Townsend v. Hirshkind

176 A.D. 520, 163 N.Y.S. 498, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5157

This text of 176 A.D. 520 (Townsend v. Hirshkind) 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
Townsend v. Hirshkind, 176 A.D. 520, 163 N.Y.S. 498, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5157 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

This action was brought to recover the amount due. upon a bond for $5,000, with interest thereon at five per cent from January 15, 1914, executed by the defendant to Alice S. Townsend, plaintiffs’ testatrix, and bearing date January 15, 1909. By his original answer the defendant set up that the bond sued on was neither signed by him nor executed or delivered by him to Alice S. Townsend; that the purported signature thereto was a forgery, not having been made by him or by any person with his authority and consent; and that the bond itself was a forged instrument. On his application for a change of the placer of trial of this action the defendant swore absolutely and unequivocally that the signature to the bond was a forgery. The defendant employed a handwriting expert to fortify himself in this denial. Upon his examination before trial, defendant, after swearing that he signed all sorts of papers for Wertheimer without knowing what they were, never refusing so to do, finally admitted that the signature to the bond in suit was his, although he could not remember the specific time when he signed any particular paper. An amended answer was interposed admitting that the signature subscribed to the bond was that of the defendant, but setting up that he had been induced to execute the same by his attorney and confidential [522]*522adviser, Louis Wertheimer, who on January 15, 1909, induced him to sign three papers, one of which was the bond in suit, another a mortgage upon an interest in the estate of one Goldenberg and the third a check for $5,000 drawn by Wertheimer to defendant’s order on the Com Exchange Bank, all of which he signed relying on Wertheimer’s statements that they were documents connected with some transaction relating to property really belonging to Wertheimer and by him carried in the name of the defendant and that they involved the defendant in no personal liability to pay money, as the result of which he did not read the papers and did not know their contents or effect, Wertheimer having suppressed all knowledge of the same from him. Upon the trial when confronted with his signature to the bond and the acknowledgment thereto taken before Wertheimer as notary public, he admitted that he had signed the bond and claimed to remember perfectly the circumstances under which he had been induced to sign it by Wertheimer. He then set forth his version of the transaction, which was that Wertheimer asked him to sign some papers, saying that he (Wertheimer) had taken a mortgage for himself in defendant’s name and he wanted defendant to assign it over to him, whereupon defendant signed a paper which he claims was in blank at the time. Under the same representations he was induced to sign two other papers, one of which is the mortgage on the defendant’s interest in the Goldenberg estate and the other the check for $5,000 drawn by Wertheimer to defendant’s order. Wertheimer was the defendant’s brother-in-law and the latter allowed the former, according to his own admissions, to use his name indiscriminately and served in effect as a dummy for Wertheimer in his real estate speculations in which he was evidently largely engaged, the defendant’s only explanation of his submission to Wertheimer being that he was “ such a bulldozer ” and he “ thought he was honorable.” The defendant insisted that he never knew that one of the papera he signed was a bond and that he never intended to execute a bond. Wertheimer had been employed as attorney by Mrs. Townsend to invest $5,000 for her and she had furnished Wertheimer with the funds for süch investment. Upon the trial it appeared that Wertheimer had duly drawn a check for [523]*523$5,000, the amount of Mrs. Townsend’s deposit with him, such check being drawn by Wertheimer upon his own account in the Corn Exchange Bank to the order of Max Hirshkind, the defendant, and it bore the defendant’s indorsement upon the back thereof. There is no question whatever that Mrs. Townsend advanced this money; that the sum represented by this check was the money she had furnished to be invested for her; and that Hirshkind indorsed the check over and it was redeposited in Wertheimer’s bank account. The bond in suit was produced by plaintiffs and offered in evidence by them upon the trial. The defendant denied knowing what the check was which he indorsed or that it was a check for $5,000. He does not seem to have had sufficient curiosity to look at what he was signing although he must have known he was indorsing his name on a check from the size and appearance of the paper; but he asked no questions and, according to his story, followed blindly the instructions and relied upon the representations made to him by Wertheimer, who, of course, is now dead. He denied any knowledge of Mrs. Townsend or any transactions with her. Numerous discrepancies appear in the defendant’s testimony and many contradictions were disclosed which he was unable to explain, which, however, went to the question of his credibility. The trial court overruled the request of the defendant’s attorney to have submitted to the jury certain questions of fact indicated by him and directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs. These questions were: First, did Max Hirshkind execute and deliver to the decedent, Alice S. Townsend, or to Louis Wertheimer, her agent and attorney, the bond in suit; second, was the bond in suit founded upon a valuable consideration therefor moving from Alice S. Townsend to the defendant, Max Hirshkind; third, was the execution of the bond in suit on the part of the defendant, Max Hirshkind, induced by fraud and deception practiced upon him, the defendant, Max Hirshkind, by Louis Wertheimer, the agent and attorney of Alice S. Townsend, in the matter of investing the sum of $5,000 which the plaintiff claims this bond in* suit represents.

It is apparent that unless the defendant’s version of his transactions with Wertheimer is insufficient to constitute a defense [524]*524to the plaintiffs’ right to recover upon the bond in suit the direction of a verdict was improper and this judgment must be reversed. The manifest contradictions and falsities in defendant’s testimony would affect his credibility but would not warrant disregarding it entirely. But an examination of the record satisfies us that even accepting the defendant’s story as true, the facts narrated do not constitute a defense. The appellant contends that since his version of the transaction showed that he was induced to execute the bond in suit by the fraud of Mrs. Townsend’s agent and attorney, Wertheimer, legal fraud imputable to her was established and her representatives' are chargeable with the consequence of the false representations made by her agent, and -that, as neither she nor her estate can reap the benefits of the fraud and recover upon the bond, without adopting and becoming chargeable with the fraud of Wertheimer, hence such fraud is a perfect defense upon the bond. For this proposition he relies largely upon Garner v. Mangam (93 N. Y. 642); Krumm v. Beach (96 id. 398), and Fairchild v. McMahon (139 id. 290). In none of these cases, however, nor in any other case cited by the appellant, does the fact exist that the agent in perpetrating the fraud did so for his own benefit and for the purpose of defrauding his principal. I believe this case comes squarely within the doctrine laid down in Henry v. Allen (151 N. Y. 1). In that case Henry intrusted money to one Monson for deposit at various times with the defendants, who were bankers.

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Related

Moore v. . Metropolitan National Bank
55 N.Y. 41 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Garner v. . Mangam
93 N.Y. 642 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Shipman v. Bank of New York
27 N.E. 371 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
Henry v. . Allen
45 N.E. 355 (New York Court of Appeals, 1896)
Allen v. South Boston Railroad
5 L.R.A. 716 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
176 A.D. 520, 163 N.Y.S. 498, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-hirshkind-nyappdiv-1917.