151 N.Y.S. 314 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The indictment grows out of the construction by the defendant Hudson Valley Construction Company, under contract with the State, of the Great Meadow Prison at Comstock, Washington county, N. T. The defendant, its president, its superintendent in charge of the work, its inspector of material, its timekeeper, its paymaster and auditor, and also the Superintendent of State Prisons, the State Architect and the Deputy State Architect were jointly indicted. The defendant had a separate trial. The offense charged is grand larceny in the first degree, committed partly in Albany county and partly in Washington county.
The original contract between the State and the defendant provided for the construction of certain buildings upon a percentage basis, by which the State was to pay the net cost of the construction, with a profit to the defendant of five per cent thereon and also two per cent in addition for office expenses. Other buildings and work were added by other contracts, under some of which the work was done by defendant under a commission plan, and upon others it was to do the work for a lump
The appellant has challenged from the beginning and now challenges the whole proceeding upon the ground that the crime, if any, was committed in Albany county and not in the county of Washington or within five hundred yards of the county line. Concededly the immediate voucher upon which the money was paid was prepared and sworn to and the check drawn and used by the defendant in Albany county. The con
The evidence shows that the presentation of the monthly statements of material, of work and the salary account and the receipted vouchers, at the State Architect’s office at Comstock, was necessary before a voucher would be approved upon which the checks were to issue. We think, therefore, it was fairly established, as charged in the indictment, that the crime was committed partly in Albany county and partly in Washington county, and that the money was obtained by - reason of false tokens and writings made and delivered in Washington county which were a prerequisite of defendant’s obtaining the money from the State.
The defendant rested its case upon the People’s evidence and the court charged the jury in part as follows: “Now, perhaps we should state that the defendant is a corporation. It could not be sworn as a witness. It could only appear through its officers and agents. The defense elected to stand upon the case made by the People, and the fact that the defense elected to stand upon the case here, or the case which the People
It is now urged that Boland, the president of the defendant, and Gallagher, its secretary, were in court and sworn by the People as witnesses and that the latter part of the charge called the attention of the jury to the fact that they had not been sworn and permitted it to draw inferences against the defendant on account of their silence in violation of the provisions of the Constitution (Art. 1, § 6) that a defendant in a criminal case shall not be compelled to be a witness against himself, and of section 393 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which provides that the neglect or refusal of. a defendant in a criminal case to testify shall not create any presumption against him. The defendant, as an artificial person, had no knowledge of the facts relating to the false vouchers or frauds which were being perpetrated upon the State. Knowledge is attributed to it by law because the agents, by whom alone it could act, were doing the wrong in its business and for its benefit. The defendant itself could not be a witness. The inference from the charge was that if any witness in court whom the defendant might have called to explain certain facts which the jury felt required explanation was not called, it might infer, if it thought proper, that the witness would not testify favorably to the defendant.
In his summing up the district attorney, in substance, stated that no one had testified that Boland did not know about certain of the • irregularities, and inquired if Boland would not know all about them. The appellant- excepted to
“ The right of a person under the Fifth Amendment [U. S. Constitution] to refuse to incriminate himself is purely a personal privilege of the witness. It was never intended to permit him to plead the fact that some third person might be incriminated by his testimony, even though he were the agent of such person. A privilege so extensive might be used to put a stop to the examination of every witness who was called upon to testify before the grand jury with regard to the doings or business of his principal, whether such principal were an individual or a corporation. The question whether a coz*poration is a ‘ person ’ within the meaning of this Amendment really does not arise, except perhaps where a corporation is called upon to answer a bill of discovery, since it can only be heard by oral evidence in the person of some one of its agents or employés. The Amendment is limited to a person who shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, and if he cannot set up the privilege of a third person, he certainly cannot set up the privilege of a corporation.” (Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S. 43, 69.)
In New York Life Ins. Co. v. People (195 Ill. 430) an agent of the insurance company was permitted to testify, in a suit to recover a statutory penalty, to facts establishing the guilt of the company.
It is urged that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. Two witnesses were called who, to a certain extent, qualified as experts, and after examining the work as it was when com
' The defendant also urges as a ground for reversal that many acts were proved which did not relate to this particular con
It was shown by the vouchers presented to the representative of the State Architect upon the ground that 200 barrels of lime were used in this work. The evidence shows clearly that not one barrel was used. This did not necessarily ¿onvict the defendant of a crime; the lime may have been bought for use upon one of the other contracts relating to the prison where a lump sum was to be paid and by mistake might have been charged to this job. Each of the other incidents tending to show wrong, if standing alone, might be met by the same answer, and many of them together might he disposed of in the same way. It, therefore, became necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant’s acts were done in carrying out some scheme for defrauding the State. Where the intent with which an act is done is not clear in itself, and it is necessary to show the particular intent, other acts at about the same time of a similar nature, under like circumstances, even though constituting a crime in themselves, may be shown, not for the purpose of proving that the defendant has probably committed this crime because he had committed others, hut for the sole purpose of characterizing the intent or purpose in doing the act charged. (People v. Katz, 209 N. Y. 311; People v. McKane, 143 id. 455.)
The acts of the defendant’s agent, if committed without its knowledge or consent, cannot convict it of crime. The court so charged. But here the acts that were committed by subordinates were of the same character and quality, upon the same work and for the same purposes as the acts which the immediate representatives of the defendant were com
The architectural engineer received twelve dollars and fifty cents for a day when he was not engaged upon the work. During his absence Collier, the inspector of the State Architect, inquired of the defendant’s superintendent where the engineer was and received answer: “As it rained this morning, I suppose he didn’t come up.” The reception of this evidence was not error. It was material as tending to show that the defendant knew it was paying for work not done.
Time checks given to the witness McGarr satisfied him that some of his time was charged against this contract which rightly belonged to one of the other jobs. The superintendent called all the laborers into his office and asked them if they had ever received any checks which they thought were incorrectly marked, and then asked McGarr in person, who stated that he thought he had. The superintendent then asked him if he knew where the different jobs on the work, naming them, were, and he admitted he did not know some of the jobs named. The superintendent told him that he was incompetent to say whether the checks were correctly or incorrectly marked, and prepared and had him sign a writing stating where his time for the preceding week had been distributed, and certifying that he was incompetent to judge whether or not the amounts were properly distributed. Later McGarr asked the superintendent if he could be continued on the job during the winter and he replied, “ I could if I would keep my mouth shut on what I saw and what I heard.” This evidence, in connection with the other testimony of McGarr, bore upon the question whether the defendant through its officers knew that the men were paid for work on jobs where they had not worked, and the fact tended to prevent any inquiry in that respect. It also indicated that the defendant and its officers knew what was transpiring upon the job and were trying to keep it secret.
The People attempted to show that the settlement of the wall resulted from defendant’s fault. The attempt failed. But in making proof it appeared that concrete was being put in soft, wet ground. Hibbard heard Hennessey, the foreman, say at the time to Hamill, the superintendent, that he thought it
The different wrongs relating to this prison work, when associated, tend to characterize the defendant’s acts, and indicate that in completing this prison it was seeking every opportunity to obtain money not justified by its contract, and that the particular wrongful charges made by the defendant against the State were not made in good faith, but with the intent of illegally obtaining money from it.
We find no error calling for a reversal of the judgment. So many facts appear tending to show the commission of the crime as charged that it would seem a triumph of technicality over substance if this judgment could be reversed on account of the admission of testimony relating to incidents trivial in themselves. The case as submitted to the jury, aside from any questionable declarations or incidents, could not have resulted otherwise than it did. The charge was remarkably full, clear and fair. The judgment of conviction should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concurred, except Howard, J., dissenting.
Judgment and orders affirmed.
See Penal Law, § 1296; since amd. toy Laws of 1912, chap. 164, so as to read: “ more than fifty dollars,” etc.— [Rep.