United States v. John A. Kaye

251 F.2d 87
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1958
Docket24612_1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 251 F.2d 87 (United States v. John A. Kaye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. John A. Kaye, 251 F.2d 87 (2d Cir. 1958).

Opinion

J. JOSEPH SMITH, District Judge.

This is an appeal by John A. Kaye from a judgment of conviction entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on trial before Judge Palmieri and a jury, on a verdict of guilty on two counts, the first of violation of 18 U.S.C. § 479 by wilfully uttering with intent to defraud two counterfeit Kingdom of Belgium bonds, the second of conspiracy to violate 18 U.S.C. § 479 by negotiating 244 of the same counterfeit bonds. Kaye was sentenced to imprisonment for two years on each count, to run concurrently, and fined $2500 on the first count.

There was evidence that Kaye was a licensed securities broker who was acquainted with Evangelista (Evans), an ex-prize fighter. Evans in October of 1949 brought in to Kaye two counterfeit Kingdom of Belgium $1000 7% gold bonds of 1955. At Kaye’s request his cashier obtained a quotation from Kaye’s broker. The quotation was about 116% ($1165 for a $1000 bond). Wheeler, employed at a bank, told by Kaye he had an opportunity to buy Belgium bonds below the market, warned Kaye to be careful about the sellers. Kaye told Wheeler they were European refugees. Earlier in the year Kaye had informed one Arthur Baum, president of First Guardian. Securities Company, that he would like-to arrange a loan for Better Products Company, using foreign bonds as collateral. The day after receiving the two-bonds from Evans, Kaye, with Henry-Winston, president of Super Electric-Company, a company which First Guardian had been financing, had lunch with. Baumi and Baum’s brother. Kaye proposed to Baum that First Guardian loan. $150,000 to Better Products, Belgium 7’s. of 1955 to be used as collateral. It was. proposed that part of the collateral loan, be used to reduce Super Electric’s indebtedness to First Guardian. Baum-asked if Kaye’s people would sell the-bonds instead and Kaye said “yes.” They agreed on a sale of 250 bonds of $1000* each, at a price of 60, or $600 a bond, plus. $50 commission for Kaye per bond. Kaye-attributed the low price to disagreement, between the refugees, who had their-money in Better Products and wanted; to get out and Young, who he falsely said, was an officer of Better Products. Kaye-gave Baum one of the bonds, and later-that day a second one, for which two. bonds Baum paid Kaye $1200. Baumi later that day sold the two bonds through a broker for $1120 each. On the following Saturday Baum came to Kaye’s house* *89 to close the deal. He paid $1200 cash for two more bonds and paid $7000 cash as down payment for the rest of the bonds to be delivered. After Evans, described by Kaye as Young’s messenger, came to the Louse Kaye gave Baum a bundle containing 242 more bonds. Baum rejected two, one because it was coffee stained. Kaye explained that the refugees had smuggled the bonds out of Europe in coffee pots. Baum agreed to pay $50,000 in cash the following Monday, the balance in one week. That evening Kaye went to Baum’s house in Riverdale and told Baum Young didn’t want the bonds out over the week-end. Baum falsely represented he had delivered them to a customer in New Rochelle. Baum was willing to pay the balance of the purchase price. Checks were made out several different ways, finally as two checks to Kaye’s order for $46,400 and $99,600. The checks were taken by Kaye out to two men in a car, who rejected them and came into the house. The two untidy and unkempt men were introduced by Kaye to Baum as Young’s messengers, Lennie and Joe. After further negotiations at home and at a restaurant the 240 bonds were returned to Kaye, the deal to be completed the next day directly with Young. At that point Baum had given $7000 cash on the purchase of the 240 bonds to Kaye, of which $4000 had been turned over to Evans. Kaye gave Baum his own check for $4000 to insure Baum against loss of the $4000, and agreed to retain the other $3000 pending closing of the deal. Later he gave the $3000 to Evans. Sunday, the Baums were introduced to Young and arrangements made to complete the deal Monday. Monday before the time set for closing Baum checked a list of the bond numbers, which he had compiled without Kaye’s knowledge, with J. P. Morgan & Company and learned that many of the bonds of those numbers had been redeemed and destroyed or cancelled. When he told Kaye this in Lennie’s presence Kaye said the deal was off and told Lennie to go to Young and get Baum’s money back. Lennie (co-defendant Berger) left and never returned. Kaye took Baum to Young’s office and was told by Young that Young actually had nothing to do with the bond deal. The investigation, indictment of Kaye, Evans, Berger and John Doe, the “Joe” of the negotiations, and conviction of Kaye, Evans and Berger followed. “Joe” had died in the meantime.

The principal ground of Kaye’s attack on the judgment against him is a claimed insufficiency of evidence of Kaye’s knowledge that the bonds were counterfeit. The evidence on this point, from which the jury could draw an inference of such knowledge, although circumstantial, was considerable. It included (1) the price at which Kaye was to, and did offer the bonds, $650 each when the market price was over $1100 each, (2) the source of the bonds, Evangelista (Evans) an ex-prize fighter who did not claim ownership, (3) Wheeler’s warning to Kaye that they might be stolen, (4) Kaye’s original efforts to place them as security for a loan where detection of their spurious nature might have been longer delayed, and later belief by Kaye that Baum was placing the bonds with a private buyer the butcher Buxbaum, where again the probability of prompt and careful checking of their genuineness would be slight, (5) the disreputable appearance of the messengers of the purported owner, (6) the misrepresentation by Kaye of Young’s business and connection with the bonds, (7) the many contradictions in Kaye’s pre-trial and trial statements, and (8) Kaye’s unsatisfactory explanations of his actions. Kaye contends that this evidence failed to show knowledge the bonds were counterfeited rather than stolen. There was sufficient evidence to make this a question for the jury, for as the government points out, knowledge of counterfeiting is the more logical since Kaye would have expected so large a theft to have been widely known among dealers in securities, and Kaye had testified before the grand jury that he gave no thought to that possibility (theft), and that he knew they were not blocked assets. The issue of knowledge of counterfeiting was plainly *90 before the jury on the charge, and the jury’s awareness and consideration of the issue are placed beyond doubt by the jury’s request for additional instructions.

Testimony of an Atlantic City police officer of the apprehension of the' defendant co-conspirator Berger hiding in a clothes closet of an Atlantic City apartment was received in evidence as” against Berger alone. Testimony of the defendant eo-conspirator Evans before the grand jury was admitted in evidence as against Evans alone. Defendant Kaye attacks as prejudicial to him the admission of evidence of Berger’s flight and Evans’ post-conspiracy statements. Proper instructions were given limiting the use of this testimony in the case against Berger only and Evans only respectively. In view of the limitation at the time of the admission of the evidence and in the charge, the denial of a mistrial on the ground of prejudice to Kaye was not error. Delli Paoli v. U.

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Bluebook (online)
251 F.2d 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-john-a-kaye-ca2-1958.