109 N.E. 554 | NY | 1915
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *418 The Dunbar Contracting Company, its president and treasurer Bart Dunn, and Joseph J. Fogarty, a foreman of laborers in the service of the state, have been convicted of the crime of conspiracy. They are found to have conspired to defraud the state in the repair of a state road in Rockland and Orange counties. They did not do the work as the contract required it to be done; they did not supply material of the quantity or the quality which the contract made it necessary to supply; and by false estimates and reports and vouchers they covered up their wrongdoing and procured payment from the state. It is not denied that there is evidence from which a jury might find that there was a flagrant departure from the contract in the doing of the work. It is not even denied that there is evidence that this departure was with the guilty knowledge of the Dunbar Contracting Company and Fogarty. It is asserted, however, that there is no evidence of the guilty knowledge of Dunn. We think this criticism has no foundation. To rehearse at length the circumstances that connect Dunn with the conspiracy would serve no useful purpose. His relation to the contracting company supplied the motive *421 He was its president and treasurer, with general supervision of its affairs, and the subscriber for eighteen out of its twenty shares of stock. His relation to the work supplied the opportunity for knowledge. He signed the contract for his company, he visited the site at frequent intervals, and the barest inspection must have revealed the flagrant deviation from the contract. His own certificates supply the evidence that whatever an inspection was capable of revealing, he saw and understood. He signed receipts in the name of the corporation by himself as president in which he certified that "after personal investigation" he found the account to be correct. He even undertook to certify that there had been extra work, for which extra payment was received. The fraud was one impossible, and, if possible, incredible, without concert of action between Fogarty and the representatives of the contractor. The circumstances already stated, as well as many others, point significantly to the defendant Dunn as the guiding and guilty agent.
Satisfied, as we are, that the evidence sustains the verdict, we pass to a consideration of rulings challenged as erroneous.
(1) The People were allowed to prove a talk over the telephone in which Dunn is said to have requested that Fogarty be assigned to work upon this job. They were also allowed to put in evidence a letter confirming the request. The defendants insist that there is no evidence that Dunn was either the speaker over the telephone or the author of the letter.
Dunn and Fogarty were old friends. Before going into the service of the state, Fogarty was employed by Dunn and by the Dunbar Contracting Company. When he applied to the civil service commission for employment as foreman, Dunn became his sponsor. A few days after the award of the contract, there came from some one a request that Fogarty be given the supervision of this work. The request was addressed to Lynch, the *422 state superintendent of repairs in that district. It came over the telephone from New York city, where the Dunbar Contracting Company had its office, to Haverstraw, where Lynch lived. On the same day a letter was written on the letterhead of the Dunbar Contracting Company. It is in typewriting, is marked as "dictated," and is signed with the name Bart Dunn, but not in Dunn's handwriting. It contains this passage: "Also referring to my conversation had with you over phone this A.M. in reference to Mr. Joseph J. Fogarty, who was transferred from Walden to Westbury, Long Island, I would kindly ask you, if you can see your way clear to place Mr. Fogarty on my road. I am going out of town, and will return the latter part of next week. In the meantime any courtesy you may extend to me by granting the above request, I beg to assure you will be appreciated by yours very truly, Bart Dunn."
At the time of this telephone message Lynch and Dunn had never met. They did meet, however, about five weeks later, and some three or four times thereafter. In the interval there had been other telephone talks that must have helped to preserve for Lynch the recollection of the voice which he had heard. As soon as they met, Lynch formed the opinion that the voice of Dunn and the voice that he had heard over the telephone were the same. With varying degrees of assurance he expressed that opinion upon the trial.
We think it was not error of law to receive this conversation in evidence. A voice heard over the telephone may be compared with the voice of a speaker whom one meets for the first time thereafter as well as with the voice of a speaker whom one has known before. The difference affects the weight rather than the competency of the evidence (People v. Strollo,
What has been said about the message over the telephone, answers at the same time the objection to the admission of the letter. If the telephone message came from Dunn, the internal evidence of the letter shows that it came from the same source. The letter refers to the conversation, repeats its substance, and confirms it. Unexplained and uncontradicted by any witness for the defendants, the evidence justified the inference that Dunn was the author (Cunningham v. Hudson River Bank, 21 Wend. 557; Lewis Pub. Co. v. Lenz,
(2) The trial judge construed the written contract and instructed the jury that they must accept his construction. The defendants do not deny that he construed it correctly. They say, however, that a departure from the *424 contract, due to honest mistake, was to be considered by the jury in passing upon the defendant's criminal intent. But this was plainly stated in the charge. The jury were told: "if the road was built in substantial compliance with the contract, or if there was an honest misunderstanding of the plans and specifications as a result of which work was not properly done, the defendants cannot be convicted." No fuller instructions on this subject were asked for, and none, we think, were necessary.
(3) The trial judge stated to the jury that the original proposal and specifications, signed in the name of the contractor by Dunn, the president and treasurer, and accepted by the state, constituted the contract; and that the contractor was presumed, in the absence of any claim or evidence to the contrary, to have known what it signed. That is the substance of the instructions on this subject when read as a whole. The use of the word presumption may have been unfortunate, because of the obscurity which involves it (4 Wigmore Ev. § 2491; 2 Chamberlayne Ev. § 1026), but in view of the context, it was harmless. There is no doubt that the signing of a contract permits the inference that the signer had knowledge of its contents (3 Wigmore Ev. §§ 2129, 2134). This inference the trial judge characterized as a presumption, but he said at the same time that not only opposing evidence, but even an opposing claim, might be sufficient to repel it. The presumption was said to exist "in the absence of any claim or evidence to the contrary." This reduced it to its proper level as an inference of fact. In thus describing it we are dealing, of course, with a question of criminal and not of civil liability. The jury cannot have been misled by the statement of a presumption that was coupled with so many limitations. Even though the court had not given them any instructions on the subject, they would inevitably, in the absence of any claim of ignorance, have drawn for themselves the inference of knowledge. They were not left in doubt as to the consequences *425 of honest error. They were informed that genuine misunderstanding of the requirements of the contract would call for an acquittal. There is no evidence that Dunn misunderstood anything. If, however, we assume that an inference of mistake was possible, the jury were told that they were at liberty to draw it. More than this could not, in reason, have been asked for. Even if technical error were to be found in the statement of the presumption, our duty would be to disregard it as not affecting the justice of the verdict (Code Crim. Pro. § 542).
(4) At the close of the trial the defendants' counsel asked the court to charge "that the mere fact that a conspiracy has for its object the doing of an act which may be unlawful, the doing of such an act does not constitute the crime of conspiracy unless the jury find that the parties were actuated by a criminal intent." The court responded: "I charge that, gentlemen. The criminal intent in this case means an intent to get money unlawfully from the state for the corporation, the contractor." To this last statement the defendants' counsel excepted.
We think the charge is free from error. The trial judge did not instruct the jury, as in the Flack case (People v. Flack,
(5) Error is complained of in permitting the separation of the jury. Six jurors were taken to dine at one hotel, and six at another. Each squad was in charge of a sworn officer. What was done was in accordance with an order of the court. The defendants urge that the order was improper. There are times and emergencies when the statute contemplates that leave of the court will justify a separation of jurors (Code Crim. Pro. §§ 421, 465, subd. 3). During prolonged deliberations, some degree of separation is often inevitable. The trial court must determine to what extent it shall be allowed (Comm. v. Gagle,
The judgment of conviction should be affirmed.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., WERNER, HISCOCK, CHASE, COLLIN and MILLER, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction affirmed. *427