39 N.Y.S. 50 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
The relator was called upon to answer two written charges, with specifications attached, of violation of duty in connection with his office of patrolman of the police force of the city of Brooklyn.
Respecting the proof to sustain the second charge, it is meagre and unsatisfactory. Sergeant McGovern testified that at twelve o’clock midnight the officer was assigned to w^atch the railroad property at Seventh avenue and Twentieth street. The sergeant reached the depot at three-ten, and at three-twenty-eight found the officer coming down Twentieth street from Eighth avenue, who stated to him that he followed two motormen up there. When the sergeant saw the officer he was seventy-five feet from the property. Captain Murphy testified that when the officer was assigiied to duty, he was told to be particular in his attention to that property. The patrolman, in his defense, testified that the depot which he was placed to pi’otect extended nearly half a block ; that he conceived it to be his duty to go around it; that there were some vacant lots on Eighth avenue and lie saw some parties go up Nineteenth street, went after them, crossed the lots and came down on the other side. Captain Murphy was recalled and testified that the officer could not go around the property, on account of houses. It is quite evident from these statements that the duty of the officer was to protect the property, watch it; that he could do this when at a distance of seventy-five feet from it is no strain upon the understanding. That he was required to watch its rear, as well as its front, was quite within a proper conception of his duty. If he saw suspicious characters near it, whom he might reasonably think meditated designs upon it, it was clearly within his duty to watch them, so far as to see that they did not approach the property from any side. The evidence fails to disclose that, at any point, where the officer -was found, or where he claims to have been, some portion of the property was not within
The determination should be annulled, and the relator restored to his office, with fifty dollars costs.
All concurred.
Determination annulled, and relator restored to his position, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.