People v. Garska

6 N.W.2d 527 | Mich. | 1942

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *315 Alfred J. Garska, president of the village of Grosse Pointe Park, was convicted on the charge that he, being a public and executive officer of the village, and being engaged in keeping or maintaining a handbook wherein bets could be made upon horse races and wherein other gambling games were carried on, did knowingly conspire with August Bamberg, Gustave Pines, Samuel W. Block, and other persons to obstruct justice by wilfully and corruptly assisting and enabling the keeping or maintaining of these illegal activities, and by procuring the wilful, intentional and corrupt failure, omission and neglect on the part of Thomas C. Wilcox (sheriff), Carl Staebler (deputy sheriff), Bernard McGrath (undersheriff), Duncan C. McCrea (prosecuting attorney), Harry Colburn (deputy sheriff and chief investigator for the prosecuting attorney) and others in the performance of their respective official duties between January 2, 1935, and March 1, 1940.

Testimony was introduced showing that three handbooks had been operating in Grosse Pointe *316 Park, one of which, located on Jefferson avenue at Barrington, was owned and operated by Jack Woods. Woods' widow testified that on the day of Woods' death, March 22, 1938, Garska, whom she had known for at least 30 years, called and offered her $5,000 for this handbook. Although at first she wanted $7,500, she later told Garska he could have the place for $5,000. On Wednesday of the following week, Gorman, who had been Woods' former manager for about 10 years and whom she had seen on other occasions with Garska, paid her $5,000 for Woods' gambling establishment, and she signed a bill of sale.

August Bamberg, who lived in Grosse Pointe Park for about 20 years, testified that a few days after Woods' death he asked Garska to get him a job in the Woods handbook. At first Garska disclaimed any knowledge of the existence of Woods' place, but after asking a number of questions about the continuance of this handbook, Garska offered him a job at $60 a week and 10 per cent. to represent him as "a kind of a watchdog." Garska said that he would talk things over with Gorman who, according to Bamberg, was the logical man to operate the place. Later Gorman told Bamberg that the place would be operated on the basis of 35 per cent. to himself, 10 per cent. to Bamberg, and 55 per cent. to Garska. Bamberg thereafter paid money to Garska in the percentage agreed upon. Gorman's interest was subsequently increased to 50 per cent., Bamberg's to 15 per cent., plus a salary of $75 per week, and Garska's reduced to 35 per cent.

Bamberg also testified in considerable detail regarding the operation of the handbook, stating that there was deducted from its receipts $275 a month for pay-off purposes, which was handled by Gorman and "kept the lights going and took care of the lion tamers," On one occasion Bamberg took a roll of *317 money, under the instructions of Gorman, to Frank Chism, a codefendant who operated another Grosse Pointe Park handbook in partnership with codefendant Victor Otto. Gorman told Bamberg that this was the monthly protection money and that $150 went to the sheriff and $125 to the prosecutor.

According to Block, a self-confessed protection money collector for codefendant Colburn of the prosecutor's office, the money from the three handbooks in Grosse Pointe Park was collected by Woods and, after his death, by Lewis Elliott who operated another Grosse Pointe Park handbook in partnership with codefendant Clyde Stambaugh. James Drysdale, who was chief of police of the village most of the 13 years that Garska was president, testified that there were only three handbooks in the village and that he closed other handbooks on Garska's orders whenever they attempted to open, but that he never interfered with these three handbooks.

The so-called Woods handbook employed six ticket writers, three blackjack dealers, a doorman, a cashier, and a boardman, and had a week-day take of $1,400 to $1,700, and on Saturdays as high as $3,000. The handbook paid $70 a week in 1938, and $80 a week in 1939 to the Consolidated Service for broadcasting race results. Police officers of the village cashed checks in the handbook and bet on the horses with other customers.

Garska took the stand in his own behalf and denied having any interest in any handbook. He said that he had known Bamberg for 12 years and had first met Gorman at the Woods home on the occasion of Woods' death, but he denied any relations with either of them. He claimed he never discussed Woods' affairs with his widow, but later admitted calling at the Woods home on the day of his death, where he first learned from Gorman and Mrs. Woods *318 that her husband had operated a handbook. He also admitted that some two or three months after the funeral he had a discussion with Mrs. Woods about some business dealings between her husband and himself.

Some of the questions raised by defendant Garska were raised in the case of People v. McCrea, ante, 213, decided herewith. These relate to the unauthorized examination by the jury in the jury room of part of the transcript of testimony taken at the trial; the rulings of the court regarding the use of the minutes of the grand jury for the purpose of refreshing the recollection of witnesses and for the purpose of impeaching them; the limitations imposed by the court on the use of such minutes by the defense, and the court's ruling on the right of this defendant to examine other portions of the minutes for the purpose of cross-examining witnesses as to contradictory testimony given before the grand jury.

Garska also assigns as error the admission of testimony relative to the statements of a conspirator not made in his presence or in furtherance of the conspiracy with which he was charged and the admission of testimony regarding the acts of a stranger to the conspiracy. This testimony dealt with statements made by Elik Gell and letters written by Janet McDonald, both having died prior to the trial. These matters are discussed in the opinion rendered herewith in the case of People v. Wilcox,ante, 287.

Our opinions in People v. McCrea and People v. Wilcox fully discuss the foregoing questions, and our determination in those cases is controlling here.

Garska urges that the trial judge erred in not granting him a separate trial and contends that the charge against him was entirely separate and distinct *319 from that against his codefendants because the conspiracy to which he was said to be a party did not come into existence until 1938, and because a conspiracy to operate and protect handbooks in the village of Grosse Pointe Park could not possibly extend over the entire county.

It was not necessary that Garska should know all the conspirators or participate in all the objects of the conspiracy. One who joins a conspiracy after it has been formed is as guilty as though he were an original conspirator. Allen v. UnitedStates (C.C.A.), 4 F.2d 688, and Marino v. UnitedStates (C.C.A.), 91 F.2d 691 (113 A.L.R. 975). See, also,People v. Tenerowicz, 266 Mich. 276.

The granting of a separate trial in the light of the record presented was a matter of discretion for the trial judge.People v. O'Hara, 278 Mich. 281, and 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 17298 (Stat. Ann. § 28.1028).

Garska further contends that it was error to receive testimony as to the derelictions of duty on the part of persons not named as conspirators or codefendants, and that such evidence is not admissible against him because he was not shown to be connected with them. In a trial, such as shown by this record, considerable testimony was necessarily presented which had no bearing upon the guilt or innocence of defendant Garska, but was presented in order to show the existence of the conspiracy and its details as affecting the guilt of other codefendants. Attention is directed to what we say about such testimony in the Wilcox opinion.

Garska complains of the admission of William Anderson's testimony regarding a conversation with Elliott and Stambaugh, wherein he was told they were partners in a handbook in Grosse Pointe Park, and that they paid protection money to Garska while *320 he was president of the village. Although no objection was made at the time, later Garska moved to strike this testimony and the court ruled that the jury should be instructed that Anderson's testimony in this respect was not binding upon Garska, suggesting that a proper request to charge be presented. Garska's counsel presented a request, worded as follows:

"53. I charge you that the testimony of William Anderson with reference to alleged statements of a defendant by the name of Stambaugh and his alleged payments for protection cannot in any way be considered by you as testimony against Alfred J. Garska, and any verdict returned by you which was influenced by or affected by the consideration of such testimony must be set aside and held for naught."

This charge was not given by the court in the language proposed, but the jury was instructed during the argument of the assistant attorney general as follows:

"A motion was made in your absence, members of the jury, with reference to this particular conversation, and it was the ruling of the court at that time that the same is not binding as against the respondent Alfred Garska."

We do not deem it necessary to include in this opinion all that was said by respective counsel and the court on this subject. It is sufficient to say that defendant's rights in this respect were adequately protected.

Garska claims that the testimony of James Drysdale, chief of police of the village, which was received over his objection as to raids on handbooks, et cetera., in Grosse Pointe Park, was highly prejudicial. This testimony was directed against two *321 other defendants who were members of the Grosse Pointe Park police department, as well as against Garska, and covered matters that were the proper subject of inquiry. The objections shown in the record have more to do with the argumentative nature of the people's questions than the claimed prejudicial nature of the inquiry. The testimony of the chief of police was not prejudicial.

Garska was the president of the village and, under its charter, had certain duties imposed upon him. The charter states in chapter 5, § 3:

"He shall supervise the affairs of the village, and shall see that the laws regulating the village and all ordinances and regulations of the village commission be enforced. * * *

"(4) He shall be a conservator of peace and shall exercise within the village the powers conferred upon sheriffs to suppress disorder, and shall have authority to command the assistance of all able-bodied citizens to aid in the enforcement of the ordinances of the commission and to suppress riots and disorderly conduct; and shall perform generally all such duties as are or may be prescribed by the ordinances of the village, and by this charter."

Chapter 14, § 9, reads:

"The village president and members of the village commission are ex-officio members of the police department of the village of Grosse Pointe Park with full powers of a police or patrolman."

The court did not err in refusing to take the testimony of Julius Berns, an attorney who drafted the village charter and acted generally in the capacity of legal advisor, for the purpose of explaining the meaning of the charter and Garska's powers and responsibilities. There is no ambiguity in the provisions of the charter pertaining to the duties of the *322 village president. Garska's claimed understanding of the charter was inadmissible. He is presumed to have known the law. The trial judge correctly held that the interpretation of such provisions was a question of law for the court and not a question to be determined by the jury on opinion testimony.

Garska claims the court improperly restricted his explanation regarding a transaction with Victor Otto, a codefendant and operator of another Grosse Pointe Park handbook. Otto and Garska were associated in the International Vanadium Corporation and Garska was at one time its general manager. Following the death of Woods, his widow had some dispute with Garska over her husband's investment in this corporation and a settlement agreement was entered into, whereby Garska paid Mrs. Woods $4,000 for a full and complete release of a claimed indebtedness of $6,250. The court ruled that Garska could go into this matter only to show ill feeling on the part of Mrs. Woods, and not to impeach her testimony. The court did not err in so restricting the scope of this inquiry.

Garska assigns error regarding questions put to him concerning his refusal to answer claimed incriminating questions at the McCrea ouster hearing before Judge Hollander. The situation thus presented is no different from that discussed in the McCreaCase regarding McCrea's testimony before the grand jury, and what the court said there is controlling here. Having submitted himself to cross-examination by taking the witness stand, it was proper to question Garska regarding his refusal to answer claimed incriminating questions in another proceeding.

Garska claims the court erred in denying his motion for a directed verdict at the close of the people's case and in submitting the case to the jury. The *323 testimony of Bamberg and other witnesses, and Garska's denials, presented questions of fact for consideration by the jury. The record contains sufficient testimony from which the jury could find Garska guilty as charged. A conspiracy may be established by circumstantial evidence. People v. Tenerowicz, 266 Mich. 276, and People v. Fields, 288 Mich. 166. It cannot be said that the verdict of the jury is against the great weight of the evidence.

We find no reversible error. Judgment is affirmed.

CHANDLER, C.J., and NORTH, STARR, BUTZEL, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred. BOYLES and WIEST, JJ., did not sit.