Max Steuer

Max David Steuer was an American trial attorney in the first half of the 20th century.

Max Steuer
Born September 16, 1870
Homanna (Humenne), Austria-Hungary
Died August 21, 1940 (aged 69)
Jackson, New Hampshire
Alma mater City College of New York, Columbia University Law School
Occupation Lawyer

Personal life

Steuer was born on September 16, 1870 (or 1871), in the town of Homonna, then in Austria-Hungary (now Humenne Slovakia). In 1876 he arrived in the United States with his father and mother. He attended the City College of New York from 1886 to 1889. He received his law degree from Columbia University in 1893 and was admitted to the New York state bar the same year.

Steuer married Bertha Popkin in 1897. The couple had three children: Aron, Ethel and Constance.

Steuer was active in Tammany Hall for many years, especially during the leadership of John F. Curry in the late 1920s and early 1930s. In 1938 he served as a delegate to the New York state constitutional convention.

Max Steuer died in Jackson, New Hampshire, on August 21, 1940.

Legal career

Steuer represented some plaintiffs and in some cases was a prosecutor, but he made his name as counsel for the defense.

His first trial that gave him a reputation was the defense of actor Raymond Hitchcock in 1908.

Steuer is best known today for his successful defense of the factory owners after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. In March 1911 a fire broke out on the eighth floor of the factory, and quickly spread to the ninth and tenth floors. The escape routes were locked or overcome by the fire. One hundred forty-six women, adolescent girls, and men lost their lives. Steuer defended the owners, Max Blanck and Isaac Harris, against criminal charges arising from the fire and its circumstances. The two were acquitted. The acquittal is attributed to Steuer's cross-examination and impeachment of one of the surviving employees.

Steuer won acquittals in numerous cases. Defendants who were acquitted included sports promoter Tex Rickard, banker Charles E. Mitchell and former Attorney General Harry Daugherty. Steuer, though a skillful litigator, also saw clients convicted, such as Maurice E. Connolly, or saw the loss of divorce cases, as the one for W.E.D. Stokes.

Working for the employers, Steuer negotiated significant collective bargaining agreements in the women's clothing industry.

Working as a prosecutor, Steuer won convictions against Barnard K. Marcus and Saul Singer for their roles in the failed Bank of United States.

Steuer focused on his individual clients and left behind no philosophy and no writing such as a book or law review article. His son Aron Steuer, a New York state court judge, compiled a book about his father's career that consisted entirely of excerpts from Max Steuer's cross-examination of witnesses. Steuer's lesson to the lawyers who followed him was to see each case as a whole and to watch for testimony that runs counter to human experience.

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