In re Becker

229 A.D. 62, 241 N.Y.S. 369, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10311
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 11, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 229 A.D. 62 (In re Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Becker, 229 A.D. 62, 241 N.Y.S. 369, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10311 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Dowling, P. J.

Respondents Aaron M. Becker and Joseph Levy were admitted to practice as attorneys and counselors at law in the State of New York at a term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New A7ork, First Department, the former on February 20, 1905, and the latter on November 21, 1904.

The respondents have been engaged in the practice of the law as partners under the firm name of Levy & Becker. Separate petitions were filed against them but the charges of misconduct as an attorney at law against each of the respondents are identical and the proceedings have been conducted jointly. The respondents were charged with professional misconduct in the general solicitation of retainers in negligence actions and specific instances of solicitation were enumerated; and, in refusing to answer questions in the Ambulance Chasing Investigation ” before Mr. Justice Wasservogel, thereby hindering and delaying the conduct of the investigation. After respondents answered, the matter was referred to a referee to take testimony in regard to the charges and to report the same with his opinion. The learned referee has duly reported and petitioners now move that respondents be adjudged guilty of professional misconduct as charged in the petition and for such further action as the court may deem proper.

Upon the general charge of solicitation the record discloses that prior to April, 1924, the practice of the respondents consisted of freight claims for loss and damage of personal property in transit, the defense of various insurance companies in actions and claims asserted against them, and some commercial business, contracts and preparation of wills, some small corporation work, and some few negligence cases. In April, 1924, Abraham Gatner entered the employ of the respondents. Gainer’s testimony is that respondents expressed the desire to build up a negligence business. He was taken on ” under an arrangement by which he was to receive $100 a week drawing account and a percentage of the business brought in; that following a conversation with the respondents as to the best method of building up the business he, with their full knowledge, consent and approval, employed the best knowm ambulance chasers “ in the game,” among whom were Tony Sagona, Dave Schaeffer, Eddie Ellenbogen, the two Feinbergs, Irving Wolf, Sam Abrams, Max Corbin, Joe Rose and Ben Roman; and that he arranged for their compensation in fixed amounts varying from $150 to $250 a week. He described in detail how these men worked. The whole field was systematized: Schaeffer and Wolf worked as a team in Brooklyn, which was the territory assigned to them; William Feinberg and Corbin worked in Manhattan; Ellenbogen and Rose in the Bronx and the upper part of Harlem; [64]*64Abrams and Henry Feinberg worked along the waterfront among the stevedores and longshoremen; Sagona worked primarily on Italian cases. The payroll expenditures, largely for these men, from the time of Gatner’s employment to January 5,1925, amounted to $17,545, according to a memorandum that respondents’ bookkeeper gave him. A press clipping bureau was also paid to furnish a daily report of accidents:

Respondents admit that Gatner was employed to take charge of, and to manage, a negligence department at a salary of $100 a week. Their explanation is that Gatner represented that he had had experience in handling negligence cases; that he was well acquainted among lawyers who made a specialty of handling negligence cases; that he was well acquainted with insurance companies in the city, and that he knew from experience that a great many of these lawyers do not try their cases themselves but employ counsel and he stated that by reason of this acquaintance and his knowledge he thought he could succeed in diverting a large amount of this business to respondents. His duties were in general to handle such negligence cases as respondents might have in their office and see if he could develop the contracts which he claimed to have.

Gainer’s activities were so successful that from June, 1924, to February, 1925, 180 negligence cases came into respondents’ office. None of these was counsel work. The retainers were direct from the injured claimants, and in twenty-nine instances the retainers were signed the same day, or the day following, the date of the accident, as shown by the retainers. Neither of the respondents, nor the employees concerned therewith, could satisfactorily explain how the retainers were received. Levy claimed to have no knowledge of any case until it was reached for trial; Becker said he rarely passed on the retainers; Winkelman said he only passed on them when they were signed in the office, and Sullivan said Gatner gave him seven out of ten of the retainers.

That respondents were successful cannot be questioned. Levy said he did not know within $50,000 a year what his income was. Becker was unable to produce copies of his income tax returns.

Respondents attribute the sudden growth of their negligence business to recommendations from delegates of the Longshoremen’s Union and personal friends, and to satisfied clients who benefited by substantial verdicts and substantial settlements. Respondent Becker mentioned a number of cases in which such verdicts and settlements were obtained. Of these, the Massaro case was settled on November 20, 1924, and the Dobrich case in January, 1925. The delegates from the Longshoremen’s Union, with one exception, [65]*65denied they had recommended cases to respondents; one delegate said it was contrary to the by-laws to recommend a lawyer; the one delegate who testified that he recommended cases said he did so on the strength of the verdict in the Fives case. This Fives case was not tried until April, 1925. The retainers signed the day of the accident or the day following the accident were hardly obtained as the result of recommendation. This attempted explanation on the part of the respondents is not satisfactory.

Respondents admit that Gatner presented to them the various individuals whom Gatner claimed he had employed as runners, but, respondents testified, they were introduced as employees of other lawyers who would be expected to persuade their employers to employ respondents in counsel work. There were introduced in evidence two post cards sent by respondent Becker to Gatner. These cards read as follows:

“ Saratoga Springs, July 20, 1924.
“ Mr. A. Gatner,
“ 27 William Street, c /o Levy & Becker,
“New York City.
Grand Union Hotel, Saratoga, 7 22.
“ Dear Gatner.— Arrived Albany Sunday night reached here Monday morning. Clear weather. Feeling a little better. Hope all the boys are hustling. Leave. here Friday. Regards to Schaeffer, Tony, Ellenbogen, Rose, Ben R., Nathan and yourself.
“ A. M. B.”
and
“ Atlantic City, January, ’25.
Dear Abe.— Having wonderful weather here and no snow. The rest is very refreshing and is doing me much good. Called on Judge Friedlander today at the sanitarium. He has been quite sick. Hope everything running smoothly and much new biz.
Regards to all.
" A M B
In care of the Breakers.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 A.D. 62, 241 N.Y.S. 369, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-becker-nyappdiv-1930.