Kaplan v. United States

18 F.2d 939, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2110
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1927
Docket161
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 18 F.2d 939 (Kaplan v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaplan v. United States, 18 F.2d 939, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2110 (2d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

This indictment charged 65 defendants with violations of section 215 of the United States Criminal Code (Comp. St. § 10385). Thirteen were convicted at the trial and 8 were acquitted. Other disposition, unnecessary of mention, was made of the charges against the other defendants.

The Crager System, Inc., was organized for selling stock securities. It circularized corporations, offering to take off their hands large blocks of their unsold capital stock, with the idea and purpose of reloading the stock so taken upon the stockholders of each such corporation. Reloading in this trade meant selling the unsold stock securities to the present stockholders.

Plaintiff in error Dorn, by means of the same scheme, had secured a contract from the Glass Casket Corporation of Altoona, Pa., for the sale of 19,000 shares of its stock. The indictment charged that, as a part of the scheme, thus referred to, this contract was *941 canceled, and one of similar purport was entered into on April 18, 1922, between Henry Crager, doing business as A. B. Heim & Co., and the Glass Casket Corporation. They secured a list of the stockholders of the Glass Casket Corporation, mailed letters to them advising them that there were certain favorable developments in the business of the Glass Casket Corporation, that a certain contract had made their stock more valuable, and that they had been allotted a certain number of shares, and advised the stockholders not to sell their present stock holdings.

By the indictment, a charge of a scheme to defraud was further alleged in the allegation that there were sent to the stockholders of the Glass Casket Corporation letters, purporting to come from three firms, offering to purchase their stock, and that the plaintiffs in error personally called on the stockholders and falsely-informed them that A. B. Heim & Co., a brokerage firm, had contracted to purchase aE the unsold shares of stock of the Glass Casket Corporation; that the latter had aEotted to each of the stockholders a certain number of shares of the stock of the company, and that a release would have to be signed before A. B. Heim & Co. could handle the stock; and that the stockholders could profit by refusing- to sign the release and by purchasing the shares aEotted to them. The charge further was that the plaintiffs in error, with others, represented that A. B. Heim & Co. would have the stock of the Glass Casket Corporation listed on the New York Stock Exchange, and that it would be sold at $35 and upwards a share. A charge of the falsity of these statements, with intention to defraud, was made.

There were 37 counts in the indictment. Each count charged a scheme to defraud, and in the execution thereof a letter was sent through the United States maüs. There is also a charge of conspiracy to violate section 37 of the United States Criminal Code (Comp. St. § 10201). This count was withdrawn from the jury's consideration by the trial judge.

Some of the defendants who planned this scheme to defraud gave testimony in behalf of the government. By their testimony it was established that Benjamin Crager, after meeting Samuel Safir in December, 1921, became associated with him and Rosenblatt and Sideman as partners, under the name of the Crag-er System, Inc., with offices in New York City. Their business was the seEing of stock by reloading it in the manner described heretofore. By soHcitation they secured representation of corporations which desired to sell or dispose of unpurehased capital stock. They organized a new corporation for each proposition which they undertook, but they used the same salesmen in attempting to dispose of the stock. They inaugurated a vigorous seEing campaign in disposing of the stock, and easEy and quickly shifted from one corporation to the other, when one did not readily sell.

The Crager System, Inc., had no regular clientéle. On March 10, 1922, it soEcited the business of the Glass Casket Corporation, of Altoona, Pa. Negotiations were opened. The plaintiff in error Dorn at this time had the contract referred to for the sale of 19,-000 shares of stock of the Glass Casket Corporation. He stated the proposition was too large for him to handle and assigned it to the Crager System, Inc., in return for the promise of $2 a share for each share of stock sold. He promised to assist the Crager System, Inc., in a sales campaign. In place of the assignment of the contract, a new contract was entered into between the defendant A. B. Heim & Co., a sales company formed by the Crager System, Inc., to handle the stock of thé Glass Casket Corporation. Dorn and Rosenblatt went to Altoona and arranged for the making and signing of the new contract. Up to that time the Glass Casket Corporation had tried unsuccessfully to dispose of its unsold stock at $10 per share. Dorn agreed to sell it at $15, and the Crager System, Inc., was to sell it at $20. Of this $20, the Glass Casket Corporation received $8 a share. Three letters were written and agreed upon as form letters to be sent out for use by the salesmen in disposing of the stock. A letter of identifica-* tion was also used by them. There were statements in the letters which were proven to be false, as recorded by the jury's verdict.

The convicted plaintiffs in error, with the exception of Dorn, were aE salesmen, and were supplied with letters and cards, bearing the names of stockholders and the number of shares held by each. They made misrepresentations in furtherance of this fraudulent scheme, and attempted-to or did dispose of stock to stockholders of record. They took releases, using the form of release by stockholders of his so-caEed allotment of shares. In truth and fact therq was no allotment of shares to stockholders. The size of the aEotment was governed largely by the representations or judgment, or both, of the salesman. They had order blanks, which the purchaser would sign, authorizing A. B. Heim & Co. to seE Glass Casket Corporation stock at a certain price, usuaEy at $10 a share, over the *942 purchaser price of $20 per share. Advisory board applications were also used. The salesman represented to the victims that a place on the advisory board could be had by the purchase of more stock, and that such an office carried with it a salary. A “jumbo” contract blank, stating the price of the stock to old subscribers as $20 a share and the price to others at $22.50, was supplied and used.

One of the defendants, who had charge of the salesmen, testified that the salesmen knew practically nothing of the Glass Casket Corporation, and therefore had no information upon which to make the representations they did. Eách salesman received $4 a share for his services, $8 was paid to the Glass Casket Corporation, $2 to Dom, and $3 to the Crager System, Inc., and the overhead was estimated at $3. Letters were sent to stockholders, which were false in their statements of fact, and were designed to create the impression that there was a strong demand for the Glass Casket Corporation stock. A card was also, sent by the United System and Lester Armstrong of Chicago, subsidiaries of the Crager System, Inc., offering to buy the stock. Dom & Co. made similar offers. No stock was ever purchased by either of these firms upon offers of stockholders to sell.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F.2d 939, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaplan-v-united-states-ca2-1927.