In re Sprung

229 A.D. 501, 242 N.Y.S. 660, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10430
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 29, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 A.D. 501 (In re Sprung) 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 Sprung, 229 A.D. 501, 242 N.Y.S. 660, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10430 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Dowling, P. J.

The respondent was admitted to practice as an attorney and counselor at law on July 1, 1921, in the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department.

The charges of misconduct as an attorney and counselor at law made against the respondent herein are a result of the Ambulance Chasing Investigation. The principal charge against him is that he participated in a scheme and conspiracy to defraud insurance companies by the assertion of baseless claims for personal injuries [502]*502and property damages alleged to have been sustained by the negligence of certain corporations covered by indemnity insurance. Charges of improper solicitation and improper subscription as a notary public of certificates of acknowledgment are incidental to the principal charge. Respondent’s answer to the petition alleges that he acted in good faith in connection with claims asserted against insurance companies, as set out in the petition, and denies any and all allegations charging him with acts of wrongdoing or dishonesty.

The matter is now before this court on a motion to confirm the report of the referee to whom the matter was referred to take testimony in regard to the charges and to report the same with his opinion thereon to this court.

Respondent is in his present difficulty because of his association with Daniel M. Laulicht and Benjamin Laulicht. He first met them in December, 1924, through one William Weiss. There is testimony that Daniel M. Laulicht had, for some years prior thereto, been engaged in the laundry business, working for others, and also for himself and his brother under the corporate name Pure Wet Wash Laundry, in Coney Island. Respondent’s version of the meeting with Daniel M. Laulicht is that Laulicht sought to be represented by respondent in connection with a matrimonial proceeding to which he, Laulicht, was a party. In this he is supported by Weiss. Laulicht, however, testified that, having no occupation, he asked Weiss if he knew of anything he could do and Weiss suggested to him that he do what he (Weiss) was doing at the time, and later introduced him to respondent, ' saying, “ Well, Charley, this is a friend of mine just quitting the laundry business and he is O. K.; he will run around and try to get some cases and give him some summonses and whatever cases you get.” Laulicht further testified regarding this introduction as follows: “ Then I asked Mr. Sprung what my share would be if I brought cases and he said ' You will get one-third of my fee, the same as Weiss.’ ” The subsequent developments compel acceptance of the Laulicht version of the first meeting between respondent and the Laulichts. Respondent’s own testimony is that between December, 1924, and July, 1925, these Laulichts brought him twenty-one matters, some of them involving as many as four distinct claims for personal injuries. Among those were the claims which are the basis for the charges herein.

Soon after this meeting Daniel M. Laulicht testified that he had a conversation with respondent. His version thereof is as follows: I told Mr. Sprung I wasnt’t making any money, and it didn’t pay to hang around and he said,1 Why don’t you do what the other fellows are doing.’ I asked ‘ What did they do? ’ and he said ‘ Go [503]*503out and get some company to frame up a case with you. I can settle it/ I said ‘ Who do you suggest? ’ He said ‘ I can get money off the Ocean Accident Company/ He said ‘ I can get money from the Ocean Accident Company about ten days after the report goes in/ I said I don’t understand what you mean, because it is the first time I ever heard anything like that.’ So Mr. Sprung explained to me that the Coney Island Wet Wash Laundry Company was insured with the Ocean Accident Company and the fact that I was in Coney Island at one time and had a laundry there, I should know some of the drivers working for the Coney Island Laundry. I said, ‘ Yes, I know practically all of them.’ He said, ‘ Wouldn’t it be possible for you to go out there and have the drivers put in a report and state he had an accident? ’ I said ‘ I guess I could have it.’ He sat down and figured what sort of action should be put in. Then I went to Coney Island — Q. Wait a minute. What do you mean by ‘ he sat down and figured what sort of action should be put in? ’ A. Mr. Sprung outlined to me just what the driver should report to his employer. Q. What did he say the driver should report? A. I don’t remember the correct details, but that it would be four or five people sitting in a taxicab, and as the driver was rounding the corner his horse should run into the taxicah and claim he had injured the people. Q. Yes. A. And then the driver should report this to his employer. Q. That is, you were to obtain this report? A. I was to get the driver to put the report to the company. Q. To have the driver put in a report of an accident that never in fact occurred? A. Yes.”

The record contains evidence of the following claims of the character described in the foregoing testimony:

The Roman Wet Wash Laundry: An alleged accident December 27, 1924, at Ninth street and First avenue, New York city. A horse and laundry wagon were alleged to have collided with a taxicab in which William Lehman, Fred Polish, Sylvia Deutsch and Rose Deutsch were alleged to have been riding. A claim letter was written by respondent December 30, 1924, and settlement was made January 9, 1925, by the indemnity company.

The Flower Wet Wash Laundry: An alleged accident December 23, 1924, at Delancey and Ridge streets, New York city. A horse and laundry wagon were alleged to have collided with a taxicab in which Rachel Katzman, Morris Bank, Jack Hirsch and Lillian Lehnsman were alleged to have been riding. A claim letter was written by respondent December 31, 1924, and settlement was made January 17, 1925, by the indemnity company.

The Coney Island Laundry Company: An alleged accident January 6, 1925, at Surf avenue and Twenty-fifth street, Coney [504]*504Island. A horse and laundry wagon were alleged to have collided with a taxicab in which William Grill, Sylvia Grill, Jack Hirsch and Lillian Larisman were alleged to have been riding. A claim letter was written January 14, 1925, and settlement was made January 24, 1925, by the indemnity company.

The person described as Lillian Larisman in the claim against the Coney Island Laundry Company is the same person described as Lillian Lehnsman in the claim against the Flower Wet Wash Company. She now is the wife of Jack Hirsch named as one of the injured in both claims.

These alleged laundry wagon collisions never occurred. The name of the driver of the Roman Wet Wash Laundry appears as Louis Kornfeld. Benjamin Laulicht, Daniel’s brother, is the driver making the fraudulent report in the Flower Wet Wash Laundry claim. Sol Rosenfeld testified he was induced to fraudulently report an alleged accident to his employer, Coney Island Laundry Company, as testified to by Daniel M. Laulicht. Requests for medical examinations of the alleged claimants were met by having various individuals pose as the injured claimants. These examinations were held in the presence of respondent. Following the settlement releases were executed. Each of the twelve releases in the laundry cases bears the signature of the respondent as witness to the execution thereof, and each bears his name as the notary public before whom each claimant purported to have appeared and acknowledged bis or her signature. Testimony by the Laulichts as to their execution of many of the releases is supported by the testimony of a handwriting expert.

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Bluebook (online)
229 A.D. 501, 242 N.Y.S. 660, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sprung-nyappdiv-1930.