145 N.Y.S. 699 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
Lead Opinion
The indictment, in four counts with slight variations, charged defendant, who was a sergeant of police, with having received a bribe of thirty dollars on the 3d day of September, 1912, — amended on the trial to 'read tenth — to permit one Julius Both to run a gambling house at 79 West'One Hundred and Eighteenth street, borough of Manhattan, Néw York, for one month from that date. The jury rendered a general verdict of guilty. Counsel for appellant urge eighteen points for reversal but most of them are fully and clearly met by the evidence and by authoritative precedents and we' deem further discussion .unnecessary.
The only points which any member of the court deems debatable are with respect to evidence received and rulings made on questions relating to 'accomplices, and their corroboration, and evidence tending to' show that the defendant was guilty of other crimes. The steps resulting in the commission of crimes by the mutual consent and voluntary acts of the parties thereto are so concealed that it is impossible to predicate a conviction on what actually transpires when the crime is consummated, even if that were capable of direct proof, without or in addition to the testimony of accomplices. It is, therefore, necessarily competent to show the origin of the plan or scheme for the commission of the crime, and every movement toward its consummation, for it is the history leading up to the final act that affords
The theory of the People is that in the month of March, 1908, one Fox, a patrolman assigned to duty in plain clothes in the sixth inspection district and forty-third precinct under Captain Walsh, demanded of said Both, who was then conducting a gambling house at the place specified in the indictment, which was in said inspection district and precinct, under the name of the Academic Club, thirty dollars per month for protection from interference by the police, and that from that time on until the 1st day of July, 1912, Fox collected that amount from Both regularly between the eighth and twelfth days of each month according to Both’s testimony, and the seventh and eleventh according to Fox’s testimony; that on June 22, 1910, Fox was assigned to patrol duty in the fortieth precinct, and although Both’s place remained in the forty-third precinct, Fox continued to collect of Both as- before, and Both received such protection; that on said 1st day of July, 1912, a new precinct known as No. 37 was created, embracing part of old precinct No. 43, including Both’s place, but Fox remained attached to the fortieth precinct; that the defendant was then a sergeant of police and assigned to.duty in the thirty-sixth precinct; that said three .precincts remained in the sixth inspection district, and that Fox and the defendant were both, through their respective captains, under the direction of the inspector of that inspection district; that when Fox collected from Both in June, 1912, it was remarked between them that that would be his last collection, as the district was to be divided; that on July 2, 1912, at eleven-thirty P. M. the defendant, by telephone, requested Fox to meet him next morning at eight-thirty at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Amsterdam avenue, which was near the precinct station to which defendant was assigned and the headquarters of the sixth inspection district, which was in the same building; that they met pursuant to the appointment, and the defendant said to Fox: “ I want a list of the places from which you have been collecting from that were formerly in the forty-third precinct that go into the new thirty-seventh precinct; I want the names of the persons from whom
The principal evidence in behalf of the People was given by Fox and Roth, both of whom the People conceded and the trial, court ruled were accomplices. Fox further testified that on the 18th or 19th of July, 1912, he accidentally met the defendant at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Eighth avenue,, and asked if defendant had collected from all on the list he had given to him on July third, and defendant admitted that he had, with the exception of Quackenbush, from whom he
The learned counsel for the appellant contend that the corroboration of Fox and Eoth was not sufficient. The prosecution could not be sustained by merely showing the payment of the money to the defendant. It was necessary to show some agreement or understanding by which the defendant was to refrain from performing his. duty as a police officer. It is extremely doubtful whether that could be inferred from what took place between defendant and Eoth at the latter’s gambling place on the night of September 10, 1912, even if Eoth were corroborated as to that meeting. If that was the first time defendant called to collect, the evidence that he said he had taken Fox’s place pointed toward bribery; but if that was the second or third time he called, the meeting was marked by complete silence and nothing took place but the passing of the envelope containing the money. The preceding interview with Fox, however, and proof of the arrangement between Fox and Eoth, which the defendant adopted, followed by the systematic calls upon three of the others from whom Fox had been collecting, with declarations by him to the effect that he was
Moreover, I am of opinion that Fox was not an accomplice-with the defendant in the commission of the crime charged in the indictment (People v. Zucker, supra ; People v. Bright, 203 N. Y. 73; People v. Yannicola, 133 App. Div. 885); and if not, his testimony needed no corroboration. In the particular circumstances of this case, I think that the fact that the court ruled otherwise is not important, for the verdict plainly shows that the jury believed the testimony of Fox. Therefore, if they believed that testimony, notwithstanding the fact that they were erroneously instructed that it must be corroborated, the defendant could not be prejudiced by such erroneous instruction, and • the verdict may, if need be, be sustained on the theory that the instruction was erroneous. If, instead -of obtaining the information from Fox, the defendant or others who were to be the beneficiaries of the moneys thus collected had conceived the plan of having Fox give the information to another who had had nothing to do with the collections, and the defendant had called on such third party for and obtained the information from him,— then it is perfectly clear that such third party would not be an accomplice and his testimony would require no corroboration on that theory. Fox, according to the evidence, did not induce the defendant to commit the crime, and he was not to receive any of the spoils, hior did he induce the other gamblers to make payments to the defendant. He merely surrendered his position as collector and apparently had nothing more to do with the matters. He merely informed the defendant concerning the crimes which he had committed in communicating the information which the defendant desired as to where gambling houses were which had been paying tribute. The fact that Fox, in collecting from these houses theretofore had committed the crime of bribery, did not make him a party to the commission of similar crimes in the future by the defendant. There was nothing criminal in anything Fox did or said at the interview
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, and Clarke, JJ., concurred; Scott, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I feel constrained to dissent from the affirmance of the judgment appealed from for what I deem to be the error involved in the admission of evidence of independent and unrelated crimes, tó wit, the taking of money from persons other than Roth, who alone was named in the indictment as the person who bribed defendant.
Judgment affirmed.