beat hollow vs take to the cleaners

beat hollow

verb
  • To beat up (a person) severely. 

  • To defeat severely. 

take to the cleaners

verb
  • To take a significant quantity of a person's money or valuables, through overcharging, litigation, unfavorable investing, gambling, fraud, etc. (humorous way of saying older expression clean out) 

How often have the words beat hollow and take to the cleaners occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )