McConnell v. Henochsberg

11 Tenn. App. 176, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 176 (McConnell v. Henochsberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McConnell v. Henochsberg, 11 Tenn. App. 176, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 84 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The appeal in this cause is from the decree of the Chancery Court in which the complainant in his capacity of Superintendent of Banks for the State of Tennessee, was decreed a recovery of certain life insurance on the life of Clarence Henochsberg and other personal property and also the pro rata part of the amount realized from the sale of the Henochsberg home in Memphis, on the theory that the premiums on the life insurance and certain securities and personal property and a portion of the purchase price of the real estate wer& paid out of the money stolen by Henochsberg from the American Savings Bank & Trust Company, of Memphis, while said Henochsberg was employed by said bank as assistant cashier.

*178 The record consists of several volumes of pleadings and evidence and a great number of exhibits. After a thorough examination of the record we find that the facts as found by the Chancellor are supported by a preponderance of the evidence, and since the finding of the facts as found by the Chancellor meets our concurrence, we fully adopt the same, and which are as follows:

"FINDING OF FACTS:
"1. The Germania Savings Bank & Trust Company was organized in 1905, and soon became recognized as one of the strongest and safest, though not one of the largest, financial institutions in the city of Memphis, and it enjoyed this reputation throughout its entire history. During the war, for obvious reasons, its name was changed to the American Savings Bank & Trust Company. At the time of its failure in December, 1926, it had a paid up .capital of $100,000 and a surplus of $123,000/
“2. Clarence Henochsberg had been in the employ of this bank for sixteen years and for a number of years was its assistant cashier, and one of the tellers; he was well known and popular and had a large following among the customers of the bank. In his capacity as assistant cashier, he had immediate supervision over the books, bookkeepers and tellers of the bank, and as one of the tellers he received and disbursed and handled large sums of money, the property and assets of said bank. He at all times had the confidence and esteem of the officers and directors of the bank, and especially Mr. Cohn, the president, and Mr. Dixon, the cashier, with both of whom he had much influence, so that it is argued with much reason that he was in reality the dominant figure in the bank.
"3. On December 2, 1926, while the State Bank Examiners were making their regular examination of the books of the bank, a shortage of approximately $105,000 was discovered in the ledgers and accounts kept by Rush H. Parke, a bookkeeper, having charge of the commercial accounts in the ledger ‘A5 to ‘E.’ As soon as the examiners appeared to examine the books, Parke fled. His shortage was ultimately found to be approximately $135,000 the bulk of which occurred in the accounts of Jessie Foltz and Foltz Suburban Markets. As a result of this discovery the examiners, I. H. Wilson and J. F. Hunt, demanded a thorough audit of the bank’s books. Henochsberg vigorously opposed this audit on account of the great expense, but agreed that the directors should make good the Parke shortage, and offered to contribute the sum of $5000 in making up the shortage. The examiners, however, insisted the bank’s having a thorough audit made, which would involve the bringing in of all the depositor’s pass books for examination; and when this was refused by the officers and directors on December 6, the examiners gave notice that they *179 would themselves begin the making of such an audit on the following morning.
“4. On the night of December 2, after the discovery of the Parke shortage, Henochsberg. was greatly worried and told his wife that the bank would not be able to survive the loss, and that if the bank ‘busted’ they were ruined; he afterwards'told Hunt, one of the tellers, that the bank would not be able to survive the loss; on the night of December 6, he confessed to his wife that he was $300,000 short; and told her that he had figured it out, and that the only thing left was for him to kill himself, and that if he did that she and the children could live on the income from his life insurance. At five o ’clock' the following morning he phoned to Abe Plough, wealthy depositor of the bank, and son-in-law of Harry Cohn, the president, and told him that he was $300,000 short; that the shortage would be revealed within five minutes after the auditors stepped into his cage; and that this was in addition to the Parke shortage; and he asked Plough to put up the $300,000 to save the bank; and Plough suggested that the situation ought to be laid before the board of directors and the money raised that way; at seven o’clock Henochs-berg again called Plough and asked him to come over to see him, which Plough declined to do, again suggesting that the matter should be laid before the board of directors. Henochsberg declined to agree to this, and closed the conversation with the statement, that ‘if you don’t come over here with the money before eight o’clock, when the bell rings eight o’clock, you will know that I am dead.’
“5. On the morning of Tuesday, December 7th, at eight o’clock, Clarence M. Henochsberg committed suicide by (firing) a bullet through the brain. He left a memorandum in his own handwriting on the back of an envelope, headed ‘ all the accounts I can remember, ’ in which he made a partial list of his defalcations, which amounted to $244,595. This was evidently made from memory as indicated by the heading, and the amounts were approximated, as indicated by the use of the word ‘about,’ in connection with the amount.
“6. As soon as the announcement of Henochsberg’s shortage and suicide became known the directors of the bank, passed a resolution requesting the Superintendent of State Banks to take charge and wind it up as insolvent; so the bank did not open its doors on the morning of Tuesday, December 7. The examiners at once took charge and made a thorough and complete audit which revealed the fact that Henochsberg was short in his accounts at the time of the failure of the bank in the sum of $329,591.75.
“7. The method used by Henochsberg in stealing the funds of the bank was to receive deposits, enter them on the customers’ pass books, and put the deposit slip in a private drawer or tear it up, so that no record of this deposit would appear on the depositors’ ac *180 count on the ledger. When checks were drawn against these deposits he would either make a fictitious deposit to cover them, or would pay them and drop the check in his private drawer so that they would not be entered on the depositor’s account on the ledger. These thefts were generally in substantial amounts, and from accounts that were comparatively inactive, and from depositors whose dealings were almost exclusively with Henochsberg, and in many instances Henochs-berg himself balanced the pass books of these depositors. By reason of this system it was necessary for the auditors to examine the pass books and check them against the ledger accounts. By this means the 'auditors have compiled a record filed as exhibit ‘O’ to the deposition of R. W.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 176, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-henochsberg-tennctapp-1929.