Pelz v. United States

54 F.2d 1001, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2974
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1932
DocketNo. 227
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 54 F.2d 1001 (Pelz 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
Pelz v. United States, 54 F.2d 1001, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2974 (2d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

The indictment charged appellants in nine substantive counts of violation of the mail fraud statutes (section 215 U. S. Criminal Code, 18 USCA § 338), and in the tenth count with conspiracy to violate the statute (section 37 U. S. Criminal Code, 18 USCA § 88). They were acquitted on the substantive counts and convicted on the conspiracy count.

Pelz-Greenstein Company, Inc., was a New York corporation, and the áppellants were its officers. The name was changed to the Consolidated Factors’ Corporation. The crime of conspiracy, of which appellants have heen convicted, rests upon misrepresentations that they intended to list stock of the corporation, which they offered for sale to the public, on the New York Curb Exchange, and also that they made misrepresentations as to the financial condition of the corporation. The tenth count named as victims persons who were induced to purchase stock of the corporation.

The corporation was formed in 1922. It financed other concerns, in its factoring business, as departments. This relationship was created by a factoring agreement; money was advanced to a department against an account receivable. If a sale was made by the department and approved by Pelz-Greenstein Company, Inc., and credit risk assumed by it, then a new account receivable was created against the customer of the department, and the accounts receivable against the department were credited in the amount thus charged against the customer. The security for the loan was the inventory of that department, and sometimes other collateral was received; in some cases, if the departments were corporations, personal guaranties were given. At times credit insurance was taken out as a protection. If a customer’s account receivable proved uneolleetable, it was charged back to the department. All moneys advanced by the corporation were thus represented either in the accounts receivable in the department, or in accounts receivable of the customers of the department.

The corporation had a capital and surplus of $500,000 in 1922 and $2,000,000 in 1927. Sales financed in 1922 were about $550,000; in 1927, $12,500,000; and over $14,000,000 in 1928 — the volume increasing each year. It had bank credits in some sixteen banks of $3,600,000 in 1928, and $4,-000,000 in 1929. The corporation started in 1922 with a capital of 500,000 shares-of preferred stock, and common stock of no par value. In 1923, the preferred stock was increased to $750,000, and in June, 1928, to $2,000,000. The indictment sets forth June 4, 1928, as the important date. On-that date there was a stockholders’ meeting which authorized the increase of the common stock from 21,000 to 135,000 no par value shares. There was outstanding at the time 20,000' preferred shares. The stockholders were given the right to exchange one share of preferred for three of common, and it appears that stockholders holding some $900,000 of this stock exercised their right and converted their shares. The common stock after June 4, 1928, was divided into 250 shares of class B, and 134,750 shares of class A stock. Class B stock, owned by appellants, held all the voting rights, but On July 1, 1929, all the common stock received voting rights. The corporation’s books were audited by a well and favorably known firm of accountants. They were unhindered in their, work, and in every way had a free hand.

The conspiracy count states that the conspiracy began June 4,-1928, and continued to August 29, 1930, which is the date of the filing of the indictment. It was arranged to sell stock to the public around September 1, 1928, through a firm organized for that purpose. It offered to the public 59,000 shares of stock. The first prospectus was dated October 2, 1928, and a later one November 28, 1928. The stock selling ended in June, 1929. Bankruptcy of the corporation followed in April, 1930.

The fraudulent scheme is charged to have heen devised in June, 1928, and is based on the alleged false statements of the financial condition of the company as set forth on December 31, 1928. An alleged fraudulent representation, emphasized upon the trial, was that the appellants represented that application would he made to list the stock of the corporation on the New York Curb Exchange and that this was not done. While the corporation was carrying on business, it earned and paid 7 per cent, dividends on its preferred stock. Misrepresentation as to the assets and liabilities of the corporation are stated to have been made in its December 31, 1928, statement. It showed assets of the value of $7,913,465.25, liabilities of $4,734,311.16, and a net worth of [1003]*1003$3,179,154.09. The charge is that fictitious invoices were used in connection with the accounts of the Madison Distributing Company and its affiliates; also in connection with the account of E. Heller & Bro.; that the reassignments of handkerchief accounts and handkerchief inventories were false; that a series of notes, referred to as the Oppenheimer notes, executed as payable monthly to the corporation, was fraudulent. These are charged to have fraudulently increased the assets of the corporation as well as the net worth. As to the Madison Distributing Company and its affiliates,, the claim is that appellant Pelz made arrangements with the Madison Distributing Company, which was one of the departments of the corporation, to show $215,000 worth of sales by that company and its affiliates which were never actually effected. It may well be questioned how this affected the assets of the corporation by the issuance of false invoices through one of its departments. If fraudulently issued, the effeet of such a transaction would be temporarily to reduce the amount due from the Madison Distributing Company by the amount of the fictitious sales, to substitute a new account for the same amount, and ultimately to reinstate the exact amount in the Madison Distributing Company account, under its assumption of the risk, but the total of accounts receivable could not have been affected one way or another, and could not have affected the statement of assets appearing on the balance sheet of December 31, 1928.

The E. Heller & Bro. account was another department of the corporation. It was testified that late in December, 1928, appellant Pelz requested that he be furnished with false invoices for approximately $300,000, which was done. When the invoices became due, in accordance with the arrangements, it was claimed that appellant Pelz paid them with cheeks obtained from his friends, and reimbursed his friends with funds obtained from the corporation. Assuming this to be true, and that the motive to create fictitious sales existed, the outstanding accounts on the books of the corporation were not increased or decreased by the transaction. The assets would remain the' same. The Madison Distributing Company and its affiliates, the Blondel Textile Mills and the Bernice Silk Corporation, delivered inventories to the corporation. It was testified that these inventories were fraudulently increased by the companies at the request of the appellant Pelz, but only after protesting and consulting with counsel, as m the case of the fictitious invoices. But the entries in the books indicated the indebtedness of the factored company to the corporation, and the account remained the same irrespective of the inventory.

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Bluebook (online)
54 F.2d 1001, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelz-v-united-states-ca2-1932.