146 N.Y.S. 637 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The four appellants, who were at the times mentioned in the indictment inspectors in the police department of the city of New York, were jointly indicted and tried for the crime of having conspired to prevent and obstruct the due administration of justice. (Penal Law, § 580, subd. 6.) The particular purpose of the conspiracy, as charged in the indictment, was the suppression of testimony which if produced would'have tended to prove that the appellants and other members of the police force had been guilty of accepting bribes to influence their official action.
The city of New York is divided for the purposes of police administration into inspection' districts, each of which is in charge and under the command of an inspector of police, and is further subdivided into* precincts, each of which is commanded by and in charge of a captain of police, who is subordinate in authority to the inspector in charge of the inspection district of which the precinct forms a part. The prosecution with regard to which it is charged that the appellants sought to suppress evidence arose out of testimony given by one George A. Sipp, the keeper of a disorderly house, before a committee of the board of aldermen, which was engaged in investigating police conditions in the city of New York. Sipp’s testimony before the committee was to the effect that for a series of years he had been in the habit of making regular payments of “protection ” money to a patrolman named Eugene Fox, attached to the forty-third police precinct, which was included within the sixth inspection district. It was further proven upon the present trial that Fox paid over the
It is not seriously contended by any defendant that no conspiracy existed such as is charged in the indictment, but each defendant insists that the evidence is insufficient to connect him with the crime, and that, in any case, the evidence against him is solely that of accomplices and is, therefore, insufficient to warrant a conviction under section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which provides that “ 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.”
It rarely happens that a criminal conspiracy can be proven without the aid of some of the participants and accomplices, and the present case was no exception to the general rule. Of the witnesses relied upon by the prosecution the trial court
Before proceeding to consider the evidence dehors that of accomplices which is relied upon to connect each appellant with the crime charged it will he well to recall certain well-established rules of law hearing upon the question of corroboration. In the first place the evidence of accomplices, alone, if believed by the jury, is sufficient to establish the fact that a crime has been committed. The rule as to corroboration of an accomplice does not attach to each and every part of the material evidence given by the accomplice. (People v. Elliott, 155 App. Div. 486, 496.) It is not necessary to elaborate this proposition further because it is not denied in the present case that there had been a conspiracy for the unlawful purpose charged in the indictment. Just as it is not necessary that the corroborative evidence shall alone be sufficient to prove the fact of the crime, so also is it not necessary that it shall, standing by itself, prove absolutely the defendants’ participation in the crime, nor need it be inconsistent with the defendants’ innocence. (People v. Elliott, 106 N. Y. 288.) All that the statute requires and all that is necessary is that there shall be evidence, other than that of accomplices, which tends to connect the defendant with the crime. If the evidence be of that character the jury, and not the court, is to judge of the weight to be given to it. (People v. O’Farrell, 175 N. Y. 323, 326.)
It will be most convenient to consider the case of each defendant separately.
As to the defendant Sweeney.
The evidence implicating him, if believed, was ample. In fact, so far as the testimony of the conceded accomplices went he was by far the most active person concerned in promoting the conspiracy. Captain Walsh, who was also deeply interested, and a considerable contributor to the fund that was raised,'was ill and unable to be about, so that the active part
As to the defendant Murtha.
The evidence against this defendant consists of a statement made by him to the district attorney. It is related by a police
As to the defendant Thompson.
He is abundantly connected with the crime by the testimony of Fox, but as he was a conceded accomplice, corroboration was necessary to justify a conviction. Such corroboration is sought to be found in the evidence of one Nelson, who was a nephew of Fox’s wife, and who was sent by Fox to find Thompson and bring back a message. He testified that he did so, and the message given him, if his evidence was credited by the jury, was quite sufficient to connect Thompson with the crime. Nelson’s evidence is bitterly assailed by counsel for Thompson, but the credence to be given to it was wholly a matter for the jury, and we are not disposed to overrule their finding. A more serious question is whether or not Nelson was not also an accomplice. This question was left to the jury, and their ver
As to the defendant Hussey.
All of the defendants also bring up for review two orders made before trial. One denied a motion for leave to inspect the minutes of the grand jury. This motion appealed to the sound discretion of the court and was, we think, rightly denied. The second order denied a motion to quash the indictment on the ground that it had been found upon the evidence only of accomplices. The indictment had indorsed upon it as the witnesses who had appeared before the grand jury the names of Walsh, Fox, George A. Sipp and Newell. The motion to quash was made on affidavits by the defendants stating generally that all of these four witnesses were accomplices. Again we think that the motion was properly denied. It did not appear on the face of the indictment that all of these witnesses were accomplices and the court was not bound to accept the bare allegation of the defendants unsupported by the statement of any facts from which the court itself could form a judgment whether or not all the witnesses were accomplices. It is true that the evidence upon the trial showed that they were, but the court when it decided the motion to quash had no means of knowing what the evidence on the trial would be, aud its action in denying the motion to quash must be judged by the information it then had, and not by what may have afterwards been disclosed.
It results that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed as to the defendants Dennis Sweeney, John J. Murtha and James F. Thompson, and that it be reversed as to the defendant James E. Hussey and that he be discharged.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
As to the defendants Sweeney, Murtha and Thompson judgment affirmed; as to defendant Hussey judgment reversed and defendant discharged. Order to be settled on notice.