Harrington v. Boschenski

116 A. 836, 140 Md. 24, 1922 Md. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 116 A. 836 (Harrington v. Boschenski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrington v. Boschenski, 116 A. 836, 140 Md. 24, 1922 Md. LEXIS 5 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

*25 Pattisox, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment for eight hundred dollars, recovered by the appellee against the appellant in the Baltimore City Court.

The action, which was upon the common counts, was brought not only against the appellant, Thomas M. Harrington, but also against August Gerecht and James Y. Bonsai, but the jury, upon the instructions of the court, rendered a verdict for Gerecht and Bonsai, upon which a judgment in their favor was entered.

The record discloses that Gerecht, at the time a police justice of the Central District Station of Baltimore, in March. 1920, called the appellee, Jacob Boschenski, over the ’phone at 1647 Thames Street, in said city, where he was conducting a near-beer business, but Boschenski, at the time and for several days thereafter, was in an intoxicated condition and unable to answer the ’phone. His wife answered the call and communicated the fact of Boschen ski’s condition to Gerecht, when she was told by the latter that “he had very important business lo tell her husband.” On the next day, Boschenski being still in the same condition, Mrs. Boschenski went to see Gerecht at the police station, and was there told by him that her husband could buy some whiskey if lie wanted it; and she, as she testified, inquired of him, “how can you get whiskey; it is against the law.” He replied, “the government lets people have some whiskey by permit, and the government is going to deliver it in government trucks * * *, and in case the ban is lifted you have some on hand.” He then asked her how much she wanted, and she said forty cases. The price to be paid therefor was ninety dollars per case. She returned home, and on the next day, accompanied by her brother. Henry Karcz, to whom she had told of her conversation with Gerecht on the preceding day, she again went to the station house to see Gerecht. On this occasion she carried with her $3,600, and her brother, also a dealer in near-beer, on South Broadway, carried with him $2,250 with which to purchase *26 twenty-five cases of whiskey. When they arrived at his office, she was asked by Gerecht if she had the money, and she told him she had, and placed it before him wrapped in paper with her brother’s money, and Gerecht promised to send them by mail a receipt for it, and also told them that the whiskey would be delivered in a short time. She did not see Gerecht after that visit to his office, had no dealings with Harrington, and did not know Bonsai at all.

Henry Karcz, the brother of Mrs. Boschenski, corroborated his sister as to what was said and done upon their visit to Gerecht’s office, and further testified that Gerecht said to them that “the government men and government trucks would deliver the whiskey to the house.”

Boschenski, as both he and his wife testified, did not know of the conversation of Gerecht with his wife over the ’phone, or of her visit to Gerecht’s office, and the delivery of the money by her to him on that occasion, until the following Sunday morning, when he had recovered from his condition of intoxication. She then told him what she had done, and assured him that it was all right, as the government was going to deliver the whiskey in its trucks, and that he need have no apprehension.

Boschenski testified that, about a week after his wife had left the money with Gerecht, he called upon Gerecht, and was told by him that he would get the whiskey in a few days. Boschenski then expressed to him some doubt as to the deal being all right, but he was told, as he said, by Gerecht, that “the government men would deliver it in front of his home and nobody could stop them.” Then he said “that is good-enough.” He waited another week and with Karcz, his brother-in-law, again called upon Gerecht and asked him about the whiskey, and Gerecht sent him to Harrington’s place, who was also a dealer in near-beer in the city since prohibition had gone into effect, and said that he would meet him there in a short while. They went to Harrington’s, and in a few minutes Gerecht came in. He then asked about the *27 whiskey, and. was told by Mr. Harrington that the whiskey would be delivered in a few days, and said to him “not to forget to break the boxes and scrape the labels off” the bottles. Boschenski said, “he was not going to do anything like that,” and demanded that his money be given back to him; “that he wanted his money and did not want to break boxes and wash off labels.” He further testified that about another week later he met Gerecht upon the street, and Gerecht asked him if he had gotten his money back, and that he told him he had not. Gerecht said, “You go to Harrington and get your money. Tell him I said so”; that he said his hands were off and he had nothing to do with it; that he and Mr. Karcz went to Mr. Harrington and asked for the money and Harrington said, “I aint got no money”; and the witness replied, “Look here, Mr. Harrington, if I do not get my money I am going to do something with you. I will get my money” ; that Mr. Harrington told him not to get hot-headed, to come back in a fewr days and he would see what he could do; that he went back on Friday of the same week and received a check for $2,800; that he asked Mr. Harrington about the $800, and Mr. Harrington told him that as soon as he got a few cents together he would give him the rest, to be quiet, not to talk too much, and be would give Mm the rest of his money as soon as he could; but he never got it; nor was any -whiskey delivered to him; that he made no demand for the -whiskey, that he was told to scrape the labels off; that he was done with whiskey after that, and wanted his money; that Gerecht never promised to return him the money, but told him to go to Mr. Harrington; that he received $2,800 by Harington’s . cheek and Mr. Harrington promised to give him the $800 balance.

Gerecht admitted that Mrs. Boschenski met him at his office at the police station, that he at the time was a magistrate, and had received from her $5,850 for whiskey to be delivered to the plaintiff, her husband, that he took the money to Harrington’s saloon, and took from him a receipt therefor *28 in the following words: “Received of Jacob Boschenski $5,850 for merchandise,” signed Thomas M. Harrington, but Harrington destroyed it; that he did not know how much of the $5,850 was paid by persons other than the plaintiff; that the plaintiff demanded the return of his money about a week after his wife gave it to him; that he saw the plaintiff on the street and later at Harrington’s saloon; Karcz was with him; plaintiff made no demand on Harrington for the money in his presence, nor did he ever direct Harrington to pay him; that he did tell plaintiff to go to Harrington and demand his money. He further testified that he called up the plaintiff, at the time his wife answered the ’phone, at the instance of Harrington; that he was a go-between for Mr. Harrington.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 A. 836, 140 Md. 24, 1922 Md. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-boschenski-md-1922.