Hettleman v. Frank

110 A. 715, 136 Md. 351, 1920 Md. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 21, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 110 A. 715 (Hettleman v. Frank) 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
Hettleman v. Frank, 110 A. 715, 136 Md. 351, 1920 Md. LEXIS 63 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Baltimore City Court. The suit was brought on the common counts in assumpsit, and there was filed with the declaration the following account:

“Baltimore, Md., Eeb. 12, 1919.
“Joseph Hettleman,
To Israel Prank, Dr.
“Sept. 28th — Cash money advanced by Israel Prank to Joseph Hettleman............$100.00
“Oct. 3rd. — Cash money advanced by Israel Prank to Joseph Hettleman........... 100.00
$200.00.”

*353 The defendant pleaded never indebted as alleged and never promised as alleged, and for a third plea, alleged, “That the said sum of two hundrd dollars ($200.00) was received by him from the said plaintiff, on the days asi set forth in the writing attached to the declaration, but that the said sum of money was received by said defendant as a fee for professional services as an attorney-at-law and was so agreed to between the said plaintiff and the said defendant at the time .the said sum of money was received hy the said defendant from the said plaintiff.” The Court below sustained a demurrer to the third plea, and the case went to trial on issues joined on the first and second pleas, and resulted in a, verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $212.00.

No objection was made in this, Court to the ruling of the Court below on the demurrer, but the appellant insists that there was serious error in the rulings of the lower Court on the evidence and prayers embraced in twenty-one bills, of exception.

The plaintiff offered, evidence tending to show that he was, a citizen of Russia, and had never1 declared his intention to become; a citizen of the United States. He was twenty-four years of age, and came to the United States in 1914, and lived in Baltimore until April 8th, 1917, when he went to work in the City of New York, and lived there1 until he returned to Baltimore on the; 29th of July, 1918. While living in New York he was required to register there under the Act of Congress of May 18th, 1917, known, as the Selective Service Law, and wasi classified by the Local Board in Class 5 F. Subsequently h,e received a notice from, the Local Board that he had been reclassified by that board and placed in Class 1 A. The Selective Service Rules and Regulations prescribed by the President of the United States; in pursuance of the Selective 'Service Law provided that a, resident alien, not an alien enemy, who had not declared his. intention to become a citizen of the; United States;, was; entitled to *354 be classified in Glass 5 F, and that the effect of such classification was “to grant exemption or discharge from draft,” while the effect of classification in Glass 1 was to render the man so classified “presently liable for military service in the order determined by the national drawing,” and as the plaintiff did not want to enter the military service, after receiving the notice of his reclassification, and before leaving New York, he went to see the chairman of the Local Board, explained the matter to him, told him he was a Russian alien and had only been in this country about four years, and gave him the names of some witnesses SO' that he might take the matter up with the Local Board for the purpose of securing his reclassification in Glass 5 F. He told the chairman of the Local Board that he was going, to- Baltimore and gave him his Baltimore address. The plaintiff also testified that some time after he returned to Baltimore from New York he “had a little case with the United Railways,” and that his sister-in-law sent him to Doctor Katzoff, who was well known at the Railways Oomp>any’s office, and that after1 he explained the case to Doctor Katzoff, Doctor Katzoff said to him,, “Frank, we will go down Saturday, and we will get the money from the United Railways”; that he met Doctor Katzoff at his house and they went to thei office of the “United Railways” and got $70.00; that Doctor Katzoff retained $35.00 of it for himself and gave him the remaining $35.00, and that when they were leaving the office of the Railways Company Doctor Katzoff said to him, “Mb. Frank. I have got a man that is going to' take you out from the draft. His price¡, he saysi, is $300.00”; that he told Doctor Katzoff that he did not have more than $200.00 — $165.00, which was all he had saved, and the $35.00 he got from the Railways Company, and that Doctor Katzoff replied, “Well, I will take you over in his office and see what he can do”; that Doctor Katzoff took him right over to the defendant’s office and explained the matter to the defendant, and that the defendant said to him, “Well, Frank, being you are a poor *355 man, I will do it for you for $200.00”; that the defendant told him of a man he had gotten discharged from Gamp Meade, and of two other cases that he had pending, and that he would not make anything out of the $200.00, as he would have to make several trips to New York and would have to take a sleeper, which was expensive, and that he would keep an account of and would show him, all of his expenses,; that he then paid the defendant $100.00, and that the following week he paid him the other $100.00', for which payments he received from the defendant the following receipts :

“Joseph Hettleman, Attorney-at-Law,
“Rooms 27-29 Courtland Bldg., 215-217 Courtland Street,
“Phone: St. Paul 2225.
“Res.: 311 N. Broadway, Phone: Wolf 630-W.
“Baltimore, Md., September 28, 1918.
“This is to certify that I have this day received from Israel Frank the sum of one hundred dollars for professional services in connection for obtaining his discharge from the military service of the U. S. Army on the ground that he is an alien, a non-declarant and a subject of Russia, and who has been reclassified from Class 5F and placed in Class 1A by his Local Board.
“Joseph Hettleman.”
“Joseph Hettleman, Attorney-at-Law,
“Rooms 27-29 Courtland Bldg., 215-217 Courtland Street,
“Phone: St. Paul 2225.
“Res.: 311 N. Broadway, Phone: Wolf 630-W.
“Baltimore, Md., October 3, 1918.
“This is to certify that I have this day received from Israel Frank the sum of one hundred dollars for profesisonal services in connection with the draft for the purpose of obtaining a release from the military service of the United States on account of illegal induction, all of this to be applied for expenses and *356 court costs in the procuring of a release; in the event of not obtaining a release for the said Mr. Israel Frank from tbe said military service by way of exemption as be is entitled to under tbe draft, then tbe said Joseph Hettleman is to return tbe said one hundred dollars to tbe'said Israel Frank.

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Bluebook (online)
110 A. 715, 136 Md. 351, 1920 Md. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hettleman-v-frank-md-1920.