240 A.D. 72 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1934
The defendant Kaplan was the president of a labor union known as the Moving Picture Operators Union of Greater New York, Local 306. The defendant Theodore Greenberg was an organizer and a member of the executive board of said Local 306. The said local consisted of a membership of about 1,200 persons. The indictment was against the defendants Kaplan and Greenberg and twenty other defendants who were members of said Local 306. At the trial, on motion of counsel, the court directed the acquittal of three of the defendants named in the indictment, namely, Bush, Bishop and Williams, and, by consent of counsel, the indictment abated as against the defendant Friedman, who had died prior to the trial On motion of counsel for the defendants (the district attorney consenting as to the defendants Lafante and Linder) James Lafante, Morris Sternberg and John Linder were acquitted. The jury at the trial acquitted the defendants Weinberger, Luck, Stewart, Weiss and Paul. The defendants Kaplan, Eichhorn, Castle, Day, Rotker, Wolheim, Feinberg, Paster, Greenberg and Avzar were convicted of the crime charged in the indictment. Upon such conviction the court imposed sentence upon the defendants, appellants, Kaplan and Greenberg, that each be committed to the penitentiary, with a recommendation that they there be confined for the period of six months. As to the convicted defendants Eichhorn. Castle, Wolheim and Avzar, the judgment of the court fined each of said defendants $500, and as to the defendants Day, Rotker, Paster and Feinberg, the court imposed a fine upon each upon their conviction of $250. In default of payment of said fines, the defendants stood committed to the city prison of the city of New York, not exceeding one day for each dollar of said fine until the same was paid. Subsequently, the eight defendants, upon whom a fine had been imposed, paid the fines imposed upon the judgment of conviction. As to the defendants Kaplan and Greenberg, a certificate of reasonable doubt was granted. (See People v. Kaplan, 147 Misc. 752.)
Without going into a long statement of the circumstances leading
Section 530 of the Penal Law makes coercion a misdemeanor. It provides as follows:
“ § 530. Coercing another person a misdemeanor. A person who with a view to compel another person to do or to abstain from doing an act which such other person has a legal right to do or to, abstain from doing, wrongfully and unlawfully,
“ 1. Uses violence or inflicts injury upon such other person or bis family, or a member thereof, or upon bis property or threatens such violence or injury; or,
“ 2. Deprives any such person of any tool, implement or clothing or hinders him in the use thereof; or,
“ 3. Uses or attempts the intimidation of such person by threats or force,
“ Is guilty of a misdemeanor.” (Italics are the writer’s.)
The appellants argue that the evidence fails to show that in any respect, in expelling the members of the Polin faction, the defendants acted either wrongfully or unlawfully, and they argue that so long as the means adopted to obtain such expulsion were lawful and within the constitution and by-laws of the local, the defendants cannot be charged with a violation of section 530 of the Penal Law. The court, at the trial, held otherwise, and held that while the means whereby the defendants sought to coerce the Polin people may have been lawful, yet, nevertheless, the end which they were seeking to accomplish, namely, the discontinuance of the Queens county actions, was unlawful and in violation of the statute. We think the learned justice presiding at the trial was entirely correct in the position which he took and maintained through the trial.
While a number of errors are claimed by the appellants to have occurred during the trial, in the introduction of evidence against the objection and exception of defendants’ trial counsel, we do not think there occurred any error prejudicial to the rights of the defendants, appellants, requiring a reversal of the judgment of conviction.
The chief ground upon which reversal is asked, and the only one which merits serious consideration by this court, is that adverted to, namely, that, the means used in expelling the Polin people from the local being entirely lawful, the defendants cannot be charged with coercion in violation of the statute. Early in the trial the justice presiding clearly indicated his views upon that
<l If these men were expelled in violation of the contract, that does not prove that the defendants committed this particular crime. If they expelled these men, as I have said before, for some other reason, even if they expelled them by breaking the contract to do so, if they expelled them for some other reason than the reason for forcing a discontinuance of these actions, then the defendants are not guilty.
“ On the other hand, even if they conformed tq the contract and did not violate their own rules in expelling them, yet if that expulsion was a cloak, a means of forcing the complainants and coercing them, by fear of injury to their persons or property or business, to discontinue these actions, then the mere fact that they did it in conformity with the rules of the Union is not a defense, because nobody has a right to commit a crime, whether they commit it in conformity with the rule of some institution or not. The rules, though proper in themselves, cannot be used to cloak a crime.
“ Therefore, as I say, the prime object here is not to determine whether the action of the Union violated its contract with these men, but it is to determine whether their action was a criminal action, namely; the applying of coercive means to compel these men to abandon their lawsuits.”
Thus, in the portion of the charge above quoted, the judge clearly discriminated between the “ end ” and the “ means.” Clearly, in the case at bar, the end which the defendants sought to accomplish was not expulsion. The provision of the statute that “ a person who with a view to compel another person to do or to abstain from doing ” an act, clearly shows that it was the end in view that constituted the offense, and not the means. Indeed, the evidence shows that various “ means ” were employed to induce Polin and his coplaintiffs to drop the actions brought in Queens county. This “ means ” consisted of verbal abuse and actual assaults, and preferment of charges against members of the Polin faction. All of these acts were means, and were not the end desired, which was that the Queens county actions should
We have examined the briefs in this court and in the Court of Appeals in the case of People v. Dolowich. The People cited the cases of People v. Sheridan (186 App. Div. 211) and People v. Hughes (137 N. Y. 29). These two cases were extortion cases, but the rules therein enunciated apply to coercion cases. In
“ This misconceives the sense of the words ‘ unlawful injury to * * *' property.’ A threat by means of a complaint to stop the running of this elevator would deprive its owner of the use of his property, and such interference has been held to come within this term ‘ unlawful injury to * * * property.’ (People ex rel. Short v. Warden of City Prison, 145 App. Div. 861, 863; affd., 206 N. Y. 632.)
“ The unlawfulness lies in the motive. If its purpose be unlawful, then the act (which under other conditions might be justified) becomes unlawful. (People v. Weinseimer, 117 App. Div. 603; affd., 190 N. Y. 537.) The offense in such criminal prosecutions is in mala fides on the part of the official who makes the threats. Thus where the victim of the extortion was actually practicing dentistry in violation of law, payments to a professed detective raised for the jury the question of how far such payments had been induced by fear, so as to make out this offense. (People ex rel. Damato v. Kempner, 163 App. Div. 966.)
“ The defendant sought to have rulings during the trial and in the charge to the jury that defendant could not be convicted if he merely threatened to do an act which it was his duty to do, or his official right to do, even if he did receive fifty dollars by means of such threat, which the court refused. He also contended that the prosecution had to prove that the elevator was being run under a regular permit, but, as we have seen, this was no element of the offense, as an actual violator of the Building Code might be the victim of such extortion.” (Italics are the writer’s.)
In People v. Hughes the defendant was likewise convicted of the crime of extortion. The defendant was the head of a labor organization. In the opinion of the Court of Appeals (at p. 37) it is said: “ The next ground of the appellant’s argument is that there was no evidence to sustain the indictment and the prisoner should have been acquitted by direction of court. The argument is directed to the point, that what the prisoner threatened and did was not an unlawful
At page 39 the court said: “ Conduct takes its legal color and quality more or less from the circumstances surrounding it and the intent or purpose which controls it, and the same act may he lawful or unlawful as thus colored and qualified. One may refuse to deal with a film because of a conviction that it does not give honest compensation for labor, and may ask his friends or the public to do the same thing, and the conduct may produce injury to the business criticized without thereby becoming illegal. . The jury were so told in substance and permitted to judge whether that was the true quality and character of the prisoner’s action. On the other hand, one may influence his friends and the public to inflict the same injury of withdrawal of custom without just or excusable reason and by fraudulently concealing the fact that it does not and pretending that it does exist, and using official power and influence to make effective the deception, and to force and compel unwilling dealers to desist from their purchases, and that for the sole purpose of extorting money, in which case the resultant injury will be unlawful. What Hughes threatened was found by the jury to be such an unlawful injury. They saw that he conveyed the idea strongly and clearly that unless his demand of money was complied with he could and would by threatening the hostility of the Order, compel the retail dealers to withdraw their custom, and could and would utilize the power he had although the original occasion for its exercise was gone. Such a threat within the doctrine of the Barondess case, and within that also of the dissenting opinion in this court amounts to a threat to do an unlawful injury to property. (People v. Barondess, 133 N. Y. 649; 61 Hun, 581.) There was, therefore, a question for the jury, and the court could not properly have directed an acquittal.” (Italics are the writer’s.)
It, therefore, seems to us that, applying the principle thus followed by this court and by the Court of Appeals, the very things which the defendants threatened to do and carried out were unlawful acts rendering the defendants hable for a violation of section 530 of the Penal Law. We think we are bound by our decision affirming the conviction of the defendants in People v. Dolowich, and the unanimous affirmance of this court by the Court of Appeals in that case.
We think the trial of these defendants was eminently fair. Their
The judgment convicting the defendants of the crime of coercion and the order appealed from should be affirmed.
Finch, P. J., Townley, Glennon and Untermyer, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order affirmed.