173 A.D. 734 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The defendant Harry Aronson applied to the First National Bank of Brooklyn, N. Y., for discount of a note of $1,000 dated November 17, 1913, made by the Portia Cloak Manufacturing Company, Incorporated, and another note for $2,000 dated December 11, 1913, made by the Golden Fleece Knitting Mills. The said Harry Aronson was president of the Portia Oloak Manufacturing Company and did business under the trade name of Golden Fleece Knitting Mills. Both notes were indorsed by his wife, Ida Aronson. The bank refused to discount these notes until Ida Aronson, the indorser, made and filed with it a statement of her assets and liabilities. On November 21,1913, she signed a statement that she owned No. 142 Monroe street, a three-story brick building in New York, valued at $42,000, mortgaged for $20,000, equity $22,000, and that she had no other liabilities except the two notes in question. This statement was false and must have been known to Ida Aronson to be false, as she swore in supplementary pro ceedings that she had conveyed the property to Monroe & Market Company, a corporation, in Septembei1 of 1913. The statement furnished the bank, as above stated, contained the following: “I consider myself to be worth at least $20,000. The above statement is made for the purpose of obtaining credit from the First National Bank, Brooklyn, N. Y., and in consideration of the granting of such credit to me by said bank it is hereby agreed,” etc. The bank refused to give the defendant Harry Aronson money without this statement; it received the statement, and in reliance thereon discounted the two notes. It is proved by positive testimony that Ida Aronson knew this statement to be false. It is proved by circumstantial evidence, viz., the control of the property by Harry, that he, Harry Aronson, knew the statement to be false. By means of the false and fraudulent statement Harry Aronson obtained the bank’s money. Section 1293b of the Penal Law (as added by Laws of 1912, chap. 340) makes it a misdemeanor to obtain property or credit by use of a false statement. Both these defendants have been convicted of violating this section.
In my opinion both these defendants are very fortunate in not having been prosecuted for larceny in obtaining money by means of false pretenses.
Motion for certificate of reasonable doubt denied.