125 N.Y.S. 301 | New York County Courts | 1910
The appellants have been convicted in the City Court of Buffalo of having violated section 380 of the Penal Law of this State. That section reads, in part, and in so far as the ease at bar is concerned, as follows: “A person who gives or offers to give any money or other things of value to any duly appointed representative of a labor organization with intent to influence him in respect to any of his acts, decisions, or other duties as such representative * * * is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The appellants claim that Adamski’s resigning as a union representative was a purely personal act; that it was not an act as a representative of the labor organization; and, necessarily, Adamski having been given money so to do, that his resigning as such representative and then going to work in the interest of the appellants to help break up the strike, an interest, I must assume, adverse to those of the union, was not in the aggregate a violation of any duty to the union under the statute. If the appellants be wrong in this contention, then it was the expressed intention of the Legislature, when enacting said section 380, to prohibit a third party, while a strike of his employees be on, from giving to a representative of a labor union, which is back of such strike, money to do work for him hostile to the union at a time to begin immediately after the resignation of such union representative from his said position. And this even though such third party, having interests at stake adverse to the union and in process of attempted adjustment, made the resignation of such officer a prerequisite to the going into effect of such new contract of
The district attorney argues that the method adopted by the appellants was either only an ingenious attempt to get around the statute or the accomplishment of the ends of the appellants by means now claimed by them not to be unlawful, but really within the fair prohibitory intendment of the law.
This statute, so far as I am able to ascertain, has not hitherto received judicial construction. The argument of the appelants’ learned and able counsel is earnest and impressive. However, it falls short of convincing me that this judgment should be reversed for this reason:
Supposing that all the other circumstances hereinbefore recited remain as they are, if these appellants stood accused merely of having hired Adamski to resign from his representative position in the union, or of having hired him to go into their employ even in hostility to the union’s interests after he had voluntarily resigned, it is probable that no crime would have been committed; but the trial judge was justified in concluding that the real and wrongful act done by the appellants was giving money to Adamski while he was a representative of the union to induce him to help break up the strike; and that the arrangement about the preliminary resignation was merely an incident, if not devised by the appellants to furnish them, at least now erroneously resorted to as furnishing them, a safeguard against punishment, because it removed Adamski from his position as a labor representative before he became actively engaged in the employ of the appellants. I agree with the court below that this whole transaction by the defendants comes fairly within the prohibition of section 380.
Counsel for the appellants claims that sections 371, 378, 380 and 1822 of the Penal Law are all substantially the same in spirit and intendment, interdicting bribery of various officials. And he thereupon argues that, since section 1980 expressly prohibits representatives of railroad corporations from offering any position or other consideration to a public service commissioner, or his secretary, clerk, etc., this is an indication that the Legislature felt that offering a position to any of the other officials named in the various sections just enumerated should not be deemed criminal; and counsel further urges, carrying that reasoning through, as he claims, that the Legislature had no intention, when it was passing section 380, as it stands, to make the said proved acts of these appellants criminal. As to that argument I am impressed that our Legislature might well have felt that the act of offering any position, of any character and under any circum
Adamski’s attitude in this whole affair is not worthy of entire commendation. He admits that he lied; that part of his story to the appellants “ was a bluff; ” that he was trying to entrap .the appellants. But this is not of avail to them. Even though Adamski went further than laying a trap and actually solicited the appellants to commit crime, it would furnish no defense to them, since Adamski was not a prosecuting or other public official of any kind.
I appreciate the undesirability of being compelled to stand convicted of having- committed a crime, and am firmly convinced that no man should be put into such a position unless it be clear that he has violated a statute, which, fairly and strictly construed, for that is the law, characterizes an act or omission of the accused person as criminal. Further, with a business situation like the one here shown confronting the appellants, one can readily understand how, in their zeal to terminate a strike damaging to their business interests, they may have come to act as they did and without knowledge that they were committing a crime. However, most of us know well by heart the old maxim relative to ignorance of the law; and it follows that, if these appellants did this act with the
And so, since I feel that the court below had fair warrant for finding that the part taken by the appellants in this transaction was as hereinbefore indicated, and that such acts bring them fairly within the prohibitory scope of said section 380, I must affirm the judgment of conviction of the City Court.
Judgment affirmed.