33 N.J.L. 102 | N.J. | 1868
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The indictment in this case was removed into this court by certiorari to the Sessions of Hudson. It sets forth in substance, in language sufficiently plain and intelligible, that application having been duly made to the common council of Jersey City for leave to lay a railroad track along one of the public streets of that city, the defendant wickedly and corruptly offered to one of the members of said common council the sum of fifty dollars to vote in favor of said application. Upon return of the certiorari, a motion was made to quash the indictment, on the ground that the facts set forth do not constitute a crime.
It is said that the common law offence of bribery can only be predicated of a reward given to a judge or other official concerned in the administration of justice. The earlier text writers thus define the offence : “ Where any man in judicial place takes any fee or pension, robe or livery, gift, reward or brocage, of any person, that hath to do before him in any way, for doing his office., or by color of his office, but of the king only, unless it be meat and drink, and that of small value.” 3 Inst. 145. The definition in 4 Blackstone’s Com. 139, is to the same effect. Hawkins, in his Pleas of the Crown, Vol. 1, p. 312, gives, substantially, the same description of the offence, but adds : “ Also, bribery signifies the taking or giving of a reward for offices of a public nature.” The later commentators, supported, as I think, by the adjudged cases, however, maintain the broader doctrine, that
Whether or not the common council has the power, with or without legislative sanction, to grant the use of a public street to a railroad company for the uses of the railroad, it is, I think, clear that no such use can be made of the streets, without the consent of the city, in the absence of a legislative grant to that effect.
Nor is it material whether the railroad company which applied for the privilege, had the power under its charter to lay the track. Application had been duly made for that purpose, and was pending. An attempt to bribe a member of council to vote upon it, whether such attempt was made after or before the introduction of an ordinance or resolution granting the privilege asked, comes within the general law against bribery. Whether the common council had authority to make the grant, or the railroad company the power to avail itself of its benefits, if made, or whether the offer of a bribe was before or after the application in due course of proceeding, had been embodied in an ordinance or resolution is immaterial. The offer of anything of value in corrupt payment or reward for any official act, legislative, ex
The objections taken are not tenable, and the motion to quash must be denied.
Motion denied.