Jake the Barber.htm
LUCK AND WITLESS VIRTUE vs. GUILE IN WHICH AN ENGLISH CLERGYMAN
PROVES THE NEMESIS OF JOHN ("JAKE THE BARBER") FACTOR, alias J. WISE, alias
H. GUEST
By Thomas Chalfont McConnell
Delivered to
The Chicago Literary Club March 1, 1943
Copyright 1943 by The Chicago Literary
Club
JOHN JACOB FACTOR is now serving a ten-year sentence in a federal
penitentiary for a crime which fell far below the standard of performance he set for himself in
England. The only point of similarity to the subject matter of this paper is that the complaining
witness in the recent federal prosecution, which terminated Factor's career, was a
clergyman.
In England, Factor acquired an enormous reputation as a
financial swindler, ranking along with Hatry and Jabez Balfour in the amount of public interest his
exploits aroused. His English victims were not little people but members of the aristocracy and
leaders in the professions, and many of the letters found in his companies files bore the crest of
nobility. As one instance, I recall a letter from a man now high in the counsels of the British
government referring to a basket of trout caught on that day and forwarded to "Jake" in gratitude
for valued advice.
Factor's picture is probably familiar to most of you.
He is small in stature, not over five feet four inches in height, and at the time I knew him he
weighed around one hundred and fifty pounds and was quite unprepossessing in his general
appearance. He had a dark, swarthy complexion and Semitic features and possessed the ability to
light up his countenance with a friendly and disarming smile and to become most ingratiating
when about to sever you from all your worldly goods. He could also, when it served his purpose,
switch off the charm and assume an expression which revealed him as an evil-tempered and
thoroughly vicious man.
Generally, however, he practiced the adage that to
betray confidence you must first obtain it. While he used many employees and associates, he was
essentially a lone operator and went to great lengths to disassociate himself personally from his
various enterprises. He trusted his associates with tremendous sums of money and shared very
little of it with them. Apparently there is honor of a sort among thieves, because, with the possible
exception noted in this paper, there is no evidence that any of his associates ever held out
anything or levied any tribute.
One of the chief reasons that Factor used
associates was that he was illiterate and had difficulty in even writing his name. He could not
write checks or instructions, and I doubt if he could read much more than his name. However, he
had an intimate knowledge of human psychology and the affairs of the stock market. There is not
the slightest question of his innate ability, which, if put to use to better ends, would have brought
him legitimate success.
He had not the slightest compunction for his victims
and was without a trace of loyalty toward those who assisted him in his ventures, abandoning
them to their respective fates when he fled England taking all the profits with
him.
He was described in a recent editorial in the Chicago Tribune as
"the only impresario who ever managed to work lend lease in reverse." I here attempt to show
exactly how he did it without adopting the customary procedure of deleting amounts, names,
dates, places, etc.
I do not claim, nor do I wish to create the
impression of claiming, professional credit for the success of the Faber suit. As an English lawyer
would put it, I was "led" throughout that litigation by a well-known Chicago lawyer by the name
of John H. S. Lee. It is as an observer on the scene that I seek to write a story never fully told
before, and the use of the personal pronoun is adopted to avoid awkwardness in the telling. No
attempt is made to describe the personal experiences of the writer through a glorious summer in
an England living in a happier day. The English lawyers with whom I lived and worked gradually
grew to accept me as among those present and made possible many opportunities to observe
matters of interest in the law courts and to watch the best of the English barristers in action. For
that chance to gain some slight familiarity with the system of jurisprudence upon which our own
is based, I give grateful acknowledgment to the little clergyman whose stubborn British virtues
made the following narrative possible. In the fall of the year 1928 the Reverend Arthur
Travis Faber, a clergyman of the Church of England, then enjoying the living of a parish in Leeds,
came into a small inheritance of some three thousand pounds. At that time he had been
negotiating over the matter of a dowry for his daughter, whose intended marriage was one of love
plus certain customary marital arrangements. Even with the inheritance, he was still far short of
his prospective son-in-law's demands. It was a good match, and Faber did not want to lose it. He
was on the lookout for some means of increasing his inheritance. In the vernacular, he was "on the
make" and "ripe for a taking." At about this time one Jacob Factorovitz, later shortened to Factor,
popularly known as "Jake the Barber" because of his former connection as a chore boy with his
brother Max's cut-rate shop on Halsted Street, was embarking on the promotion of a brighter
future for a half-dead but respected publication, known as the Financial Recorder. This, however,
was not to be a purely altruistic endeavor. Factor had plans in which his own personal
fortunes were also to be refurbished. But I am ahead of my story. Some months previously
at Toronto, Canada, while awaiting the dying-down of an investigation of a little promotion in
oil-shale lands, Factor had struck up an acquaintance with one Captain Alexander Clarence
Bowles. This gentleman had an extraordinary military record in the last war and came from a
good family, but at the moment was down on his luck. He was preoccupied with the problem
of where to find the wherewithal for a return to his home in England. Factor was impressed by
his soldierly appearance, his rank, and by the fact that he wore the ribbon of the Victoria Cross,
but chiefly because he could write initials after his name which would look good on a
letterhead. In short, Bowles had all the requisites of a "front" behind which Factor could
operate.
Bowles left Toronto with one hundred and fifty pounds of what I
suppose to have been oil-shale money. Upon his arrival in London he purchased a respectable
weekly financial paper founded in 1862, known as the Financial Recorder, and its
subscription lists. The purchase price was one thousand pounds, one hundred pounds down and
the balance in instalments. Bowles later testified that all he agreed to do was to permit the use
of his name on the masthead and publish what Factor told him to. Incidentally, on the list of
subscribers to this paper was the name of Arthur Travis Faber. No immediate change in the
character of the paper was evident. Bowles drew a weekly stipend of ten pounds and
apparently conducted the paper under the guidance of writers who had been in the paper's
employ for years.
Some weeks later, a Mr. J. Wise appeared in London
and took up residence at the Mayfair Hotel. He opened an account of one thousand pounds in the
Midland Bank. In order to open this account, he had to sign his name. Later comparison showed
that the signatures of J. Wise and J. Factor were undoubtedly written by the same
hand.
The next issues of the Financial Recorder carried a slight
innovation, in that in a box on the front page was shown the paper's recommendation to invest in
the shares of "Swears and Wells," which were due to have a substantial rise on the London
Exchange and might be purchased through Tyler, Wilson, and Company, with whom the paper
had made satisfactory arrangements. From a gentle recommendation in the earlier issues, this
advice became more urgent. "Buy Swears and Wells Now" became the caption in this customary
box. In the next few issues the paper was able to announce substantial profits for its clients in
these shares, due to the fact that most of the subscribers were buying them.
The shares had advanced several points, and outside buyers were beginning to take an
interest. Faber, reading his issue of the paper, saw the answer to his personal problem. He
bought "Swears and Wells," and, sure enough, the stock continued to advance. A few days later
he received a telegram from the paper advising him to sell and cash his profit. He followed this
recommendation, and, strangely enough, he received a check for his principal plus his
profit.
So far, Factor was engaged in an activity known in England as
share pushing. His chance for profit was limited to the rise in the value of the shares which he
himself had purchased for his own account. This profit was much too small to hold his interest. It
is not surprising, therefore, that the next issue announced that the paper had acquired an option
on all the shares of Hecla Consolidated Gold Mines Ltd., and that while these shares were not yet
registered on the Exchange, their immediate listing was contemplated, and that then their rise
would be even more emphatic than that of "Swears and Wells. Faber saw the recommendation of
the paper and was in on the ground floor. Succeeding issues carried advices to buy, but there was
no expected telegram to sell Hecla Consolidated. In fact, there was no place where they could be
sold. Subscribers of the Financial Recorder had by that time invested over two hundred thousand
pounds in these shares. There were inquiries in the City about the company. Since no such
company existed, except in the realm of fantasy, it was a little difficult to find out anything about
it.
Then like an avalanche the investors descended upon Bowles. Writ
followed writ. He consulted with Factor and was told to try and settle with the subscribers by
offering them no more than ten shillings to the pound.
Bowles was quite
successful in the adjustments with the clients, and with something less than one hundred thousand
pounds was able to settle the claims that is, all but one, the claim of Arthur Travis Faber. After a
number of calls on Bowles, Faber had listened with growing impatience to his story of misfortune
with the Hecla shares and to the various explanations as to why the company had never been
registered. He immediately realized that his stock was worthless, but nevertheless was shrewd
enough to see that there was money in the till sufficient to pay all his investment plus the
customary profit, and so threatened that if he did not get it, he would make a horrible example out
of Bowles.
Factor, in the meantime, had decided that it might be
prudent and the better part of valor to remove himself from the reach of the process of the British
courts, and he was then living at the Hotel Carlton in Paris. Bowles, worried and distracted, made
a hurried trip across the Channel to see him and to try and prevail upon him to pay Faber in full.
Factor, of course, appreciated the practical turn of Faber's mind. He saw no humor in it and
assumed an attitude of righteous indignation. Bowles was instructed to tell Faber that he, Factor,
"would see him in hell before he would pay him a cent."
After receiving
this message, Faber sued Bowles and Factor in a civil suit, but he was never able to obtain service
on Factor. After months of delay and a lengthy litigation, he obtained a judgment against Bowles
for two thousand three hundred and seventy pounds and costs. On supplementary proceedings he
was able to determine that a balance of something over one hundred and seven thousand pounds
in cash had been withdrawn by Bowles from the bank accounts of the Financial Recorder.
However, by that time, the whereabouts of Bowles was unknown.
While
all this was going on, an outside brokerage house by the name of the Broad Street Press Ltd., run
in conjunction with an old established financial weekly called Finance, was creating quite a stir in
the City. It was organized with a capital of five thousand pounds divided into one thousand
ordinary shares of one pound each. It was registered by Mr. Barnett Leon Elman, a solicitor,
who later served three years in Dartmoor Prison for his part in the affair. The shareholders were
clerks in Elman's office, and the original capital was paid into the company bank account at
Barclay's Bank from the account of Mr. H. Guest in the North of Scotland
Bank.
The company procured through Frederick Newberry a large
block of shares in a company known as Asbestos and Holdings Trust Ltd. It then invited its
clients to participate in the same sort of "jingle" which had fooled Faber. They first purchased
shares in Triplex Safety Glass, which were listed on the London Exchange, and were very
shortly afterward informed to their great delight that the shares had advanced in price. As a
variation to the Financial Recorder scheme, the clients were not urged to sell and cash their profit,
and in fact very few transactions for their accounts were actually concluded. Factor had by now
enough money to push these shares up marketwise through his own operations, and the clients
whose confidence had thus been completely gained were then advised to put their money in the
shares of the Asbestos Company. To a very large extent this recommendation was
followed.
By April of the year 1930 the complete success of the plan was
evidenced by the fact that the Asbestos shares had been completely exhausted, and, to supply
the demand, it was necessary to acquire shares in some other company. Accordingly, Newberry
was again consulted, and on April 28 a company known as Vulcan Copper Mines Ltd. was
registered and 1,660,400 of its shares unloaded on the British public. By July, 1930, all the
Vulcan shares had been sold, and the Broad Street Press in its enthusiasm had sold 66,400 more
shares than were registered. Again through Newberry, on July 22, the Rhodesia Border
Mining Corporation was registered, and 1,242,200 of its shares sold to the public. Since only
1,000,000 of these shares were actually registered, the company had sold almost a quarter of a
million shares above the authorized capital. However, this sale of unregistered stock was not a
matter of any great moment because, as might be anticipated, none of these companies had assets
of any greater value than the paper on which their shares were printed.
In October, 1930, a Miss Edith Oerum, who had paid in six thousand pounds to the
Broad Street Press in the manner indicated, consulted a London firm of solicitors named
Wordsworth, Marr, Johnson, and Shaw. This firm, although it had a most lucrative practice,
including the representation of the Amsterdam diamond cartel, might have stepped right out
of a Dickens novel. When I first met them, I discovered that, except for Wordsworth, the
grandson of the founder of the firm, any resemblance between the firm name and any living
solicitor was purely coincidental. The firm had been in existence for more than one hundred
years and had just renewed its lease at 139 Lombard Street in the City of London for a further
period of sixty-five years.
Its method of conducting business was
unique, if not refreshing. The clerks and stenographic force appeared on the scene at ten in
the morning the partners a half to three-quarters of an hour later. The work of the partners was
done between that time and two in the afternoon. At half-past two all the partners went to
lunch in the back room of an oyster shop around the corner from Lloyd s. The lunch usually
consisted of oysters or shell fish and chips. The shop was not licensed so they provided their own
wine. The lunch lasted most of the afternoon. At around five o clock they all returned to
chambers. Then the letters would be signed and a conference held with the managing clerks, who
were doing all the work, following which their rubbers and umbrellas would be brought in and
they would all depart for homes where they could not be reached by that abomination known as a
telephone.
The furniture of the Wordsworth chambers apparently had
originated with the firm; it defied description. The carpet in the reception room had come
untacked so that it caught the door every time anyone attempted to enter; no one could ever be
bothered to take the five minutes necessary to tack it down again. The contraption they called a
water closet never worked. When I called this feature to the attention of the managing clerk, he
told me not to be disturbed about it that it never had really worked well. The offices of the
partners were heated by coal grates. Along the walls the floors were stacked with old parchment
briefs, rolled and tied with faded ribbons and incrusted with accumulated dust. At four in the
afternoon, while the partners were still at lunch, all work in the office stopped for tea, brought in
to the clerks by the stenographers. This routine had evidently gone on for years and I am sure it
still does, in spite of war, bombs, hell, or high water.
On November 10,
1930, this firm, proceeding in a leisurely manner, procured an order to permit it in due course to
institute proceedings to wind up the affairs of the Broad Street Press and later the Vulcan and the
Rhodesia companies. By the middle of February of the fol lowing year they had discovered that
Jacob Factor, operating under the alias of H. Guest, had withdrawn from the company between
June 13 and October 27, 1930, the sum of seven hundred and nine thousand one hundred and
eight pounds sterling. As against this amount, he as was credited with one hundred and four
thousand two hundred and twenty-eight pounds, leaving a net amount of monies paid to his
account of six hundred and four thousand eight hundred and eighty pounds.
By this time the Wordsworth firm was finally convinced that it was dealing with an affair
which presented financial irregularity. Scotland Yard was then called in. On that day, their City
inspector committed suicide. The accounts of the Broad Street Press showed that he had had
phenomenal success in gauging the interim movements of the London Stock Exchange. He had
no losses, and his cashed profits exceeded ten thousand pounds. The resulting investigation by
Scotland Yard furnished the basis for the issuance of an extradition warrant calling on the United
States ns government to surrender Jacob Factor for trial in England on the charge of violating
the British Larceny Act.
Prior to the service of this writ, a law firm in
Chicago headed by the late Senator Charles S. Deneen, with which I was associated, received a
letter from Faber's solicitors. It described the proceedings against Bowles and stated: "Though
we are not in a position at the moment to give you any definite evidence on the point, we
entertain no doubt that the cash withdrawn by Bowles was received by Jacob Factor. He has been
known over here for some years as a notorious share pusher." This letter then stated: "If you
advise that there is a reasonable prospect of success in any proceedings which you might think fit
to take against Jacob Factor, the necessary funds to prosecute the claim can be obtained in one
way or another, perhaps by raising a fund from the defrauded persons. At this juncture, however,
no steps have been taken in this direction, and we should be gratified therefore if you will bear in
mind that we are directed to limit your costs to one hundred pounds." Since the word "costs" in
the English sense means fees, this letter aroused no enthusiasm among the senior members of the
firm. There were no clues offered as to the location of any funds or as to where Factor might be
found.
One evening I arrived home to find that I was to spend an evening
at contract bridge. At the conclusion of the first table's play a desultory conversation, to which I
was paying very little attention, suddenly became of extraordinary interest. The other gentleman at
the table, who was an employee of a Chicago bank, started to describe a little fellow by the name
of John Factor who that very afternoon had been in the trust department of the bank to deposit a
million dollars worth of British War Loan Bonds for investment in a trust. He went on to say that
when he expressed some surprise at the amount involved, Factor had told him that he had just
finished establishing another million dollar trust at the First National Bank. Being somewhat
suspicious of the transaction, he had checked this information at the First National and had been
advised that Factor's statement was entirely true. Forty-eight hours later the Reverend Faber was
advised by cable that he had instituted suit in the federal court on behalf of himself and all those
similarly situated to impress a trust on a fund of two million dollars in the hands of two of the
largest banks in the city of Chicago. A few days later, Factor surrendered for arrest under the
extradition warrant and was then served with process in the Faber suit.
To understand what follows, it is necessary for me to explain the essential features of the
legal theory upon which this suit was predicated. The letter of Faber's counsel had been very
sketchy as to facts. No information was given as to the activities of the Broad Street Press.
However, it took no mental genius to grasp the obvious fact that these two trust funds must
represent the fruits of Factor's activity in England. So in the Faber suit it was alleged that the
money in the trusts was the identical money, or its proceeds, received by Factor from Faber and
other British subjects similarly situated.
After the suit was started, an
explanatory letter was written to Faber advising him to start to work on the raising of the
promised fund to pay expenses. He sought the aid of a Mr. Pepys, the senior official receiver
under the British Companies Act, and after lengthy conversations persuaded him to authorize the
Wordsworth firm to forward the claims of Edith Oerum and other clients of the Broad Street
Press with directions authorizing their intervention as co-plaintiffs in his suit. He also obtained the
promise of the receiver to circularize the clients of the Broad Street Press in order to raise a fund
to pay the costs.
After Edith Oerum joined the suit, the following situation
was presented. Faber sued on behalf of all persons similarly situated, but the other clients of the
Financial Recorder had all released their claims, and he was not similarly situated with the clients
of the Broad Street Press, unless his specific money could be traced into the trust funds in
Chicago and could be described as commingled with Broad Street Press money. If this could not
be established, then Miss Gerum had no standing in his suit, and Faber's suit, in turn, could
establish no claim on the trust funds, so that the net result of it all would be that both claims
would fail. If they did fail, the funds would be released by the banks, and once in Factor's hands,
the chance of rediscovering their location could by no process of thinking be considered
bright.
In addition to this difficulty, Factor's counsel had immediately
presented another. They filed a motion to dismiss the suit on the ground that Factor was a citizen
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, as were the plaintiffs, and therefore the
requisite diversity of citizenship for jurisdiction in the federal court was
lacking.
This issue was called up for early disposition, and Factor, together
with a galaxy of counsel, appeared at a hearing before Judge Wilkerson armed with a British
passport reciting that he was born at Hull, England. He also had the affidavit of a rabbi to the
effect that said affiant had attended the circumcision of a child named Jacob at Hull, being the son
of an itinerant rabbi named Factor. This evidence having been ruled insufficient, Factor himself
took the stand to testify as a witness at the event of his own birth. He finally was permitted to
testify that he had seen his name inscribed in the family Bible as having been born in 1892 at
Hull.
Both he and his counsel had overlooked the fact that in the
marriage license bureau in New York City he had filed an application to marry one Rella Cohen,
and in this document he had recited under oath that his place of birth was Chicago, Illinois. With
the appearance of a certified copy of this document, properly authenticated with a gold seal and
bright red ribbon, the defense of no diversity of citizenship died a-borning.
An interesting sidelight on the disposition of this issue was that actually Factor was the
son of an itinerant rabbi named Factorovitz and was born in a little village in a part of Russia near
the city now known as Warsaw. He had been admitted as an immigrant at the port of Philadelphia
along with father, mother, and two brothers in the year 1902. He had taken out his first
citizenship papers but not his second and was still a citizen of Russia. We had discovered these
fact from the records of the Immigration Department in our search for counterproof to his
affidavit. If he had told the truth, the case would have been dismissed because he could have
corroborated his testimony by government records. Later his counsel told me that they knew
these facts, but that Factor was obsessed with the fear of a British prosecution for a passport
fraud and refused to permit them to use this evidence. He was therefore "hoist by his own
petard" when his false marriage application destroyed the probative value of his false testimony.
With this issue behind us, we stood face to face with the real problem in the case to prove that
Faber's money was in the trust funds. As I have already pointed out, Faber had paid his money to
the Financial Recorder; Miss Oerum had paid hers to the Broad Street Press. The question was,
"What was the source of the monies in the trust funds?" The answer could only be found in
England. No one could foretell the answer until by subpoena the records of the banks which had
dealt with this money could be examined. It was a chain of proof in which every link had to be
sustained by a preponderance of the evidence, in which failure at any step of the effort must result
in complete failure of the suit.
The latter part of May, 1932, saw Mr. Lee of
the Deneen firm and myself on the old "Mauritania" bound for London. This was no pleasure trip.
The time on board was spent in earnest communion with depositions taken in the extradition
hearings held in London. These depositions referred to gambling at Le Touquet and stock-market
operations at Paris. It therefore seemed reasonable to suppose that some of the money might have
been routed through France. Our plans were therefore changed. When our boat stopped outside
the harbor of Cherbourg, I returned with the tender, bound for Paris, while Lee continued on to
Plymouth and thence to London.
On arrival at Paris, I thought from
what I knew of Factor that he would select a good hotel, so I put up at his former residence, the
Hotel Canton. It was a happy choice, being located near the Port Maillot on the Champs Elysees
and only a few blocks distant from a residence in Neuilly in which I had always stayed when en
repos during the last war. The neighborhood had many nostalgic associations for me, and, while I
had no time to renew them, this recollection gave the feeling that I was in friendly and familiar
surroundings and contributed to making the Paris visit a never-to-be-forgotten
delight.
On registering in a Paris hotel, one must fill out a slip for the
Prefecture de Police, giving the place of the registrant's birth. This information appears upon the
registry book of the hotel. Just as a matter of curiosity, I asked to see the entry made by Factor
when he had stayed at the hotel. This record showed that here in Paris, although traveling on a
British passport showing his birthplace as Hull, England, Factor had registered as having been
born at Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Upon taking up the investigation of
Factor's accounts in France, a serious difficulty was immediately presented. Under the laws of
France, a broker, banker, or other person acting in a confidential relationship to clients or
customers, who divulges any information with regard to such accounts, is guilty of an offense, the
penalty for which is two years penal servitude. Without the aid of French officials, it was
obviously impossible to get anywhere at all in the face of such a law.
Through the aid of a British solicitor doing business in Paris, an introduction was obtained to the
Director of Criminal Prosecutions in the Prefecture. To my surprise, this gentleman was not
French, but English. His name was Roberts, and, after twenty years of effort, he had
accomplished the almost impossible feat of heading a department under French Civil Service. It
would seem that he is entitled to a slight digression. He had an office in that part of the
Prefecture which dates back to the year 800. This part of the building had stood since Paris was
merely an island on a mud flat on a bend in the Seine. The windows to his office were grated slits
in a wall at least six feet thick. The window over his desk gave view to the approach to the
Prefecture and a part of the Seine. During his tenure of the office, Roberts had occupied his spare
time in making sketches of the scenes he viewed through this window. The office walls were
covered with these drawings and proved him a talented artist, and a few minutes conversation
proved him a highly cultured and extremely intelligent man. I have since wondered whether or
not his position as head of the law-enforcement division of the Civil Service might not have been
explained by some connection with the British Secret Service.
To him was submitted
the problem of how to obtain evidence in a land where to divulge it was a crime. He advised that
there was an exception to this law in that the Director of Criminal Prosecutions could compel the
production of any documents or records he might require in making an investigation. However,
there was a limitation to this exception. While the witness who provided the information was
protected from prosecution by the Prosecutor's request, he could refuse to divulge it, and upon
such refusal the maximum penalty was a fine of twenty francs, at that time eighty cents in our
money. The French court had no power to cite such refusal as a contempt, as is the common
practice here. However, the witnesses were perfectly willing to give the information, when
assured of their own immunity. This procedure thus procured the records necessary to prove the
transactions which had taken place in France.
On arrival in London, the really
serious part of the business began. We had previously determined that the source of the trust
funds in Chicago was twofold: first, the cable of one million dollars from Brown, Shipley, and
Company in London to Brown Bros., Harriman, and Company in New York by Arthur J. Klein
to Rella Factor, and, second, a registered package containing a million-dollar market value of
British War Loan Bonds sent by a broker in London to the Union Bank of Chicago as receiving
agent for a Mrs. Cohen, who was Factor's mother-in-law. We had obtained the serial numbers of
these bonds and also the name of the English broker who had forwarded them. This, then, was
the obvious starting point for further investigation.
Depositions were started
before the United States consul in London. The broker's records showed he had been put in
funds for the purchase of these bonds by cash withdrawn from the North of Scotland Bank on the
order of Arthur J. Klein. The records of that bank disclosed that these funds had been paid out of
the account of H. Guest. The memorandum in the possession of the bank justifying this charge
was what was termed a "paying-out slip." This document showed the charge to the account, the
delivery of the money to a bank messenger, and the receipt signed by the broker. The account of
H. Guest was shown to be the account of Factor by the bank manager, who, by pointing out a
photograph of Factor, identified him as the bank's customer. The bank had in its possession a
power of attorney executed by H. Guest making Arthur J. Klein his attorney in fact to check
against the account. The signature on this document was identified as that of Jacob Factor. In a
similar manner, the million dollars in currency sent by Brown, Shipley, and Company to New
York was traced back to a withdrawal by Klein from the H. Guest account in the North of
Scotland Bank. It was now necessary to trace the source of the monies which had been paid into
the account of H. Guest at the North of Scotland Bank. They totaled in all some nine hundred
thousand pounds sterling. A large part of these sums came from Barclay's Bank and the Midland
Bank, but among the deposits was a cash item of something over one hundred and seven
thousand pounds which was made at a date corresponding to the closing of the account of the
Financial Recorder in the Midland Bank.
To understand the difficulties
involved, some explanation is necessary of the nature and character of the English banking
system. There are five great branch banking systems. The banks named above are two of these
and have branches all over the City of London, throughout England, the colonies, and on the
Continent, so that a payment made to the North of Scotland Bank designated on its records as
originating from Barclay's Bank might have come from any bank belonging to the chain. It was
necessary to work down through the records of the head offices of these banks to find and
locate the particular branch involved. It is sufficient here to note that, as a result of a lot of
examination of books and records, it was ultimately disclosed that the deposits in the H. Guest
account originated in withdrawals from branches of Barclay's and the Midland with which the
Broad Street Press did business.
At the time these transactions took place, the British
banks were using a depositor's book called a "paying-in book." It was somewhat similar to the
passbook used by our own banks, but with a difference, in that the original paying-in book
belonged to the bank and remained in its possession. The entries in the book were made by the
customers and showed the number of the check deposited, the name of the drawer, the drawee
bank, and the amount. Cash deposits showed the numbers appearing on the bank notes. When a
deposit was made, the customer called for his paying-in book, made the entry, and turned the
book back to the bank. It thus constituted a statement of account made out in the handwriting of
the depositor and was thus an admission of the receipt of any items handled and gave complete
evidence of their source.
At the time the depositions were taken the paying-in books
had been superseded by deposit slips similar to our own, but the old paying-in books of the
Broad Street Press still remained in the hands of the bank, and these furnished us the evidence,
not only of payments into the account of the Broad Street Press, but also of the source of the
payments and the state of the accounts of the company with its various clients. As these
customers were as a class the persons upon whose behalf the suit was brought, and as it was their
money we were seeking to trace, these records proved a commingling of their money in a bank
account in the name of the Broad Street Press.
The mere statement of this proof can
give no adequate picture of the many technical difficulties with the evidence which counsel had to
meet and overcome. For example, British banks do not voluntarily produce their books so that
proof can be made in American courts. In fact, to produce the sort of proof of these transactions
our courts require would have disrupted the entire banking system of England, because the
customers accounts are not kept in a loose-leaf ledger, as is the practice in this country, but are
entered in longhand in a voluminous and bulky customers ledger. This ledger is in constant use in
an English bank to show the state of its accounts with its clients, and is the only permanent
record which they have. To subpoena in the books themselves would mean that the English bank
would be giving its permanent records into the jurisdiction of an American court, which in turn
might order them returned to America and thus deprive the bank of the only source of
information as to the state of its accounts.
To protect the banks from the loss
of their records, the British Parliament had passed a Banker's Act which provided that, upon a
subpoena being served, the requirements of evidence could be satisfied by certification by the
bank manager of the entries in the ledger. Under that act it was not necessary in England to
prove the making of the entries in the books or any of the foundation proof so necessary in
our courts, as the records so certified proved themselves and were admissible without
more.
As any lawyer knows, such proof would not prove anything in our
courts, and it was necessary for us in some way to devise a method of getting a record proof
which would satisfy our rules of evidence. This was done by arranging to have the bankers
photostat the entries, and then produce the books under a stipulation permitting their withdrawal
from evidence after opposing counsel were given the opportunity to use them on their
cross-examination. The photostats were then proved to be the same as the original records and
the foundation proof as to the making of the entries was put in by the testimony of the ledger
clerks. Since the British bankers were unfamiliar with what seemed to them a very queer
proceeding, they would invariably refuse to answer any question until it was arranged to have
their own counsel present. The result was that at practically every session of the taking of the
depositions, a bank manager would appear accompanied by a barrister and a solicitor, all dressed
in cutaway coats and striped trousers, prepared for a very formal and dignified noting of their
objections in the record. Whenever a question was asked, they would go into a huddle and decide
whether or not they should advise the witness to answer.
To get these bank
witnesses in the first place, it was necessary to petition the English High Court of Justice for a
subpoena calling for oral testimony and records. Counsel, of course, had no standing in the
English courts, but did have a very important looking document designated as "Letters Rogatory"
under the seal of the United States District Court, with large red ribbons attached. "Letters
Rogatory" at that time were only honored under the treaties with England in a case where the
nation itself was a party to the suit. However, the English High Court of Justice was not familiar
with this technicality, and since counsel for the banks did not point it out and counsel for the
plaintiffs were content to rest their plea on the document itself, the subpoenas issued without
difficulty.
The taking of these depositions was a day and night task, and we made the
American Club our office and headquarters. Never before or since has the staid, austere, and
thoroughly reputable American Club seen such a succession of questionable characters pass
through its portals. Examining witnesses out of court in the evening and in court by day, and with
two lawyers working continuously at the task fifteen hours a day, months were spent. As
Westbrook Pegler would say, the English lawyers went off the sled at the first turn. By the end of
the month of August, 1932, most of the technical proof had been introduced in evidence, but all
that had been done so far had only given emphasis to the most difficult problem in the entire case,
which, if not solved, threatened to defeat and negative all that had gone before.
After a tiresome succession of ledger clerks and bank witnesses and the offering into
evidence of hundreds of documents and records, and after taking the testimony of more than two
hundred witnesses, it was apparent that exactly no progress had been made in connecting up the
Faber claim with the funds of the Broad Street Press. Faber's money had been paid into the
Midland Bank. His canceled check showed the indorsement of Captain Bowles to the account of
the Financial Recorder. The record of this account showed deposits of around two hundred
thousand pounds sterling. It showed numerous withdrawals from time to time, but from the time
of the Faber deposit until the closing of the account there were always sufficient funds on hand to
cover Faber's payment.
The applicable theory of tracing is that, as between a person
wronged and the wrongdoer, money paid out of a commingled fund is presumed to belong to the
wrongdoer until the fund is exhausted. Under this theory Faber could trace down to the date of
the closing of the account, but there the trail ended in a blind alley. Bowles had closed the account
by withdrawing the balance in cash. As pointed out above, a clue had been given by the records in
the North of Scotland Bank, which showed a credit to the H. Guest account of cash in a similar,
but not identical, amount to that of the Bowles withdrawal. The dates of the withdrawal and the
deposit were only two days apart. It was therefore a moral certainty that the entry in the H. Guest
account represented a payment from Bowles to Factor of monies drawn from the Financial
Recorder account. If this could be proved, then Faber's money was commingled with the Broad
Street Press money in the account of H. Guest.
It was obvious that the
missing link of proof could only be supplied by Bowles, but where to find Bowles? Scotland
Yard was consulted, but all they could tell us was that he had not left the country, at least not
under his own name. Since the affair of the Financial Recorder some two years before, he had
dropped completely out of sight. A young lawyer named Perry, associated with the Wordsworth
firm, had met him at the time of an investigation by the senior official receiver of the affairs of the
Financial Recorder. He had talked with him and he could recognize him. Perry was assigned the
task of locating him to the exclusion of all else. He ran down all available clues, traveling to Hull,
Liverpool, and various places in Scotland. All during the time the depositions were being taken
he could report no progress. We were nearing the end of our task, and the constant subject of
discussion was when and where and if ever we might count on finding Bowles. We had finally
reached the stage of considering amendments or other ways and means of getting out from under
the legal objections to our suit which a failure to make this proof would immediately raise. We
knew that our opponents were enjoying our discomfiture. They kept asking us whether or when
we intended to put Bowles on the stand. From this we could only infer that Bowles was enjoying
himself on the Continent or in the colonies on a Factor expense account.
One
evening I invited Perry to the American Club for dinner. We took the underground and got off at
Piccadilly Circus, intending to walk the remaining distance to the Club. Now Perry had a
profound and enduring regard for an English drink named "gin and ginger." The sight of the
Piccadilly Bar caught his eye as we emerged from the underground. In the next two hours that
establishment did quite a business in Perry's favorite drink.
Comfortably installed
in an eighteenth century atmosphere, the thought of dinner at the Club had long since lost any
attraction for either of us. By this time Perry had shed his customary English reserve and was well
launched on a lengthy discourse, the topic of which, if ever remembered, has long since been
forgotten, when suddenly he stopped talking and began to listen.
There was a
telephone stall directly behind the booth in which we were sitting, and someone was having
difficulty with a number. Perry quietly disengaged himself from the table and walked behind the
booth. A few seconds later he was back introducing me to Captain Alexander Clarence Bowles,
V.C. Much later in the evening, at a restaurant in Soho, he told us all about his association with
Factor.
Needless to say, by that time we had developed quite an attachment for the
Captain, and we had no desire or intention of losing his company. He had no guest card, but
nevertheless he spent the night at the American Club with a doorman hired by the Club to keep his
like out, now hired by us to keep him in. Next morning Bowles, Perry, and I left the Club, bound
for a deposition hearing at the Linited States consul's office on Harley Street.
Bowles made an excellent witness. He testified he had withdrawn all the funds of the
Financial Recorder under directions from Factor and had met him two days later at his rooms in
the Mayfair Hotel. There he had received instructions to deposit the money in cash to the account
of H. Guest at the North of Scotland Bank. He further testified that Factor had told him to keep
for himself the sum of five hundred pounds with which to take up residence on the Continent. He
said he had made the deduction and deposited the balance, but not wishing to spend the five
hundred pounds in Continental travel he had sedulously avoided any further meeting with
Factor.
On cross-examination some considerable doubt was cast on whether Factor
had actually authorized the five hundred pound deduction, but this line of questioning only
strengthened the proof of the actual deposit of Financial Recorder funds in Factor's account.
When Bowles left the stand, no one present had the slightest doubt but that Faber's case stood
complete and beyond refutation.
Settlement talks immediately ensued. So far as
Factor's counsel and ourselves were concerned we had practically reached an agreement two days
after the conclusion of the Bowles testimony, but we had not reckoned with Mr. Pepys. This old
fuddy-duddy had all of the vices and none of the virtues of the original Pepys, who wrote the
diary. He was incensed at the thought that American lawyers were undertaking to agree about
matters within his prerogatives, so he sent around a note by messenger that the settlement
conversations were to be continued at the office of the Senior Official Receiver.
Since all of Factor's companies were in liquidation and Pepys was the liquidator, we had no
alternative but to adjourn our meetings to this place of assignation. There Mr. Pepys held court
from his desk on a little raised dais, and we sat before him at desks, feeling like little
schoolboys, while he called on us one by one for our views. He then called in scriveners to put
the suggestions in draft form. The sessions would start at eleven in the morning and continue
until two-thirty in the afternoon, at which time Pepys would ring a bell, and his clerk would
bring him his hat, coat, rubbers, and umbrella, and we were through for the day. One Friday we
had reached a point in the discussion vital to Mr. Lee and myself, in fact one might say that,
from our point of view, it was the crux of the matter, and that was the size of our fee. At this
juncture Mr. Pepys rang his bell and his clerk appeared with the customary accouterments.
Since it was only one o clock, we asked him where he was going, to which he replied that his
weekly holiday had started and that he would be back on the following Tuesday.
As Charley McCarthy would say, "That did it." Lee wrathfully announced that he was
sailing on the next boat. Factor's lawyers announced that they had made the only proposal they
were ever going to make, and he could take it or go on with the suit; that since holidays
seemed to be in season they were taking one too, and were leaving immediately for three weeks
on the Continent. Pepys never turned a hair. He calmly put on his j rubbers, his coat, and his
bowler hat, picked up his umbrella, said "Good day, gentlemen," and walked out of our
respective lives forever. Lee took the next boat, leaving to Wordsworth and myself the task
of obtaining approval of the settlement. We circularized all the victims and obtained the consent
of 94 per cent of them, and then appeared before a British court to get the approval. After the
hearing the court took under advisement a petition to approve, without prejudice to the
extradition proceedings, a net payment of some three hundred and seventy-four thousand pounds
in release of the claims of those who dealt with Factor's companies. This amount was the
approximate equivalent of the then value of the trusts established in the Chicago
banks.
Faber, however, had not completed his mission. He insisted that out of the
settlement funds he be paid the amount he had invested plus what he termed his customary profit
plus all his costs, including those incurred in the Bowles suit, plus interest at bank rates. This, in
gratitude, the other claimants were willing to concede after they found out Faber intended to
block the settlement unless they did.
Since the court had indicated that the
settlement would be approved in due course, I felt free to sail for home. I had passage on the
"Europa" and went aboard at Plymouth without awaiting the actual entry of the order. Again I
had reckoned without Pepys. When I checked in with the purser he handed me a telegram from
Wordsworth requesting me to return to London immediately to defend a petition by Pepys to
modify the settlement to permit the fixing of the attorneys fees by the English court. The purser
had also handed me a cable from my wife stating that she was meeting the boat in New York. I
went to my stateroom to consider the position. It was apparent that Pepys could do no
real damage, as Judge Wilkerson, with jurisdiction over the fund, would have the final word
regardless of what the English court might say. It was also fairly clear that Wordsworth's hand
was strengthened, on any further hearing, by my absence. The amenities of the situation, however,
still needed careful consideration. Thereupon I had an inspiration. Everyone in the case had
been addicted to holidays except myself. To an Englishman the word "holiday" connotes
something sacrosanct, a natural, inalienable, and fundamental right. Why not call this boat trip
my holiday? I then wired Wordsworth to tell Pepys that I was taking a holiday, and that if the
judge indicated an intention to amend the order of approval, to withdraw our petition, cable me
in New York, and I would return on the next boat and renew the application. On my arrival in
New York I found a cable from Wordsworth saying that the judge, in spite of Pepys objection,
had approved the settlement without amendment or modification.
Probably a
more apt title for this paper would have been "Luck and Stubborn or Shrewd Virtue vs. Guile,"
because it is quite apparent that Faber's actions in the course of this suit were far from witless.
There can, however, be no doubt about his luck. Factor prided himself on his amazing success
at games of chance. The records at Le Touquet showed that he had won almost a million francs
in competition with the best of Continental gamblers. There is a well-authenticated story that as
banker in a game of chemin de fer he had once left a future king of England living for a time on
the interest of his debts. Be that as it may, Factor couldn't win a trick from Faber.
The chances against the disclosure of the hiding place of Faber's money four thousand
miles away, by casual conversation in the presence of a person in a city of three million souls, who
had his claim in hand, far exceed any possible combinations of odds at Monte Carlo, and any
editor worth his salt would reject outright the story of Perry's meeting with Bowles as far beyond
the range of credibility.
A moralist of the High Church school would conclude that
the very Fates themselves were set in angry and retributive motion when Factor instructed Bowles
to tell a clergyman of the State Church of England to go to hell. However, no moralist could
survive the advantage, enjoyed by the writer, of studying proximate causation under the late
Joseph H. Beale. Applying Beale's theory of the latest intervening factor upon a set stage or fixed
frame of reference, there can be not the slightest scintilla of a doubt but that the success of the
Reverend Faber should be ascribed to Mr. Perry's well-developed taste for "gin and
ginger."
THIS PAPER WAS WRITTEN FOR THE CHICAGO LITERARY CLUB
AND READ BEFORE THE CLUB ON MARCH FIRST, NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
FORTY-THREE. THIS EDITION OF THREE HUNDRED AND THIRTY COPIES WAS
PRINTED FOR THE MEMBERS OF THE CLUB IN THE MONTH OF JULY, NINETEEN
HUNDRED AND FORTY-THREE.
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