Fact Check

Expense Account Reveals Adultery?

Did the details of an expense account reveal an ongoing affair between an executive and his stenographer?

by David Mikkelson, Published April 10, 2009


$100 US Dollar bills in dark background

Image courtesy of isak55 / Shutterstock.com


Claim:
Expense account reveals affair between executive and his stenographer.
Rating:
Legend

About this rating


Most urban legends (or humor pieces that circulate as such) are told in straightforward narrative form; however, sometimes such items take other forms, such as the "Writing Wrongs" piece (proffered as a pair of English students' tandem writing assignment) or "Hotel Soap" (presented as an exchange of notes between a traveler and various hotel personnel). The "Expense Account" item reproduced below takes this concept a step further, employing a non-narrative format to offer a tale which the reader must interpret through inference:

Example:   [Collected via e-mail, June 1995]

Expense Account for June 1995
----------------------------------------

1 June

Ad for female stenographer

$5.00

2 June

Violets for new stenographer

$7.50

6 June

Week's salary for stenographer

$225.00

9 June

Roses for stenographer

$25.00

10 June

Candy for wife

$4.50

12 June

Lunch for stenographer

$35.00

13 June

Week's salary for stenographer

$300.00

16 June

Movie tickets for self and wife

$6.00

18 June

Theater tickets for self and stenographer

$75.00

19 June

Ice cream soda for wife

$1.50

20 June

Virginia's salary

$375.00

23 June

Champagne and dinner for "Ginny"

$160.00

25 June

Doctor for stupid stenographer

$1,500.00

25 June

Fur coat for wife

$6,800.00

27 June

Ad for male stenographer

$6.50

The premise here is that a listing of an executive's expenses for one particular month reveal an adulterous affair between him and his assistant (and its aftermath): He hires a female stenographer, pays her an increasingly large salary, and spends increasingly large amounts of money wining and dining her, all the while penuriously treating his wife to cheap gifts and entertainment. On the same day the affair is revealed by an unexpected pregnancy (hence the "Doctor for stupid stenographer" expense), the executive springs for an expensive mink coat for his wife and shortly thereafter runs an ad seeking a male stenographer.

The use of the word "stenographer" and the mention of a (now largely socially unacceptable) mink coat as a gift for the wife help date this piece as something that goes back several decades. Indeed, a version virtually identical to this 1995 example (save for use of smaller monetary amounts in the expense report) appears in Dundes and Pagter's 1975 collection of copylore (i.e., items circulated through use of photocopiers), Work Hard and You Shall Be Rewarded. As the authors note of it, "Once again, there is a moral twist to the item: Sin leads to trouble, and the sacredness of marriage and the home is reaffirmed."

 


By David Mikkelson

David Mikkelson founded the site now known as snopes.com back in 1994.


Source code