151 N.Y.S. 164 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The defendants were indicted for the crime of conspiracy under the provisions of subdivision 4 of section 580 of the Penal Law, the charge being that they conspired to cheat and defraud the State of New York by omitting to perform labor and furnish material required by a contract between the State and the defendant the'Dunbar Contracting Company, for the repair of a highway in the county of Rockland, and by furnishing material inferior in quality and less in quantity than called for by said contract, and in falsely and fraudulently representing to the State that the work and materials, in quantity and quality, had been done and furnished as provided for and required by said contract, and thus obtaining payments thereunder that they were not entitled to but would have been if the requirements of the contract had in fact been' complied with. The defendant Dunn is the president and treasurer of the defendant company, and the defendant Fogarty was the representative of the State, supervising and in charge of the work on said highway. The jury found all of the defendants guilty, and from the judgment of conviction and from two orders, one denying their motion for the arrest of judgment and the other denying their motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial, the defendants appeal.
Before pleading, the defendants demurred to the indictment upon various grounds, the defendant company basing its demurrer in part upon the contention that the crime of conspiracy requires a specific criminal intent and that a corporation is incapable of committing any crime requiring criminal inten
It is contended that there is no direct evidence of a conspiracy between the parties, and that there must be independent proof of the conspiracy before acts can be proven in furtherance of it. This contention is also without merit. The same evidence may establish both the conspiracy and overt acts charged, and the evidence may be wholly circumstantial. (People v. Miles, 123 App. Div. 862; People v. Micelli, 156 id. 756, 761.) In the case at bar the violations of the contract were so flagrant as to compel the conclusion that they were the result of a conspiracy on the part of the defendants to cheat and defraud the State.
Dunn, as I have said, was the president and treasurer of the Dunbar Contracting Company. He was also its principal stockholder, owning eighteen of the twenty shares of authorized stock. He executed the contract in behalf of the company, and had general supervision of its performance. He knew what the contract required, and is shown to have known the manner in which the work was actually performed, and that its provisions were flagrantly ignored. It seems that Fogarty had been in the employ of both Dunn and the Dunbar Con
The contractor was required to furnish and place upon the surface of the roadbed, for two and nine-tenths miles in length and sixteen feet in width, 2,270 cubic yards of second-class gravel concrete, the gravel to be screened and washed, uniformly spread to a depth of three inches when compacted. For a distance aggregating 4,600 feet of this road no concrete was used. The total quantity of concrete furnished and used was 1,135 cubic yards — one-half of the quantity required by the contract and actually paid for by the State. It covered the roadbed only one and one-half inches, instead of three, and in its composition the stone taken from the old roadbed, owned by the State and which was required to be used for a solid foundation for the concrete surface, was used instead of gravel. It appears that the stone were not cleaned before being crushed, and the concrete made from it was poor and of no value as a road surface, and that it was so soft that it would not hold together. In quality as well as quantity it was below the requirements of the contract, and the road when pronounced completed was really in no better condition than before repairs were commenced.
Six different estimates, made and certified by Fogarty, purporting to correctly show the material furnished and work done during each month and the amount of money to which the contracting company was entitled under its contract, purporting to be based upon actual inspection and measurements made by him, were each false and necessarily known to be false by the defendants. The defendant Dunn also certified at least twice, in the receipts executed by him for his company as conditions precedent to payment, .that the amount therein stated to be due and unpaid was in full payment of the account, which was found by him after personal investigation to be a correct account of work done and materials furnished under said contract in the repair of said road, which statements were false and necessarily known by him to be so when made. These facts establish of themselves an existing conspiracy, and overt acts in furtherance of it, to cheat and defraud the State, entered into and successfully carried out by the defendants, and are amply sufficient to sustain their conviction.
But three of the additional alleged errors upon which the appellants rely possess sufficient merit to require consideration. The People contend that as part of the alleged conspiracy, and for the purpose of making it effectual, Dunn procured the representative of the State, Lynch, to put the defendant Fogarty in charge of the work as the superintendent and
The learned trial justice in his opinion exhaustively considered the questions presented by these exceptions, and states the evidence upon which his rulings were made, in which I concur. (People v. Strollo, 191 N. Y. 42; People v. McKane, 143 id. 455; Tichnor Brothers, Inc., v. Barley, 149 App. Div. 871; Kansas City Star Pub. Co. v. Standard Warehouse Co., 123 Mo. App. 13; Conkling v. Standard Oil Co., 138 Iowa, 596; Barrett v. Magner, 105 Minn. 118; Miller v. Leib, 109 Md. 414; Lewis Pub. Co. v. Lenz, 86 App. Div. 451; Cunningham v. Hudson River Bank, 21 Wend. 557; People v. Micelli, 156 App. Div. 756; People v. Campisi, 145 id. 264; People v. Adrogna, 139 id. 595; People v. Peckens, 153 N. Y. 576, 595.)
During the progress of the trial the court had on several days directed the division of the jury into two parts, one officer taking six jurors to one hotel and another officer taking the other six to another hotel. The learned court states what occurred on the day the trial was concluded in answer to the motion of counsel for the defendants for the discharge of the jury, the direction of a mistrial and the ordering of a new trial as follows: ■ “ Immediately after the Court finished its charge to the jury, the two officers having the jury in charge were instructed by the Court to take the jurors to dinner
The learned court again considered the occurrence on the motion for a new trial, saying: “In reference to the alleged separation of the jury, the facts as they appear from the record made up before the jury returned with its verdict, and as they actually are, show that after the judge’s charge, the jurors were constantly in the custody and care of two duly sworn officers; that by the direction of the Court they were taken in two groups of six each, each group in charge of one of these two officers, to two of the hotels near the Court House, for dinner; that they were so divided by order of the Court for the more convenient and prompt service of their meals; that the members of each group were constantly kept together, and in the immediate custody and presence of the officer in charge; and that they were simply taken from the Court House to said hotels, and immediately after dinner returned to their room in the Court House where they resumed their deliberations that were interrupted when they were taken to dinner; that not a word concerning the case was spoken by any juror during this dinner hour, and that no person spoke a word about the case in the presence or hearing of any of the jurors. The defendants’ rights were not and could not nossibly have been injured or
The remaining exceptions, all of which have been examined, do not present reversible error, and the judgment of conviction, and orders appealed from must be affirmed as to each of the appellants.
Burr, Thomas and Stapleton, JJ., concurred; Carr, J., not voting.
Judgment of conviction and orders affirmed as to each of the appellants.
See Code Crim. Proc. §§ 421, 465.— [Rep.