittal for lack of evidence was without foundation. The evidence of guilt of all the convicted defendants was strong.

On or about April 1, 1923, Harry Fried-en, Samuel Frieden, and Louis Frieden, three brothers, formed a copartnership under the name of the Frieden Company. Harry and Samuel Frieden had been associated for some years before that date as partners in the manufacturing business in Waynesboro, Pa., under the firm name of “Cumberland Yalley Shirt Manufacturing Company.” The ostensible plan of the new partnership was to continue the manufacturing business in Waynesboro and to operate a system of chain stores handling men’s furnishing goods in the cities of Norfolk, Richmond, and Roanoke, Va. Ellis Frieden, a son of Louis Frieden, was employed in the firm’s Roanoke store, and Charles Seher was manager of one of the Richmond stores. The net worth of the new firm at the commencement of business, according to its statement to a commercial credit agency, was $174,185.52. At first all obligations were paid promptly by the Fried-en Company, and thus high credit rating was established. Later, long terms of credit were secured on large orders.of goods, and after a while creditors were unable to obtain payment for large bills overdue. In this situation the copartnership and the individuals composing it were thrown into bankruptcy. When a receiver was appointed, he had difficulty in getting the books and records of the bankrupts, and finally was furnished with an incomplete set.

The trustee, Alfred Anderson, testified that after making every fair allowance, which he fully explained to the jury, in favor of the defendants and crediting them with goods on hand at cost prices, the assets appearing from the books and vouchers unaccounted for amounted to $242,660.61. There was no evidence of extraordinary disaster attending the business; none of the defendants charged the others with conversion or breach of trust against the copartnership; nor was there any evidence that any of them made a complaint to the others that the business was going wrong. The inference might well have been drawn by the jury that the partners had failed to show where this very large deficiency of assets had gone, that $242,000 had not been lost in the business, which lasted only 8% months, that its disappearance was not satisfactorily explained, and that the defendants had by agreement concealed it for their own benefit. This would have been sufficient; basis for the conviction of all the copartners without other testimony. But there was much more.

Lords Frieden and Ellis Frieden, his son, were in charge of the Roanoke store. Sallis, an employee of the Roanoke store, testified that large quantities of goods were shipped from that store under fictitious names, and to fictitious consignees, and that the bills of lading were in the handwriting of Ellis. Frieden. B. Miller testified that goods were shipped to him in a fictitious name contrary to his request that his own name be used; that cash was required of him; and that -he several times paid in thousand-dollar bills. Express agents testified that Ellis Frieden paid for C. O. D. shipments on three occasions with thousand-dollar bills. There was evidence that Ellis Frieden kept his bank account in his wife’s name and deposited funds of the partnership in that account; that he opened a bank account in Scher’s name, and after the adjudication deposited in it a thousand-dollar bill, and drew cheeks *558 in Scher’s name, receiving by his request bills o£ the same denomination. A letter from Harry Erieden to Ellis Erieden indicated that he was receiving goods from Ellis. In the letter he said that he was obliged to sell clothing at 55 per cent, of cost; that “things would be cleaned up pretty good”; that “I don’t think we ought to keep balances in banks.” Samuel Erieden, in charge of the Waynesboro business, received there large quantities of goods in packages which he immediately unpacked, and repacked in different cases and sent to the Roanoke and Richmond stores. Tending to show his purpose to make large purchases in anticipation of bankruptcy, was the evidence that Samuel Erieden made rapid increases in purchases and decreases in payments as bankruptcy approached. In May, 1923, purchases were nothing and payments $1,563.59; June, purchases $2,859.73, payments $2,696.-42; July, purchases $4,409.52, payments $4,-342.42; August, purchases $3,254.28, payments $50.00; September, purchases $10,-818.05, payments $3,245.17; October, purchases $31,813.25, payments $2,100.79; November, purchases $20,093.96, payments $1,-944.11. Corresponding increases in purr chases and decreases in payments appeared at the other places of business. The purchases in October, November, and December, on the eve of bankruptcy, were over $200,000.

Large quantities of goods were shipped from the Richmond store by Seher under assumed, names to fictitious persons. After bankruptcy, Seher bought in his own name the goods in the Richmond . and Roanoke stores for $10,000, paid in thousand-dollar bills. There was evidence from A. Friedman that Seher told him he had bought the Roanoke store for Louis Erieden. Further details of incriminating testimony seem unnecessary to show that, the ease was one for the. jury.

Exception was taken to the first paragraph of the following charge of the District Judge:

. “Consider the evidence that has been adduced, start at the beginning when those men went into business, their course of dealing from that time as it has been disclosed on the witness stand by the evidence, finally winding up with a shortage or shrinkage as you may call it, their explanation of how it occurred, and if you are convinced as a result of a fair consideration of all of that evidence that that shrinkage has not been accounted for, that their explanation is not reasonable and does not commend itself to you, that this property which they had and which they now owe money for is unaeeountr ed for, and that those circumstances irresistibly lead your minds to conclude that the whole thing was a guilty scheme to defraud their creditors, then I am sure you won’t hesitate to find them guilty.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dick v. Corman
N.D. California, 2022
Eggleston v. Slayton
348 F. Supp. 221 (W.D. Virginia, 1972)
United States v. Alfano
59 F. Supp. 270 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1945)
United States v. Rosenberg
145 F.2d 653 (Second Circuit, 1944)
United States v. Tatcher
131 F.2d 1002 (Third Circuit, 1942)
United States v. Tatcher
43 F. Supp. 659 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1942)
Cohen v. United States
67 F.2d 449 (Fourth Circuit, 1933)
Kelly v. United States
47 F.2d 122 (Fifth Circuit, 1931)
United States v. Rosenstein
34 F.2d 630 (Second Circuit, 1929)
Saleeby v. United States
21 F.2d 713 (Fourth Circuit, 1927)
Kanner v. United States
21 F.2d 285 (Second Circuit, 1927)
Reimer-Gross Co. v. United States
20 F.2d 36 (Sixth Circuit, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F.2d 556, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frieden-v-united-states-ca4-1925.