154 Misc. 667 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1935
The defendants move to set aside and quash the three indictments presented by the Westchester county grand jury in the fall of 1934.
Two of these indictments, indorsed as “ No. 1 ” and “ No. 5,” respectively, charge the defendants with grand larceny in the first degree, each by two counts. The third, indorsed “ No. 3,” carries, as separate counts, an accusation of a violation of sections 952 and 926 of the Penal Law, respectively.
All of these indictments are in the simplified form, sanctioned for use in certain cases by the recent amendment to the Code
The indictment styled “ No. 1 ” is based upon a misapplication of the proceeds of an assignment of rents made by defaulting corporate mortgagor to a corporate mortgagee under circumstances upon which is based the conclusion of the individual criminal liability of the defendants as officers of the corporate mortgagee. This indictment fails as against all of the defendants except George Watson and Leverett G. Cross by the concession at the argument of the motions that the testimony before the grand jury failed to show that at the time of this misapplication any of the defendants, save those two, were officers of such mortgagee. The fact that they were not such officers was likewise conceded by the People.
The second count of the indictment, known as “ No. 3,” I understand to be not pressed by the district attorney, who frankly acknowledges the very evident fact that the grand jury minutes disclose no evidence that the guaranteed mortgage certificates in question had any “ market price,” or that the advertisement charged was made with intent to affect same.
Subject to the aforesaid ehmination as regards indictment “ No. 1,” the grand jury minutes disclose evidence that the defendants were officers in divers grade as to rank, duty and activity, of a corporation, to wit, First Mortgage and Title Company, located at New Rochelle, Westchester county, N. Y., at the time the various offenses charged are alleged to have been committed. It was the business of that corporation to deal in real estate mortgages on properties situate in that county. One of its activities was the issuance and sale of so-called guaranteed mortgage certificates, whereby, in legal effect, in consideration of certain sums paid to it, it executed its promise to pay to the holder a certain sum at a certain time, with semi-annual interest payments, and, as collateral security therefor, it deposited, from its holdings, certain first mortgages on real estate with a third party, all in pursuance of agreements as to various matters, made with the depositary and the holders of its promises to pay. The very nature of the corporation’s business thus entailed many thousands of separate transactions and involved a great amount of detail. Two of these transactions are the bases of the grand larceny indictments. The evidence before the grand jury clearly indicates that these indictments thus accuse the defendants, vicariously,
It is also my opinion that the evidence before the grand jury failed to establish that the acts charged in the bill of particulars supplementing indictment “ No. 1 ” constituted the crime charged. The application of the proceeds of the assigned rents to the corporation’s reimbursement for its prior and advance interest payments made to the holders of its certificates was done openly and avowedly under the claim of a right so to do, preferred in good faith, even though, in another case, a year later, such a claim was held to be untenable. The claim of the right to make the application which was made was a claim of title founded upon the subrogation provision in the certificates themselves as distinguished from a claim of a right to payment of an indebtedness. (Penal Law, § 1306.)
As to indictment “ No. 3,” here, too, we find no evidence before the accusing body that any of the defendants actually composed or caused the advertisement charged. Just who did so does not appear. There is some evidence that some of the defendants saw it when published, and that some or all had seen and acquiesced
All the pending motions are granted. Submit orders.