Mayer v. . the People

80 N.Y. 364, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 107
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 80 N.Y. 364 (Mayer v. . the People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. . the People, 80 N.Y. 364, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 107 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Bapallo, J.

The representation charged in the indictment was, in substance, that the defendant’s firm of Hirsch & Mayer had, on the 1st of January, 1876, balanced its books *367 and taken an account of stock, and that its assets, consisting of cash, merchandise, bills receivable and live accounts, exceeded its liabilities by the sum of $25,000. The prosecutor testified, to the making of the representations by Mayer, on the 28th of January, 1876, and to the sale of goods to Hirsch & Mayer on that day, on the faith of such representations. It appeared in evidence that the firm failed early in April, 1876, largely insolvent; that its books had never been balanced, and an examination of the books disclosed that the firm had long been insolvent, the drafts of the members for their personal expenses having far exceeded their capital and profits, and that a large deficiency in the assets existed.oil the 1st of January, 1876; that the greater part of its liabilities, existing at the time of its failure, had been contracted between January 1st and April 7, 187-6, and that at the last mentioned date its debts exceeded its appa-. rent assets by upward of $70,000.

The actual financial condition of the firm was not the subject of much controversy on the trial, but the defense rested mainly upon a denial of the making of the representations, and of the knowledge of the defendant of .the state of the accounts of the firm.

Evidence was introduced, on the part of the prosecution, in respect to the dealings of the firm between January, 1876, and the time of the failure. The prosecutor testified, without objection, to two sales of goods made by him' to Hirsch & Mayer, subsequent to that charged in the indictment, viz.: on the eleventh and fifteenth of -February, and that on the last occasion the defendant declared that the statement he had previously made was correct. John H. Rhodes, a witness on the part, of the prosecution, then testified to a sale of goods by his firm of Rhodes, Grosvenor & Co. to Hirsch & Mayer, in the latter part of March, 1876,-and being interrogated as to the conversation which then took place between him and the defendant, the inquiry was objected to as too remote, and the court held it inadmissible on the question of intent, as the case then stood, and it was sus *368 pended until witnesses to intermediate transactions should be called. ■ The witness was then asked what was said by Mayer or by Hirsch, in his presence, as to the amount of their stock on the first of January, and the court permitted this question to be put for the purpose of showing the condition of the firm on the first of January, and for that purpose only. An exception was taken to this ruling, but.we see no good objection to the evidence, it being competent as an admission of the defendant, for the purpose of showing the amount of stock on hand at the time referred' to. Joseph F. Low was then called as a witness, and testified to a sale of goods by him to the defendant, on the 31st of January, 1876 ; that he declined to deliver the goods without a statement of the condition of defendant’s firm, and that defendant then stated that he had a good sound capital of $25,000, and would make a . statement in detail if desired. . This evidence was not objected to. The prosecution then proved, without objection, by Ezra C. Dillingham a sale made- by him to defendant, on the 14th of February, 1876, on his statement that he was perfectly, good, and further sales on the same statement on the twenty-first of February, and first of March and twenty-first of March. The witness was then interrogated as to. the statement made to him by the defendant in April, a few days before his failure, as to his financial condition, and this was objected to as immaterial and incompetent, and too remote, on the ground that no property was parted with at the time. This objection was overruled, and an exception taken, and the witness then testified that he said to defendant that he had heard rumors of the failure of his firm, and defendant replied that there was nothing in it, that witness’ claim was good and would be paid, and he need have no fear as to the future. Defendant’s counsel moved to strike out this evidence as not bearing upon the question of fraudulent intent in January. The motion was denied, and an exception taken.

. The same line of inquiry was pursued with other witnesses, under exceptions taken ■ by -the defendant’s counsel-.- Carl *369 Yoight was allowed to testify to a statement of defendant on the twenty-second of March, as to his condition, the sale to him by that witness having been made on the thirteenth of March, and the goods delivered on his promise to make a statement. The statement made on the twenty-second corresponded substantially with that charged in the indictment, but was move in detail. The witness Ehodes was recalled, and testified to a substantially similar statement in the latter part of March, as to the condition of the firm on the first of January; but the sale by Ehodes had been completed long before the making of the statement. Alfred Woodbridge was allowed to be asked as to representations in January, after a sale and-delivery of goods. The point raised by all these exceptions is substantially the same. It does not controvert the general rule that cotemporancous purchases, made on the faith of representations similar to those made to the prosecutor, may be shown as bearing on the question of intent, but is, that they do not fall within the rule, for the reason that the representations proved were made after the goods had been. obtained, and no goods were obtained by means of the representations ; and the further point as to some of them, at least, that they were made so long after the purchase from the prosecutor that they cannot bo treated as cotemporancous.

As to the question of time, we think that, under the circumstances of the case, it was not too remoto. The purchase from the prosecutor was made in the latter part of January, the twenty-eighth, and the failure was April seventh. The representations to others were made during this internal; and the theory of the prosecution, in support of which the evidence was offered, was that during all this period the defendant, or he and his partner, were acting in pursuance of a scheme to obtain property by means of false representations as to their solvency, and by keeping up their credit, with intent to convert the property to their own use, and defraud the vendors of its value.

,. The evidence shows that the firm was insolvent at and *370 before the time when the defendant made the purchase from the prosecutor, and we think that its dealings between that time and the day when the, fact of its insolvency became public, a period of a little over two months, were a proper subject of investigation, for the purpose of ascertaining whether they disclosed the scheme and intention charged. If it existed,in respect to the other purchases made during the period in question, it may be inferred that the purchase set forth in the indictment was a part of the same fraudulent plan.

The main reliance of the defendant’s counsel at the trial' appears.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.Y. 364, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-the-people-ny-1880.