State v. Samis

246 S.W. 956, 296 Mo. 471, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 956 (State v. Samis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Samis, 246 S.W. 956, 296 Mo. 471, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 174 (Mo. 1922).

Opinions

The defendants Amanda Samis and Robert E. Samis, and Emma Tranin and Samuel T. Tranin, were charged jointly by information filed in the Criminal Court of Jackson County, with obtaining property by false pretenses, in violation of Section 3343, Revised Statutes 1919. The property described was a check for five thousand dollars, signed by one Esther Harvey, which check was alleged to be of the value of live thousand dollars and the property of the said Esther Harvey.

The Tranins obtained a severance and a continuance. Amanda and Robert E. Samis went to trial before a jury, and on the twenty-sixth day of June, 1920, were found guilty as charged in the information, and the punishment of each assessed at four years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. They appealed in due form.

The evidence shows that for about two years Mrs. Tranin was engaged in extracting money from numerous people in Kansas City for the purpose of alleged investments. She claimed that she was making investments for certain persons in St. Louis engaged in the junk business who made millions out of war contracts. She also said she represented what she called the Travises and Livingstons, owners of large refineries in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She claimed also to be dealing in platinum. She represented that her clients were multimillionaires and that the investments in which she induced her victims to place their money would yield enormous profits, dividends ranging from twenty-five to one hundred per cent. Many persons were led to invest money in these supposed enterprises. Mrs. Tranin's bank account was introduced in evidence *Page 478 showing large and frequent deposits covering a long period.

The defendant, Mrs. Samis, early became associated with her in these enterprises, and the record shows many checks and notes affecting transactions with various persons, where money was borrowed by her, sometimes paid back with usurious interest, a profit of from fifty to seventy-five per cent, and frequently borrowed again for re-investment. In many instances notes were renewed at from fifty to one hundred per cent more than the original notes. This represented the profits which the various lenders were receiving from the supposed investments. The evidence indicates that no real investments were made of any of this money.

On the eleventh day of March, 1919, while these business transactions were in full operation, Mrs. Esther Harvey signed a check for five thousand dollars on the Western Exchange Bank of Kansas City, payable to Mrs. R.E. Samis. It was endorsed on the back by Mrs. Esther Harvey and R.E. Samis and cashed by Mrs. Samis. The way this check was obtained is described by Mrs. Harvey. She was engaged in the paint-and-glass business in Kansas City. In March, 1919, Mrs. Samis came to her place of business and told her that "they" (evidently meaning herself and Mrs. Tranin) were getting up a fifty-thousand-dollar investment with the Livingstons and Travises, and she wanted Mrs. Harvey to have five thousand dollars of it. Afterwards Mrs. Tranin and Mrs. Samis came back together and talked to Mrs. Harvey for two hours. They told Mrs. Harvey that she was amply secured, that they had oil securities in the bank, and that the books were in the bank all figured out, and that there was no chance for her to lose. Mrs. Samis told her that it would pay at least one hundred per cent; that they had all kinds of money coming in, "and if I wanted it back in a month I could get it and it would be a permanent investment and there would be nobody in it but the Samises, Tranins and myself afterwards." Both *Page 479 Mrs. Samis and Mrs. Tranin said the Travises and the Livingstons had securities in the Gate City Bank covering the loans, and had securities back of the fifty-thousand-dollar loan they were negotiating. Mrs. Samis told her that she was familiar with the Livingstons and had been to Mrs. Travis's home on Troost Avenue. These representations were repeated several times in different forms, according to Mrs. Harvey.

Mrs. Samis testified that she paid the money, the proceeds of the check, over to Mrs. Harvey, but Mrs. Harvey denied that she ever received the money; she said that the entire five thousand dollars was lost to her; that Mrs. Samis afterwards told her that she gave the money to a Mrs. Gilchrist in the Vogue Shop in the Muehlebach Hotel.

It was further shown that Mrs. Harvey induced a number of her friends to loan money to Mrs. Tranin and Mrs. Samis, in many of which instances she went on their notes and afterwards paid the people who thus had loaned the money. Mrs. Harvey loaned other money at other times to Mrs. Samis and Mrs. Tranin, and afterwards received notes for fifty per cent and sometimes seventy-five per cent in addition to the amounts loaned.

There was an attempt on the part of the defendants to show that the enterprise was peculiarly that of Mrs. Tranin; that Mrs. Samis herself was one of the victims and lost money in the enterprise. Mrs. Harvey testified that in giving her check she replied upon Mrs. Samis's word; she knew Mrs. Tranin only through Mrs. Samis, and that, with two exceptions, Mrs. Samis was with Mrs. Tranin every time Mrs. Tranin came to see her.

The testimony as to the actual facts about the alleged investments "and securities" is very meagre. The witnesses mentioned when the "crash" came, though it is not explained what happened at that time. It is asserted by the appellant that no evidence shows any of the statements relating to the securities, were untrue, or that the enterprises in which the people were investing their *Page 480 money were not as represented. In the opinion we will refer to such facts as relate to that matter. It is also claimed that the defendant. R.E. Samis had nothing to do with the transaction involving the obtaining of Mrs. IIarvey's money. The facts relating to that will also be noted in the opinion. On the evidence as introduced both of the defendants were found guilty as stated.

I. Appellant attacks the information as being insufficient to support the conviction. The information sets forth that on the eleventh day of March, 1919, Emma Tranin, Samuel T. Tranin, Amanda H. Samis and R.E. Samis feloniously and designedly, with intent to cheat and defraud one Esther Harvey, didInformation. represent, pretend and say to said Esther Harvey that the Travis and Livingston families were then and there multimillionaire dealers, and owned and operated large oil refineries in the city of Tulsa, in the State of Oklahoma, and did then and there apply to and request that they the said Emma Tranin and Samuel T. Tranin, and Amanda H. Samis and R.E. Samis negotiate and raise a loan for them in the sum of fifty thousand dollars; that the said Tranins and Samises, with such felonious design, etc., pretended, represented and said to the said Esther Harvey that the said Livingstons had placed in their possession securities of said oil refineries to secure a loan of fifty thousand dollars, which the said Travises and Livingstons had requested the said Tranins and Samises to negotiate for them; that the Tranins and Samises further represented that they were familiar with the said securities of the oil refinery, as aforesaid, paying one hundred per cent upon the money invested; that the said Esther Harvey, believing the false statements and pretenses so made, and relying upon and being deceived thereby, was induced by reason thereof to pay, and did pay and deliver to the said Emma Tranin, Samuel Tranin, Amanda Samis and R.E. Samis a check for the amount of five thousand dollars for the purpose of it *Page 481 being invested. The check is then set out in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 956, 296 Mo. 471, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-samis-mo-1922.