People v. Sugarman

216 A.D. 209, 215 N.Y.S. 56, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9191
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 A.D. 209 (People v. Sugarman) 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. Sugarman, 216 A.D. 209, 215 N.Y.S. 56, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9191 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

McAvoy, J.

Defendant was convicted in the Court of General Sessions of the County of New York on May 2, 1924, after trial, of a violation of section 956 of the Penal Law, which forbids without the consent of the owner the hypothecation of a customer’s securities. This section 956 of the Penal Law under which defendant was convicted provides that a person engaged in the business of purchasing and selling as a broker, stocks, bonds or other evidences of debt of a corporation, etc., who has in his possession, for safekeeping or otherwise, such securities belonging to a customer, and upon which he has no hen nor any special property therein, and who pledges or disposes of such securities without the customer’s consent, is guilty of a felony. The statute makes every member of a firm of brokers who either does, or consents or assents to the doing of, any act which is made a felony by that section of the Penal Law which has just been outlined, guilty of such felony.

The indictment was on three counts, one for larceny, one for embezzlement, and one for the hypothecation as a broker of a customer’s securities, the general charge being that defendant [211]*211disposed of 100 shares of stock of the Texas Company, the property of the complainant Barringer, on the' same day as he received it without having a lien thereon or any special property therein and without the consent of the customer, complainant; and the indictment further alleges that defendant consented and assented to the hypothecation. This was the count submitted to the jury. The other counts on common-law larceny and larceny by embezzlement were withdrawn from the jury.

The defendant Sugarman was a stockbroker who occupied an entire building in the conduct of his business. He had many employees engaged in the carrying on of the office work, including a manager, blotter clerk, bookkeepers, telegraph operators, cashiers, entry clerks, runners, messengers, telephone operators, etc. On November 16, 1921, there was received by mail a certificate of stock for 100 shares of the Texas Company which were owned by one Edward E. Barringer. At this period Sugarman & Co., defendant’s firm, had an account with a firm known as Boyd, Halsted & Co., who were members of the New York Stock Exchange. They did the business of Sugarman & Co. on the floor of the Exchange.

The defendant had a room in the building which his firm occupied, where he directed the conduct of his office and carried on his duties as its head. Among these duties was the signing of his name on the reverse side of certificates of stock guaranteeing the indorsements thereon, so that they Would be passed by delivery among stock brokerage houses in the financial district. While this was not necessary to make the certificates negotiable, a custom of the trade required this signature to authenticate the indorsement of the owner and thus assure the buyer or the pledgee that the signature of the owner was that of somebody whom the selling or pledging broker knew. The defendant was not always in his office. He frequently was required to travel about the State, calling upon various offices or firms engaged in the stock brokerage business. He had a manager, one Stewart, who performed the same duty of indorsing the certificates, and it depended upon the availability of either at any particular time Who Would carry out the duty of indorsement. From April, 1919, until January, 1922, Sugarman & Co. employed one Gelobter first as a blotter clerk and thereafter as a stock cashier. On the day of the transfer of this certificate he received in his cage this certificate of stock for 100 shares of the Texas Company, which Barringer owned, and which was indorsed by Barringer and by the defendant, and delivered it to Boyd, Halsted & Co., without specific instructions from defendant or any one else, on his own initiative.

[212]*212Barringer, after November 16, 1921, conducted an account with Sugarman & Co. on margin, and in this account he Was credited With this 100 shares of the Texas Company. It is this conduct of Gelobter in transferring the shares to Boyd, Halsted & Co. on the day he received them, which the People claim makes out a case within section 956 of the Penal Law, prohibiting the hypothecation of a customer’s securities without his consent or assent.

Between November, 1921, and January, 1922, Barringer, the complainant, never saw the defendant nor spoke to him by telephone or otherwise. They first met in defendant’s home on January 25, 1922, after defendant had gone into bankruptcy and a receiver had been appointed for defendant’s firm; and during the period of the conduct of the account in defendant’s office with Barringer there does not appear to be any direct proof that defendant had knowledge thereof.

The salient points establishing the guilt of defendant are summarized in these facts: After the stock was received in New York by Sugarman & Co., on that very day it Was indorsed by defendant Sugarman in person and pledged for $4,600 to raise money for his own purposes, although Sugarman had no instructions from Bar-ringer to make any transactions on his behalf and had given no orders for the purchase of stock or for the use of his collateral. At the time of the pledge Sugarman did not have or claim to have any lien on or special property in the pledged stock, so that the pledge was either an unwarranted act of the clerk, Gelobter, or else Sugarman, by the course of conduct of his business from the beginning, had expressly or impliedly feloniously procured it to be pledged. Barringer, the owner, never received it again. Sugar-man shortly after this event went into bankruptcy. After the wrongful pledge of this stock the books of Sugarman & Co. purported to show; that the firm had possession of this very stock, although admittedly these entries were false and fraudulent since they had not had possession after the day they received it.

Barringer interviewed the defendant after the failure, and defendant said he would look into the matter and send Barringer his stock, if he could find it, and told him to go home. Barringer lived in Salisbury, N. C. Mrs. Sugarman, defendant’s wife, in making the appointment for the interview, told "Barringer that she understood that they were going to give him back his stock. Neither defendant nor his wife denied this conversation, which would raise an implication of liability to complainant for the return of his certificate for the shares of stock.

The consent or assent necessary to the completion of the crime, it is contended by the defendant, is not shown by any evidence [213]*213in the record, because no knowledge specifically on the part of the defendant of the hypothecation of Barringer’s stock certificate is in the proof, and it is further argued that no implication of defendant in the actual pledging thereof is found in the testimony.

The People showed that the certificate, which was hypothecated, Was given by Barringer to Morris, an agent of defendant; and that it was transmitted by Morris to defendant Sugarman. Sugar-man indorsed it himself, although it was already indorsed in blank by the owner. The only legitimate reason requiring defendant’s indorsement was the purpose of selling the certificate. Sugarman had no lien upon it. His indorsement gave some proof of intention to dispose of the certificate forthwith, because the owner at that time had not incurred any obligation for stock transactions.

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Bluebook (online)
216 A.D. 209, 215 N.Y.S. 56, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sugarman-nyappdiv-1926.