The relator had been a member of the police department in the city of New York for nearly twenty years, when he was placed on trial on a charge of having on May Í4,1911, at about three-thirty P. m., entered the “ apartments on the third floor of a six-story tenement house No. 297 Avenue B, occupied by one John Horay, and while therein, did, in concert with said John Horay and two other unknown men, feloniously obtain from one John Krondrachuick, of No. 49 Avenue B, who was present, the sum of three hundred and four ($304) dollars. This during his tour of reserve duty, from 2 p. M. to 8 p. M., May 14th, 1911, at the 17th Precinct Station House.”
The witness Ivan Kodreduk being the party referred to in the specifications against the relator, testified that he was taken by two Russian friends to the house in question for the purpose of obtaining work from some unnamed union, when he met a man calling himself a “foreman,” who dropped some bills on the floor, and who, when he picked them up, claimed that a twenty-dollar bill was missing therefrom. A demand was then made that all the parties present be searched, when the person referred to as the “superintendent ” agreed to be searched first. After considerable discussion a demand was made that the witness be searched, to which he refused to consent, whereupon the “superintendent” went out to get a police officer and returned with one in about an hour or hour and a half, who promptly demanded what the trouble was and demanded that the ‘witness show him the money he had in his possession, which, becoming alarmed, he finally did, handing it to the officer in the shape of a roll containing $305. The officer then turned this money over to the “ superintendent,” who returned it after a minute or so to the officer, who put it in the witness’ pocket and told him to count it at the station house, where he was going to take him. The witness was then pulled downstairs, as he says, and after being taken around the block was returned to the house in question, and when the officer went upstairs the witness put his hand in his
As against this testimony the relator has produced witnesses upon whose credibility no attack has been made, and who must be deemed to have deliberately perjured themselves, before the findings of the commissioner can be sustained. It is established by the testimony of Captain McDermott, a witness for the
While disposed to rely in the fullest degree upon the judgment of the commissioner in determining the weight to be given to conflicting testimony, we are of the opinion that the preponderance of evidence is overwhelmingly in favor of relator herein, and that he has satisfactorily demonstrated that he was in the station house at the time of the occurrences complained of, and was nowhere near the scene of their commission. Ho one seems to have called at the station house to see him or with any letter for him, nor did he receive any telephone calls, and there is no suggestion as to how he could have obtained the message inviting him to play his part in the robbery of the complainant. The complainant’s own story shows that if any one dressed in police uniform came into the premises in which he was detained, that person had been brought there for the very purpose of assisting in the successful completion of the swindle upon him. Whoever that person may have been, we are well convinced upon the record that it was not the relator, who was then either about to retire or actually in bed in the station house, where he was entitled to be on his reserve duty.
It follows, therefore, that the writ should be sustained and
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughun and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Writ sustained, proceedings annulled, and relator reinstated, with costs and disbursements. Order to be settled on notice.
