205 A.D. 257 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The defendant is a man about sixty-five years of age. He has been prominent in the civic affairs of the city of Buffalo for many years and at one time served as State Senator. He became one of the five commissioners governing the city of Buffalo under the Commission Charter. He held office from January, 1916, to December 31, 1921. He was first elected in 1915 for a two-year term and was re-elected in 1917 for a four-year term. In the fall of 1921 he was defeated for re-election.
As commissioner he was head of the department of parks and public buildings, which included the bureau of recreation. Albert C. Febrey was an employee of the park department and for eight years had been director of recreation. It was the duty of Febrey to sign receipts for all goods delivered for recreational purposes.
The specific charge against the defendant, contained in the indictment, is that he counseled, aided and abetted Edmund W. Rose in obtaining from the city the sum of $670.32 by means of a false bill and voucher. The bill covered forty-eight footballs and other athletic goods. It is charged that in 1921, shortly before the defendant’s term of office expired, he, intentionally and in pursuance of an agreement with Rose, audited and approved the voucher with criminal intent, knowing that it was false. It was the defendant’s duty, as commissioner, to sign all vouchers which were approved by him, and they could not be paid until approved and signed by him.
Rose was a man thirty-four years of age and ran a small athletic goods store. He was an accomplice of the defendant and it was so held by the trial court. Febrey was also held to be an accomplice.
The principal facts of the charge were testified to by the two accomplices, Rose and Febrey. Briefly, the testimony of Rose was that just before the election of 1921, at which the defendant was a candidate for re-election, he was called to the defendant’s office and told by the defendant that he was pressed for money for election expenses. The defendant reminded him that thousands of dollars in business had been diverted to his store through the defendant’s influence. Rose told the defendant that he had contributed $500 for the campaign fund. The defendant said that was not enough; that he knew of a man in the same business in New York, and that if Rose was not willing to furnish him with
The district attorney’s theory of the trial was that, while Rose and Febrey were accomplices, there was sufficient corroborating evidence to make a question of fact for the jury, and that he had a legal right, upon the trial, to introduce evidence of other transactions in which the defendant participated which tended to show his criminal intent and guilty purpose, particularly as upon this trial it could be urged with a great deal of force that the defendant might have signed the voucher in question without giving it the careful attention which it deserved but still without criminal intent. He sought to show the criminal purpose and intent of the defendant by testimony that on other occasions he had made agreements with Rose to pay for certain articles of personal property purchased by him and by his son, such as clothing, etc., and that Rose was to reimburse himself by putting through false vouchers which were to be approved and allowed by the defendant, and which were so approved and allowed and paid to Rose, also by testimony to the effect that the defendant agreed to accept a bribe from Rose, or a company in which he was interested, for obtaining a stall at the public market, also by testimony that the defendant had coal drawn to his own home and caused the coal dealer to collect the amount due for it from the city by putting through false vouchers which were approved by the defendant, and also by testimony that the same practice was adopted by agreement with the dealer from whom his department purchased oil and gasoline.
It is urged by the defendant that this evidence was incompetent
It is equally true, however, that there is an exception or limitation to such principle which is as firmly established as is the principle itself. That is, in cases where it is necessary to prove guilty knowledge or intent, evidence is admissible to establish similar acts reasonably connected in time and character for the purpose of proving that the transaction charged in the indictment took place in accordance with a general scheme or plan to cheat or defraud. (People v. Shulman, 80 N. Y. 373, n.; People v. Hudson Valley Construction Co., 217 id. 172.) There are many cases of this character, but the two cases cited fairly illustrate and state the rule. In the case of People v. Duffy (212 N. Y. 57), a police official in New York city was indicted for bribery for accepting money from a person named on a stated date. Upon the trial evidence was offered that on other occasions he had accepted money from other persons for the same purpose. The same argument was made in that case as was made by the learned counsel for the appellant in this case, but it was held by the Court of Appeals that the evidence was competent within the limitation of the general rule that you cannot convict a person of one crime by showing that he has been guilty of another. In my judgment, the evidence regarding the various transactions in question was competent. (See Columbia Law Review, March, 1923, vol. 23, No. 3, p. 306.)
I think the exception to the charge in regard to evidence of other offenses is not well founded. The trial judge, in an attempt to justify his rulings, read, during his charge, from several Court of Appeals opinions, and during the discussions with the counsel for the defendant undoubtedly made some statements which standing alone were not correct. It clearly appeared throughout
It is urged, with great force and ability, by the counsel for the appellant that “ The court erred in denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment for lack of corroboration of the testimony of the accomplice Rose, and in declining to charge that the testimony of Rose was not corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime charged in the indictment.” Section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides: “ A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice, unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” Under the provisions of that statute the testimony of two accomplices must be corroborated to the same extent as that of one. One accomplice cannot corroborate the testimony of the other. (People v. O’Farrell, 175 N. Y. 323.) There can be no question about the law upon this proposition. The corroborative evidence need not show the commission of the crime or that the defendant was connected with the commission of the crime. It is sufficient if such evidence tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime. (People v. Dixon, 231 N. Y. 111, 116.)
Rose and Febrey were both accomplices and they gave the principal testimony as to the crime charged in the indictment. The question, therefore, is whether or not their testimony was corroborated by evidence which tended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime charged. Briefly, the evidence relied upon by the learned district attorney to constitute corroboration is the testimony as to the number of footballs for which the bill was presented, the time of year, the fact that the recreation grounds were about to be closed, that the football season was about over and that on the same day the defendant approved another voucher presented by Rose for thirty-six footballs which were not delivered. It is also urged that the fact that Seitz testified that he, as storekeeper, received no footballs covered by said vouchers and that none of the playground instructors received any footballs subsequent to the date on the two vouchers tends to corroborate Rose and Febrey. It is urged further that the fact that the defendant had taken over from Hull the auditing of accounts, that he was himself acting as auditor and, therefore, was required to know about the items of all bills, tends to corroborate the accomplices.
It is also urged that the fact that Rose was getting all of the patronage of the department for athletic goods and Suor the patronage for oil and gasoline, and the large increase in their business resulting therefrom, was some evidence tending to corroborate the accomplices; that the fact that the bills for athletic supplies and for oil and gasoline were so large as to be unreasonable was, or ought to have been, notice to the defendant, if he were honest, that something was wrong; that the evidence of Phillip Febrey, a grocer, who was not an accomplice, and who testified that the defendant told him over the telephone and at defendant’s house to tell his brother, Albert Febrey, the accomplice, to “ sit tight ” and to employ die attorney who was acting for Rose, constituted some corroboration. The opinion of Mr. Justice Kruse in People v. Lein (152 App. Div. 381; affd., 207 N. Y. 667) indicates that the advice to tell him to “ sit tight ” constitutes corroborating evidence.
The voucher was approved and signed by the defendant and was received in evidence. There was evidence not given through the testimony of the aoomplices that the forty-eight footballs charged for on the voucher lad never been delivered. The voucher, therefore, was a false voucher, signed and approved by the defendant. It might have been signed and approved by the defendant without intent to commit a crine. It appears, however, by the testimony of witnesses who were not accomplices that the defendant on other occasions, in pursaance to agreements, had approved other false and fraudulent voichers, and had benefited financially by so doing. It seems to me that there was evidence which tended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime in addition to the evidence given by the accomplices, and that the trial court did not err in so holding.
It is contended by the defendant that there was a fatal variance between the crime charged in the indictment and the proof. The indictment charged the defendant with common-law larceny. The proof was that the city delivered to Ross a warrant upon which he received credit to his account at thg bank, and that the city did not deliver to him any money. It is urged that the act charged was not proved and the act proved was not charged. That question has been settled contrary to the contention of the appellant by the Court of Appeals. (People v. Lein, 152 App. Div. 376; affd., 207 N. Y. 667; People v. Neff, 191 id. 210.)
the courts have held that the practical meaning of this is that the court and jury must, so far as they can, determine the case without prejudice or inference against him, founded upon omission to testify.” It is urged that the use of the words “ so far as they can ” requires reversal. I do not think the language used, taken in connection with all the rest of the charge, affected the substantial rights of the defendant. The court had read the section referred to and the jury could not have been influenced by the language excepted to.
The counsel for the defendant makes the point that the judgment should be reversed because the defendant did not nave a fair trial by reason of the improper conduct of the district attorney and the prejudicial comments of the court. Courts have gone far in reversing in criminal cases for improper conduci where there was doubt in regard to the merits of a case, and" where close questions of fact were involved. However, a reversal is not required in every case where the evidence of the defendant’s guit is clear and convincing, even though error may have been ccmmitted during the trial. The record in this case discloses a studied and persistent attempt by the counsel for the defendant to heckle and annoy the trial judge and the district attorney for the purpose of getting into the record exceptions to statements vhich they might make which could be used upon appeal as a grcund for reversal. Such conduct by an attorney for a defendant cannot be commended and where it finally results in drawing from the district attorney or from the trial judge some statement which, standing alone, might seem to constitute error, the judgment should not be reversed unless it appears that such error was prejudicial to the rights of the defendant. This court has not hesitated to reverse in cases where it appeared that the conduct -of the district attorney had been prejudicial to the rights of a defendant. This is not such a case. In fact, the patience and forbearance of the district attorney upon the trial of thlj case, under gresú provocation, is worthy of commendation.
X is true, undoubu dly, that roon the trial there were errors made by the receipt of evidence which, at the time when it was offered, was not competent, but the general purpose of the evidence was competent, and I think there were no errors in rulings made which were of sufficient importance to require a reversal
An appellate court is not required to search the record to ascer
All concur.
Judgment of conviction affirmed.