136 N.Y.S. 548 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The respondent is charged with misconduct in participating in and authorizing the payment of sums of money by the Metropolitan Street Railroad Company to employees who were called detectives or investigators in relation to litigation before the courts wherein the railroad company was defendant. The charges were referred to a referee who, after a most careful and impartial investigation, has reported to the court that the charges were to a large extent sustained by the evidence, and the matter is now before us for final disposition.
The Metropolitan Street Railroad Company during the period covered by this investigation was operating a street railroad
The Metropolitan Street Railroad Company had presented against it each year a very large number of claims for com
The first subject to which attention will be called related to the charge of the improper payments by the respondent’s detectives to the plaintiff’s witnesses in actions against the railroad company. In connection with these payments it must' be remembered that the great mass of these claimants were poor people who had been injured in the operation of the railroad for which the respondent was the general attorney. Generally in cases, of that character the witnesses- are in humble walks of life, to whom a small amount of money is of considerable importance. From these vouchers it would appear that these investigators or detectives were constantly in the ■ habit of interviewing and working upon those who might be expected to be witnesses favorable to the plaintiffs in the support of their claims against the railroad Company. . Thus in One voucher an investigator was allowed for disbursements: “ Right work roping plaintiff and locating and interviewing his witness and learning strength of his case —.eighteen dollars and, twenty-five cents. . Another was for “ suppers with plaintiff’s witnesses and two men from P. 0. Department, where he works, on February 16 and 11, and general incidentals in getting them right” — sixteen dollars and fifty cents. Another: “Paid to plaintiff’s two witnesses for their incidentals and lunches” — seven dollars and fifty cents. Another: “ Expended at night * * * with plaintiff’s two witnesses, *; * * and with their friends for purpose'of keeping them away from home” — eleven dollars and sixty cents. “ Their hotel bills, suppers and breakfasts ”—five dollars and fifty cents. Another: ‘ ‘ Expended with plaintiff’s two witnesses on two evenings before trial • of
A considerable number of these vouchers represented disbursements to or with the defendant’s witnesses by these investigators or detectives, and there seem to be many cases where sums of money were paid far in excess of any proper compensation to witnesses for the time lost in attending court. Thus on October 20, 1909, there was paid in the Nowak case three hundred and thirty-five dollars to different witnesses, the amount paid to each ranging from sixty-five dollars to ten dollars. In another case one hundred dollars was paid to a witness for time lost and expenses attending court, and payments of twenty-five dollars and ten dollars to witnesses were quite numerous. These, standing alone, might not justify action, but they tend to sustain the conclusion that the payments were made in these cases out of all proportion to the proper allowance to a witness for lost time or expenses in attending court.
There is then a series of payments, made to court officers, clerks and attendants by these investigators and detectives. In some instances these vouchers name a specific case in relation to which clerks or other officials were paid money by the respondent. In other instances nó case is mentioned but the expenses were called “ general.” Thus one clerk was paid $75 for “preparation of cases for trial.” There are other charges of $150 and over which are specified as amount of
There are then among these vouchers payments to ■ police officers aggregating the total amount of over $650 to thirty-four policemen. Policemen are public officers, charged with public duties, and receiving from the public compensation for the services which they render. When accidents in the streets happen they are either 'witnesses of the accident itself or appear upon the scene very soon after the accident, and are often important witnesses as to the particular facts in relation to the accident. Their official position gives them a credibility that in the trial of these cases is often of the utmost importance. And yet there are in the evidence before us the cases of thirty-four policemen who were paid various sums of money, amounting to $100, in a particular case, to each of two policemen who figured therein. It is noticed that in most:of the cases in which these sums were paid the policemen were
We then have a series of payments made to physicians for the plaintiffs in litigations against this railroad company, and many of those payments seem to us to he reprehensible. We recognize the importance on the trial of the testimony of a physician as to the plaintiff’s injuries and it is difficult to conceive any justification for a party to an action paying to the physician of the adverse party whose testimony is necessary to such party a sum of money for his special expenses, or for the acceptance by a reputable physician of such a payment from his patient’s opponent. The referee calls special attention to the Nowak case, where the case was once tried and where the
There are also many payments to hospital employees, and the total amount paid to these doctors and hospital employees amounted to several hundred dollars. Certainly the act of the' respondent in approving payments to physicians and employees of hospitals where a litigant had been taken after an accident, without the slightest evidence that these payments were for any expert or proper services rendered to the defendant, cannot be justified.
There then come a series of vouchers showing disbursements of quite large amounts of money, aggregating over $7,000, wherein no particular object, for the disbursement of the money is stated. They all, however, relate to litigations. Sometimes the particular case is mentioned in the voucher and sometimes the disbursements are called “ general,” all relating, however, to litigations in which the Metropolitan Street Railroad Company was involved. The payment of these sums of money by investigators or detectives employed to assist in tlie trial of actions, without specifying the purposes for which the payments were made, considering the detail with which the same investigators or detectives entered on other vouchers the specific purposes for which they asked reimbursement,. is certainly suggestive. No satisfactory explanation as to why these large sums of money were paid to these persons, without a detailed statement of the purpose for which the money was used, is given. There is not even a statement as to the general purpose for which the payment was made, or the particular case in which it'was expended, which would certainly have been the case if the reason for neglecting to state it was that the investigator had merely forgotten the úse to which the money had been applied. What these investigators
I have thus stated the general nature of the system established by this railroad company and carried out and operated by this respondent as its attorney in relation to the litigated cases which were before the court and involved claims against the respondent’s client for damages. Under it the railroad company paid through its attorney, who appeared for it to defend actions against it, thousands of dollars in tampering with and attempting to influence those whom they expected would be the witnesses against it and the public oficiáis connected with some of the tribunals which tried and disposed of the litigation against it. It was a system that deliberately conduced to bribery and subornation of perjury. And the respondent and those connected with him in making these payments could have had no possible justification in applying the railroad company’s money in making those payments. It was not one isolated fact, or a payment in one isolated action, but a system established by which the railroad company’s employees were justified in spending the railroad company’s money to defeat recoveries by methods which, if they did not fall directly within the criminal law, were designed to accomplish the purposes which the provisions of the criminal law were enacted to prevent. These investigators would deem themselves justified in expending money thus placed in their hands for the advantage of the defendant irrespective of the particular means used. And when we see that these large sums of money were placed in their hands without requiring them to specifically account for the use that they made of the money, it would justify the assumption that it was to be used in any manner that was necessary to accomplish the defeat of those presenting claims against the company. The court cannot in this case, or any other case, lay down a line which separates the proper or improper expenditure of money in the prosecution or defense of a legal claim. The matter was discussed at length in Matter of Schapiro (144 App. Div. 1).
The respondent is not a young attorney whose youth and inexperience would justify an inference that he did not understand or appreciate the necessary consequences of his acts. He was admitted to the bar in 1882, and thereafter was associated with Weil-known and reputable attorneys. He had defended various street railroad companies until 1893, when he was •
The respondent is, therefore, disbarred.
McLaughlin, Clarke, Scott and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Respondent disbarred.