262 A.D. 909 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1941
Judgment of the County Court of Bangs County, convicting appellant of the crime of extortion, reversed on the law and a new trial ordered. Appellant was indicted jointly with eight others, all officials of a labor union for which the appellant acted as attorney, on the charge of extorting $7,500 from an employer by threatening to foment a strike among its employees. Appellant was separately tried and convicted. The evidence was ample to establish the crime charged against him in the indictment. We are, nevertheless, constrained to reverse the judgment because there was error in the charge of so substantial a character that it cannot be disregarded. The defense was that the employer, instead of being a victim of extortion, had bribed the representatives of the labor union in violation of section 380 of the Penal Law. That this was the theory of the defense is indubitably established by the exception taken to the court’s charge, appearing at folio 1594, and the ensuing colloquy. The evidence was overwhelmingly the other way, but a question of fact was presented and the appellant was entitled to have the jury instructed that if the employer were guilty of bribery, the appellant could not be guilty of extortion. The two crimes are mutually exclusive. The court, therefore, erred in charging the jury that the appellant could be found guilty even though the employer had paid the money as a bribe. The charge as given deprived the appellant of his defense, since it authorized the jury to accept his version of the facts and still find him guilty. In any event, the court erroneously left the jury with the idea that to bribe any one connected with a labor union was extortion. As there is to be another trial,