People v. Crossman

211 A.D. 673, 208 N.Y.S. 85, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10674
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 A.D. 673 (People v. Crossman) 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
People v. Crossman, 211 A.D. 673, 208 N.Y.S. 85, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10674 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Burr, J.:

Defendant was convicted of violating the Penal Law (§ 390, subd. 1) in making a contract with Benno Eibach on two different occasions, February 9 and February 18, 1922, for the purchase on each occasion of 100 shares of Radio stock, intending at the time that no actual purchase would be made and that the account would be settled upon fictitious figures based upon market prices and without intending a bona fide purchase and receipt of said securities for and on behalf of the said Benno Eibach.

Anna Ehrlich and Samuel Livingston were the two chief witnesses against defendant. No other witness testified to the existence of a bucket shop, of its operation, or to the details of the bucketing of the Eibach orders. Their testimony was to the effect that the [675]*675place was a bucket shop, and that no stock, was ever intended to be purchased in any transaction; that orders for the purchase or sale of securities were to be given the appearance of having been executed by the maintenance of fictitious accounts with fictitious balancing entries, and that they knew that the entire scheme was fraudulent and the transactions were fictitious. Each of them testified, also, to certain specific things done by each of them in connection with the business and with each of the Eibach purchases after such purchases had taken place.

The trial court ruled that the witnesses Ehrlich and Livingston were not accomplices as a matter of law, and refused to submit to the jury the question whether, in fact, they were accomplices.

A single claim of error is now made. It is the contention of the appellant that the trial court erred in not instructing the jury that Ehrlich and Livingston were accomplices as matter of law, and in refusing to submit to the jury that question of fact whether they were accomplices.

The evidence shows that the corporation of S. M. Livingston & Co., Inc., of which the defendant was the manager, was formed about September, 1921. Livingston at that time was penniless and the recipient of the defendant’s charity. He lived in the same house with defendant. Livingston first met the defendant in Paris in 1918. In the summer of 1921 defendant told Livingston that, as Livingston had sustained severe losses in his importing business, he, the defendant, would do Livingston a good turn for the kindness Livingston had shown the defendant in Paris; that the defendant was a stockbroker and would take Livingston in the stockbrokerage business and would make him his partner. Defendant said for obvious reasons, which Livingston did not know, he, the defendant, could not use his own name. Livingston had never been in Wall street and then knew nothing about it, and told defendant he knew nothing about the business. Defendant said he had had the experience and was able to teach Livingston everything necessary in a short time. He also told Livingston that no personal liability would attach, in view of the corporate form.

When the corporation was organized Livingston says the stock consisted of 250 shares, of which he received one; that he indorsed his share in blank, and gave it to the defendant, who held it, as far as he knew. Livingston was a director and he and all the other directors wrote out their resignations and gave them to the defendant upon the day the company started. Livingston received no wages, salary or regular emolument; but occasionally a quarter for cigarettes and other sums so trivial he could not recall them. Once, however, he got $500. The defendant made arrangements [676]*676with, the landlord; hired the employees; paid them; discharged the bookkeeper; dictated all letters; composed the weekly market letters, and gave all orders.

Part of the proof that the orders in this and other cases were bucketed ” was that fictitious accounts were kept. The bookkeeper, Miss Ehrlich, testified that these entries were made pursuant to defendant’s directions.

That defendant was manager was fully established by his own letter. This testimony shows that S. M. Livingston & Co., Inc., was a mere shell and that the defendant was trading solely upon his own account and using the corporate form to protect himself against personal liability.

Eibach, the customer, was a restaurant keeper. On February 9, 1922, he gave an order to buy 100 Radio at three and seven-eighths, and paid $185. In that -transaction Eibach had dealt with Baumeister. Baumeister frequently rang Eibach up and told him to buy another 100 Radio; that it would go up. Eibach ordered a second lot of Radio at $4 and went down and paid $150. About February twenty-eighth Baumeister called Eibach up and said they needed more money as the stock was dropping. Eibach got a check for $75, went down and paid it in. Eibach’s dealings were entirely with Baumeister. Baumeister took Eibach's money and gave him receipts. Baumeister was not called as a witness. He was there every day; a sort of manager who introduced people as they came in. Eibach paid $185 upon February ninth. The bookkeeper, Miss Ehrlich, said she had nothing to do with Eibach. She handled this money after it was paid in and gave it to the defendant. Upon February twentieth Eibach paid $150. Livingston received this $150 from Baumeister and gave the money to the defendant, less- $15, which Livingston kept to pay his hotel bill.

That Eibach’s orders were “ bucketed ” was conclusively proved. Fictitious accounts were kept. Miss Ehrlich kept the books and records, ledger, blotter, purchase and sales book. The defendant saw these books, and the entries in them were made under the defendant’s directions. They purported to record actual transactions of various customers, including this complainant, Eibach. They contained, two fictitious accounts. Account No. 1001: In order to balance the customers’ accounts, the bookkeeper testified that an entry was made, though no stock had been bought, the entry being a “ dummy sheet.” These entries purported to show that Radio stock had been bought to fulfill Eibach’s orders. Such entries were made daily in the purchase and sales book and ledger. No entry was made from whom the stock was pretendedly bought, or showing an account with any other broker. Account No. 1001 [677]*677was fictitious. There was also another account, known as the Stewart ” account, which was also fictitious.

All Miss Ehrlich did was to make entries as she was told. She had nothing to do with the customer Eibach. Eibach said he had never talked with her and did not know her. She drew, some of the receipts, handled some of Eibach’s money, which she gave to this defendant or to Baumeister, and made fictitious entries. Her testimony shows that she had knowledge at all times that the place was a bucket shop and she also knew that Eibach’s orders were bucketed.

There is no pretense that these bucketing contracts were made with Livingston. Eibach’s dealings were with Baumeister. He spoke of seeing Livingston " sitting outside on a bench,” once, but did not know what he was doing. He had a talk with Livingston about the weather and the market. Livingston gave no market advice, but was talking about Studebaker and other stocks in which Eibach was not interested. Livingston was the president of S. M. Livingston & Co., Inc. He was the nominal head. His arrangement with defendant was to look wise, so that the employees would not know he was a greenhorn until he had learned the game. He signed checks. He signed all letters. His facsimile signature was attached to the. concern’s market letters.

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211 A.D. 673, 208 N.Y.S. 85, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crossman-nyappdiv-1925.