146 N.Y.S. 829 | N.Y. Mag. Ct. | 1914
City Magistrate. The prosecution here charges a violation of section 551 of the Penal Law, which makes it a misdemeanor to send threatening or annoying letters under circumstances and in a manner not amounting to blackmail. The exact language of the statute under consideration is as follows:
“A person who, knowing the contents thereof, sends, delivers, or in any manner causes to be sent or received any letter or other writing threatening to do any unlawful injury to the person or property of another, or any person who shall knowingly send or deliver or shall make and, for the purpose of being- delivered or sent, shall part with the possession of any letter, postal card or writing, with or without a name subscribed thereto or signed with a fictitious name or any letter, mark or ether designation, with intent thereby to cause annoyance to any person, is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The principal witness for the people conducts a poolroom and a saloon, regularly licensed for the retail traffic of liquor at the premises No. 523 Sixth avenue, in the city and county of New York. During the year 1913 it seems that the defendant complained, in writing, concerning alleged unlawful acts committed by the complainant at his
This section in its present amended form has not been construed by the courts, so far as my research has gone, except in one instance by Mr. Justice Mayer in People v. Loveless, 84 N. Y. Supp. 114. That case, however, is not analogous to the facts in the case under consideration. In the Loveless Case the defendant addressed a letter that was the basis of the charge there, directly to the complainant, demanding payment of an account held for collection, and stating that if it was not paid without its being placed in the hands of an attorney, various members of an association of which he was a member would be notified that the claim against him had been unpaid and placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, which communication evidently had no other purpose than to annoy and substantially embarrass the complainant by affecting his credit, and to compel the payment by him of a disputed claim.
As to the first contention, I must hold against the defendant. It is perfectly clear that the legislative intent, as expressed in the Penal Law, supra, is to prohibit any person from making or knowingly delivering written threats to do an unlawful injury to person or property, or, by a writing, willfully to cause annoyance to another. Obviously the plain object of the law is to safeguard the person and to preserve and secure property rights inviolate and to guard against injury and annoyance.
Although there is no threat involved here, the same principle applies to this class of cases which come under the second subdivision of the statute, that is, the amendment (chapter 120, p. 288, Laws 1891) of the above-stated Penal Law, which deals with letters of an annoying nature.
The English and American Encyclopedia of Law (volume 28, p. 145 [2d Ed.]) states it as a rule that the communication, whether oral, written, or printed, must be intended for the person threatened, and must actually come to his knowledge, even though the statute does not in terms say so. -
Brownlee Case, supra, presented a charge against the defendant • therein with having unlawfully threatened to kill another in order to procure his signature to a promissory note, seeking thereby to obtain remuneration in that way for a grievance of a financial nature, and to that end communicated his plans to an accomplice, who, in turn, told the complainant of them. The court said (84 Iowa, 477, 51 N. W. 27), in writing for a reversal of the conviction for extortion:
“It is clear that in this case the threats were not made to or in the presence of Wright [complainant], and it is certain it was understood that they should not be communicated to him, and that the defendant, until after his arrest, had no knowledge that they had been so communicated."
I would infer from all the circumstances of the case at bar that the defendant understood that the contents of his letters should not be communicated to, nor were they intended for, the complainant, and it seems to be the fact that the complainant had no knowledge that these matters had been stated about him until after his own waiter’s arrest for a violation of the Liquor Tax Law (Consol. Laws, c. 34) in selling whisky on Sunday, November 9, 1913, for which he has been held for trial in the Court of Special Sessions. And in this connection it may be stated as a significant fact that it appears from the police report that a license for complainant’s poolroom was not procured until October 30, 1913, the day following defendant’s last letter.
How the complainant procured the original letters from the authorities has not been shown by competent evidence, and this phase of the case is left entirely to conjecture. Attached to the deposition before me are the anonymous letters, report of the police department, affidavit
The New York police are empowered to enter and inspect to a reasonable extent all places of .business having excise or other licenses to carry on business, all houses of ill-fame or prostitution, and all gambling houses. Greater New York Charter, § 315 (Laws 1901, c. 466).
True it is that annoyance may result, no doubt, from the means employed by the city officials, and not from the written complaint itself. But is such “annoyance” within the contemplation of this law ?
A broad construction of the statute in question might, however, include every form of writing which may, in the relation of things under the rule of cause and effect, actually annoy any person, whether he be the person addressed or intended. Such a rule of law could be carried to extremes and work considerable injustice.
The writing must be calculated to cause real annoyance and disturbance in the mind of the person affected, and not be merely a whimsical or capricious annoyance. Trivial annoyance and idle threats are outside the pale of the law. Serious and malicious cases come within its inhibition. If the operation of the mind of such person were the sole test, then I fear that almost any letter might be held to cause annoyance. While no precise words are required to convey a threat or cause annoyance, still the inhibition deals with such cases only as have a substantial basis for the fear or annoyance caused another.
To hold that the Legislature intended by the use of the words “cause annoyance” that any person would be prevented from complaining of the commission of a crime, or the suspicion of a crime, would be to defeat the very purpose of this law, which is to prevent groundless and vicious annoyance. Every person has a right to make a complaint to the authorities, if made bona fide, and with the purpose of aiding in
If a crime or supposed crime has been committed, and a person interested in the general welfare, and concerned in the maintenance of law and good order, and charged with a duty to uphold them, furnishes the authorities upon whom rests the duty to administer the law with infprmation concerning it, and the communication is made in good faith, with honest motives, and for justifiable ends and in a proper manner, there arises at once that question of qualified privilege, which is one of law for the court; and, if the party seeking to hold the defendant liable criminally charges that he acted with actual malice, the burden of proving it rests upon the party seeking to hold the accused, and if such evidence is adduced, the questions of malice, good faith, etc., are questions of fact to be submitted to a trial court or the jury, although it contained defamatory matter which without such privilege would be actionable and slanderous. 1 Cooley on Torts (3d Ed.) p. 436; Byam v. Collins, 111 N. Y. 143, 150, 19 N. E. 75, 2 L. R. A. 129, 7 Am. St. Rep. 726; Coloney v. Farrow, 5 App. Div. 607, 608, 39 N. Y. Supp. 460; Decker v. Gaylord, 35 Hun, 584; Dale v. Harris, 109 Mass. 193; Hamilton v. Eno, 81 N. Y. 116; Mattice v. Wilcox, 147 N. Y. 624, 42 N. E. 270; Klinck v. Colby, 46 N. Y. 427; Sickles v. Kling, 60 App. Div. 515, 69 N. Y. Supp. 944; Lovell Co. v. Houghton, 116 N. Y. 520, 22 N. E. 1066, 6 L. R. A. 363; Payne v. Rouss, 46 App. Div. 315, 61 N. Y. Supp. 705; Annotated Penal Law, § 1350, and cases there cited.
The whole case resolves itself into one of intent. This statutory offense must have the necessary ingredient of intent to cause annoyance that seems to be lacking here. I appreciate that letters charging the commission of unlawful acts without any justification therefor may be sent to the police authorities with the deliberate design of annoying a business rival, for instance; nevertheless in such cases it becomes a question of law and fact on the evidence as to whether such was the real purpose of the writer in respect to the person to be affected. The statute requires proof of the existence of intent. While the acts charged must be accompanied by a criminal intent, which may be inferred from all the circumstances of the case (Gardner v. People, 62 N. Y. 299), the law will only presume an unlawful intent from the intentional commission of an act in itself unlawful (People v. Herrick, 13 Wend. 87). This case presents no suggestion or innuendo from anything written or spoken, or from the relations of the parties themselves, indicating rivalry or animus by the defendant to injure or annoy the complainant.
The offense is, in my judgment, incomplete and the prosecution has failed to sustain the burden of proof. The complaint is dismissed, and the defendant is ordered discharged.