People v. Wagner

120 Misc. 214, 40 N.Y. Crim. 243
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 120 Misc. 214 (People v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Wagner, 120 Misc. 214, 40 N.Y. Crim. 243 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

Stephens, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny, first degree; and he was convicted also of a violation of section 1293-b of the Penal Law by obtaining property on credit by use of a false statement in writing respecting the financial [216]*216condition and means and ability to pay of the firm of P. E. Wagner & Son, of which defendant was a member, under an indictment charging these two several crimes.

The larceny is alleged in the first count of the indictment to have been committed by the defendant on July 22, 1921, by obtaining from the Lincoln-Alliance Bank the sum of $2,000 by color and aid of fraudulent and false pretenses made feloniously and with intent to defraud. The particulars of the false pretenses are alleged to be that on July 22,1921, before obtaining the money, the defendant represented to the bank in writing and orally that the amount owing by said firm to other banks with whom he and said firm had accounts did not exceed $2,000, when, in fact, the defendant and his firm were on that day indebted to the Union Trust Company, Traders National Bank and National Bank of Commerce in the amounts respectively of $3,500, $3,000 and $3,000.

The indictment contains the appropriate allegations that the defendant knew the statements were false and that the Lincoln-Alliance Bank in reliance upon them paid over to the defendant and his said firm the sum of $2,000 on July 22, 1921.

The second count in the indictment is predicated upon a written statement, “ being the same statement in writing referred to in the first count of this indictment.” Its veracity is attacked solely in respect to the indebtedness to the other banks above mentioned and the offense is stated to have been committed on July 22, 1921. It is not alleged, in the second count, that the defendant obtained any advantage by the statement, and it was not necessary to do so.

It was proven at the trial that the only written statements made by the defendant and submitted by him to the complainant bank were two in number, one in the form of an inventory and the other in which the inventory items had been transferred to a blank form supplied by the bank. Both statements gave the indebtedness of the defendant’s firm to other banks as of May 20, 1921. The first mentioned one was not signed; the latter was signed by the defendant with the firm name P. E. Wagner & Son by P. E. Wagner.”

There was, therefore, no statement in writing as to the amount of the indebtedness to other banks on July twenty-second, the date alleged in the indictment, and to which the attention of the jury was directed in the charge of the court.

Testimony was given by officers of two of the creditor banks as to the indebtedness to them on both May twentieth and July twenty-second. To one the debt had been diminished during the interval and to the other it had been increased. The indebtedness at the third bank was given only as of July twenty-second.

[217]*217It was necessary in order to support the second count of the indictment to show that the amount owing to the banks on May twentieth was falsely stated, and it was equally necessary in order to support the first or larceny count that the indebtedness on July twenty-second was falsely stated. There being no written statement relating to debts existing at the latter date any representations about them were, of course, oral.

The counsel for the defendant assigns as an error, among others, that the conviction for larceny cannot be sustained upon the oral statement of the defendant relating to his means and ability to pay, and founds this claim upon section 947 of the Penal Law.

The section cited provides that A purchase of property by means of a false pretense is not criminal, where the false pretense relates to the purchaser’s means or ability to pay, unless the pretense is made in writing and signed by the party to be charged.”

Whatever oral statements, to be more fully examined later, were made, related to the indebtedness to other banks and were of the same character in this respect as the written ones. Both written and oral statements, therefore, related to the ability of the defendant and his firm to pay. The indictment so characterized them and the jury by its verdict has confirmed it.

It is next to be considered whether the transaction under scrutiny was “ a purchase of property ” within the meaning of the statute.

The statute has frequently been before the courts and has been consistently applied. Its enactment, in the phrase of Judge Cullen in People ex rel. Corkran v. Hyatt, 172 N. Y. 176,187, was doubtless dictated by the knowledge that criminal charges of false pretenses are often instituted in reality to compel the payment of debt, and are easily fabricated.”

In the cases where the statute has been successfully invoked merchandise had been bought by means of false representations of the buyer’s financial resources. In the instant case money was obtained. Money is property both by definition (Gen. Const. Law, §§ -38, 39) and by common understanding. To obtain it by falsely stating one’s ability to repay it does not differ essentially from buying merchandise by like means. If at the same time the defendant received the money, the bank had also sold to him securities or other articles of personal property owned by it, on credit, in reliance upon precisely the same oral statements that induced it to part with its money there could be no conviction for a larceny of the securities — a result so incongruous can be avoided only by holding that the statute is applicable to both forms of transactions.

The cases dealing with false representation, not relating to one’s [218]*218ability to pay, are numerous and I cite here only People v. Snyder, 110 App. Div. 699; People v. Whitney, 146 id. 98; People v. Cohen, 148 id. 205; People v. Rothstein, 180 N. Y. 148.

Now, to return to the oral statements. The defendant talked with Mr. Vay, an officer of the complainant bank, about a week before July twenty-second and showed him the unsigned written statement or inventory. Upon the trial Mr. Vay was asked whether on that day there was anything said about the amount of indebtedness which Mr. Wagner owed banks for borrowed money on notes on that day. The defendant’s objection was overruled and the question was answered, “Yes, sir, he stated that he owed only two thousand dollars to the National Bank of Commerce.” The witness was then asked, “Did he state that was all the money he owed to banks on notes payable on this day? ” and he answered, “ Yes, sir.” Mr. Vay then testified to the conversation had on July twenty-second when the defendant came to the bank bringing the other statement with the items of the inventory transferred to appropriate spaces in the blank form that had been given to him by Mr. Vay on the earlier visit. The oral statements made on that date appear from the following questions and answers: “ Q. Did you ask him about his indebtedness to other banks on that day? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did you ask him? A. I asked him what he owed the National Bank of Commerce on that day and he said two thousand dollars. Q. You asked him whether he owed any other banks? A. I don’t-recall whether that question came up. Q. He stated that was the only bank he owed. [Objected to. Sustained.] ”

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Related

People v. Hall
172 Misc. 930 (Jefferson County Court, 1939)
People v. Steppello
141 Misc. 162 (New York Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
120 Misc. 214, 40 N.Y. Crim. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wagner-nysupct-1923.