204 A.D. 295 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The section under which the defendant was convicted provides: l"“A person who being present before either house of the Legislature ■ or any committee thereof authorized to summon witnesses, wilfully refuses to be sworn or affirmed, or to answer any material and proper question, or to produce upon reasonable notice any material and proper books, papers or documents in his possession or under his control, is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
By joint resolution of the Legislature, a committee which has been known as the Lockwood committee was delegated “ to fully investigate and ascertain housing conditions and causes for lack of construction of new houses, flats, tenement houses and apartments in the cities of the State and especially in the City of New York; the increases made in rents, and report fully the facts showing such lack of construction and accommodations and the extent of the increases in rents; to investigate and report whether or not the construction of such new buildings is in any way
At the time in question this committee was investigating the action of certain associations, namely, the National Steel Erectors’ Association, Iron League of New York, the American Erectors’ Association, and the National Steel Fabricators’ Association. These associations had adopted the open shop policy in antagonism to the unions, and it appears in the evidence before the committee that they refused to sell their products to contractors who employed members of the union to erect the steel in the buildings being erected in the city of New York. It appears that the defendant was a detective and was employed by one Walter Drew, who represented these different associations, to investigate the conditions under which the steel work was being erected in the city of New York. The respondent’s brief states that the defendant was a private detective who had been employed to do espionage work and the like for the fabricators and erectors of the great steel plants. He employed subordinates, called “ operatives.” His subordinates, or. operatives, made reports to the defendant, which he had in his possession. Some of his subordinates were or became members of the unions and attended their meetings and acted as spies therein. Some of these reports were from some of these subordinates, and one of the reasons for his declining to produce the reports was that it would endanger the lives of those subordinates who had thus acted as spies at the union meetings. He had eight men in his employ, one of whom was engaged in erection work in the State of Texas, two of them in Ohio, and four of them in Boston, which would leave only one man who was engaged upon erection work in the city of New York. There is no specific proof
For the purposes of this discussion I will assume, if any of these reports was material to the subject of the inquiry, that he was required by law to produce that report. The indictment under which he was tried charges that all of these reports were material, and that he willfully refused to produce the said reports or any of them. I will pass over the question of the materiality of these reports to the subject of the inquiry before the committee. The trial judge held, as matter of law, that they were material. It is undoubtedly true that a witness is not allowed to determine for ¡himself what is material, so as to relieve him from a conviction /for the violation of this statute. Nor is the committee itself allowed to determine the question of materiality for a contrary purpose. The court must determine whether these documents which the defendant failed to produce were material to the subject of the inquiry. There is no evidence as to what these reports contained, or as to the nature of the reports. This man was engaged, according to the respondent’s brief, in.espionage work, apparently in ascertaining whether these people who were purchasing this iron and steel were permitting the same to be erected by union men. With the admission of those in charge of the corporation of their refusal to sell to those contractors who were engaged in erecting iron and steel and were using union men, it is difficult to see how the reports of these sub-detectives could be material to the inquiry that was being made by the committee, or to any legislation which might be based upon the result of such inquiry. The immunity of individuals from search and seizure and from forced inquiry into matters irrelevant for any legitimate purpose is to be fully protected. These rights are safeguarded by the Constitution (Art. 1, § 6) itself and by our Bill of Rights, which, so far as here applicable, is section 8 of the Civil Rights Law. On the other hand, no narrow rule of interpretation should apply which would prevent a thorough investigation of any material subject of inquiry, which the Legislature may, through a joint committee, think wise to make. Without passing upon these questions in this opinion, however, I think this judgment will have to be reversed on an error in the charge of the court below.
The statute makes criminal a willful refusal to produce any
It is true he added that they might take into consideration the attitude of the witness upon the stand and his conduct throughout his examination, as to whether it indicated a defiance of the committee and a willful disregard of its mandate. But in closing his charge he stated: “ If you believe that it has been established beyond any reasonable doubt that a committee of the Legislature was in session, that this committee was authorized to summon witnesses, that the defendant was present before this committee, that he had been given reasonable notice to produce the reports which I have heretofore charged you were material and proper in that investigation, and that the defendant wilfully, that is, intentionally refused to produce these reports, it would be your
His refusal to produce these documents was based by himself, when before the committee, upon two grounds. One was that the disclosure of the reports from his subordinates acting as spies would endanger the lives of his subordinates, and the other that such reports were not pertinent to the inquiry. His manner before the committee can hardly be shown upon the record, but is stated to have been insolent and to have indicated that his refusal was willful. The record, however, shows very clearly that he was of the opinion that those reports were not pertinent to the inquiry, and there is nothing to indicate that that opinion was not honestly entertained, and his attitude before the committee might well have been explained by the attitude of the examining* counsel. There is nothing in the record to show that his refusal to produce his reports was not prompted by an honest belief on his part that they were not material to the inquiry. The fact that he intended not to answer is not disputed, and if an intentional refusal to produce documents be deemed, as charged by the trial court, a. willful refusal, there was little left for the jury to determine. It is true the trial judge did submit to the jury whether the proper time was given to him to consult counsel, and that was the only question which was in fact submitted to the jury. The witness stated that he would like twenty-four hours to consult counsel. The committee adjourned for lunch for an hour and a half, at which time he made no attempt to consult counsel. That fact was submitted to the jury for their determination of the question whether proper time was given to him to consult counsel. In the trial of a criminal case all questions of fact are exclusively for the jury to determine. (Code Crim. Proc. § 420; Howell v. People, 5 Hun, 620; affd., 69 N. Y. 607; People v. Dishler, 38 Hun, 175; People v. Upton, Id. 107.)
That the charge of the court as to what constituted a “ wilful ” refusal to produce these papers was erroneous, has been held by this court in People v. Luft (192 App. Div. 713). The opinion of this court was there based in the main upon the opinion of the Court of Appeals in Wass v. Stephens (128 N. Y. 128), where the rule was stated: “ But the word ‘ wilfully ’ in the statute means something more than a voluntary act, "and more also than an intentional act which in fact is wrongful. It includes the idea of an act intentionally done with a wrongful purpose, or with a design to injure another, or one committed out of mere wantonness or lawlessness.” (See, also, People v. Calmbacher, 103 Misc. Rep. 408; People v. Bowie, 166 N. Y. Supp. 905.)
Without passing, therefore, upon other questions raised, the interpretation given to the Penal Law under which this defendant has been convicted, that an intentional violation of an act is of itself a willful violation of the act, requires a reversal of the judgment and the granting of a new trial.
Judgment should be so ordered. ...
Clarke, P. J., Page and Merrell, JJ., concur upon the ground that it was not shown and it does not appear that the documents called for were material and pertinent to the inquiry, and for error in the charge and refusals to charge specified in the opinion of ’ Mr. Justice Smith; Dowling, J., dissents.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered. Settle order on notice.