Wolf v. United States

238 F. 902, 152 C.C.A. 36, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1399
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 1916
DocketNo. 1433
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 F. 902 (Wolf v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf v. United States, 238 F. 902, 152 C.C.A. 36, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1399 (4th Cir. 1916).

Opinions

KNAPP, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiffs in error, Sam Wolf and Benjamin Wolf, who are brothers, were both convicted of. concealing property in violation of section 29b of the Bankruptcy Act. There is no reason to doubt the guilt of Benjamin Wolf, and the only question here, assuming that demurrers to the indictments were properly overruled, is whether the evidence against Sam Wolf was sufficient to warrant submission to the jury.

The record shows these facts: For the last 11 years and upwards Sam Wolf has lived and carried on, apparently with some success, a mercantile business at Johnson’s, S. C. Prior to that he was a peddler. In the early part of 1913 he started another store at Aiken, some 30 miles distant, which he conducted, with the aid of Benjamin Wolf, for about a year in his own name. He then had the business incorporated, as the Aiken Dry Goods Company, for the reason, as he says, that he was only able to run the store at Johnson’s, and so turned over the Aiken store to his brother. How the capital stock was divided between them, or otherwise owned, is not disclosed; but Sam Wolf was president of the company, and Ben Wolf its secretary and treasurer. The latter, according to the proof, had entire charge of the business. He bought all the goods, attended to the sales with the help of a clerk, and generally to all appearance managed the store as though it belonged to himself. Sam Wolf came over from Johnson’s more or less frequently, sometimes once a week, sometimes once a month, or at longer intervals. Many of his visits, perhaps the greater number, w,ere made on Sunday. Upon this point his own testimony is not materially different from that of the government’s witnesses. What he did when there is not shown, [904]*904nor the length of his stay on any occasion. In short, except the fact that he was president of the company and now and then visited the store, there is no evidence whatever that he knew anything about the condition of the business, or had any reason to suspect that his brother, in the fall of 1914, was secretly removing to other places/a considerable portion of the stock of goods then on hand.

In January, Í915, the Aiken Dry Goods Company was adjudicated an involuntary bankrupt, and a trustee appointed in due course. It was found upon investigation that Benjamin Wolf, some two or three months before, had taken from the store large quantities of merchandise, mostly shoes and men’s clothing, and concealed the same at two farmhouses in the country, each about a dozen miles away but in different directions from Aiken. The goods taken to one of these places were carried by the farmer who owned it, and he testified that he did so at the request of Ben Wolf and some time in the month of November. The goods taken to the other place were shown to have been carried there by Ben Wolf himself about the last of September or first of October. The property thus discovered was turned over to the trustee and sold by him in March, 1915. Not long afterwards both brothers were indicted.

The testimony at the trial covers nearly 60 pages of the printed record, but the bulk of it relates solely to the matters just mentioned, the finding of a quantity of merchandise at the two 'farmhouses, its identification as part of the stock of the Aiken store, its transfer to town and deliver}'' to the trustee, and its appraisal and sale by him. Of proof that even tends to connect Sam Wolf in any way with the removal or concealment of this property there is not the slightest word. Indeed, so far as he is concerned, the evidence is not only, unconvincing but exceedingly meager. Whilst the guilt of Ben Wolf was abundantly proven, the .case against Sam Wolf appears to rest wholly upon inference and conjecture.

In saying this we do not overlook the claim that Sam Wolf on one occasion directed Powell, the clerk, to buy tickets and check three trunks to Johnson’s. The fact asserted, however, is by no means established. Powell virtually denies it on the witness stand, though he seems to admit, in answer to a question including other-elements, that he so told the government’s representatives the night before. Without reviewing his testimony in detail, it is sufficient to note that as a witness he refuses to say that the trunks were checked at Sam Wolf’s direction; nor does he concede, when the specific question is put to him, that he had so stated in the district attorney’s office. On the contrary, he avers positively that Sam Wolf did not give him the money for the tickets, and adds, “I don’t think he was there that day.” It is also to be noted that Powell was not asked whose trunks they were, when they were brought there, from what part of the store they were taken, whether he knew anything about their contents, nor, strangely enough, to whom the checks and tickets were delivered. In short, and to say the least, the proo'f that Sam Wolf directed the shipment of these trunks is far from persuasive. But assuming he did, or that a jury might so find, we are quite unable to see that it indicates any wrong[905]*905doing on his part. Powell says, and nothing appears to the contrary, that it was a common occurrence to ship trunks from this store, that drummers very often left their trunks there, that goods sold to customers were frequently sent out in trunks and' boxes, and that he shipped the trunks in question “like I always did the others/’ In a word, taking all the testimony into account, it seems to us that the incident here considered cannot fairly be regarded as even suspicious; and this impression is confirmed by the fact that no effort appears to have been made to trace the movement of these trunks, to find out whether they were actually taken to Johnson’s, and, if so, what was done with them when they got there, or to ascertain whether there were any goods in the store at that place, or elsewhere under Sam Wolf’s control, which had previously been in the Aiken store. Moreover, on the government’s theory that Sam Wolf was conspiring with his brother to remove and conceal a large portion of the Aiken stock, it is certainly a tax upon credulity to suppose that he would openly engage in sending by public conveyance trunks of merchandise from that stock to his own store at Johnson’s. In other words, the circumstance of which so much is sought to be made is fully consistent with.honest purpose; it is absurdly inconsistent with criminal intent. Granting that it happened, we are of opinion that it gives rib support to the charge against Sam Wolf.

[1, 2] The case against him, then, rests wholly upon the fact that he was president of the Aiken Company and visited the store from time to time as above stated. Is this sufficient to justify the jury in finding a verdict of conviction? We are constrained, after careful study of the record, to answer this question in the negative, and our reasons for so concluding will be briefly outlined. To begin with, the testimony shows that the goods removed by Ben Wolf were carried away in trunks and packing cases, leaving the pasteboard boxes, or cartons, in which they had been kept for sale, standing on the shelves. Smoak, the trustee, says they found a great many empty boxes in sight in the store, with others having in them little or nothing of value, and he repeats the statement that if these boxes had been full of goods there would not have been any bankruptcy. The only reasonable inference from this is that the store to all appearance contained the usual stock of merchandise. That is to say, it looked just the same after the depletion as it did before. There was nothing open to the eye which would suggest what Ben Wolf had done.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kelly v. United States
194 F.2d 150 (D.C. Circuit, 1952)
Dodson v. United States
23 F.2d 401 (Fourth Circuit, 1928)
Barron v. United States
5 F.2d 799 (First Circuit, 1925)
Conetto v. United States
251 F. 42 (Ninth Circuit, 1918)
Sparks v. United States
241 F. 777 (Sixth Circuit, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 F. 902, 152 C.C.A. 36, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-united-states-ca4-1916.