Case ID: ny-crim_32/html/0033-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "\n      Burr, J.: Jenks, P. J. (concurring) :", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

SUPREME COURT—APP. DIVISION—SECOND DEPARTMENT,
    Oct. 2, 1914.
    THE PEOPLE v. WILLIAM WILLETT.
    (1.) Appeal—Brief unjustly reflecting on justice of the Court.
    Brief of district attorney filed on an appeal from a judgment convicting the defendant of crime stricken from the files of the Appellate Division because it unjustly reflected upon the personal character of a justice of the court.
    (2.) Conviction for paying money to ortain nomination for justice Supreme Court.
    Defendant was convicted of the crime of requesting and accepting a nomination for justice of the Supreme Court upon the understanding and promise of a valuable consideration and upon the payment of such consideration. Evidence examined, and held, that a verdict convicting the defendant was justified by the evidence, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
    (3.) Trial—Charge.
    Charge of court, as modified at request of defendant’s counsel, examined and approved.
    (4.) Penal Law Section 775 construed.
    In order that a person may be convicted of a violation of section 775 of the Penal Law, entitled “ Corrupt use of position or au- ■ thority,” it is not necessary that he occupy a public position or wield official authority, or enter into a conspiracy with some such official. • - It is sufficient that the person performing the act held any position or exercised any authority which made it possible for him effectively to bargain with respect to a nomination; it is not necessary that he be a public officer or a public employee. Thus, a defendant may be convicted where he made such corrupt agreement with a delegate to the convention which nominated him, and also with the chairman of the county committee of a political party.
    (5.) Same.
    When the language of a statute is ambiguous, reference may be had to the title as an aid to construction, but when the language is clear and specific, there is no room or occasion for construction, and the title of the act does not control or limit the language employed.
    (6.) Evidence—Newspaper Article.
    . In a prosecution for the offense aforesaid, it is not error to admit in evidence a newspaper article which stated in substance that the “tainted hand” of a political faction rested on the defendant and other nominees for a similar office, and that as to one of them there was a shocking scandal involving the payment of a large sum of money, and also a subsequent publication in which the other candidates asserted their innocence, withdrew a suit against the publisher of the newspaper for criminal libel and stated that there were strong grounds for the position taken by the publisher as regards the defendant, together with his reply thereto, where such evidence was not admitted to establish the defendant’s guilt or innocence, but was admitted solely as bearing upon the defendant’s conduct in the face of the accusation against him.
    (7.) Same—Conduct of defendant against whom criminal charge HAS BEEN MADE.
    The admission of testimony as to conduct emanating from a party to a cause can be justified either as an admission or as a self-contradiction.
    Jenks, P. J., dissented in part.
    Appeal by the defendant, William Willett, from a judgment of the Supreme Court, rendered against him on the 3d day of February, 1914, convicting him of the crime of requesting and accepting a nomination for a public office, upon the understanding and the promise of a valuable consideration, and upon the payment of a valuable consideration.
    
      Robert H. Elder, for the appellant.
    
      James C. Cropsey, District Attorney [Hersey Eggmton, Assistant District Attorney, with him on the brief], for the respondent.
   Burr, J.:

It is with sincere regret that we observe that the learned district attorney, in the brief submitted by him, has employed language relative to the justice of this court who granted to defendant a certificate of reasonable doubt, which is unworthy of a gentleman, a member of a learned profession, and the incumbent of an important constitutional office. Just and fair criticism of a judicial opinion, couched in respectful language, is rather to be commended than condemned. Under its light the search for truth is made more easy, its discovery more certain. In the brief referred to these limitations have been far exceeded. Such alliterations as “ intellectual inertia ” and “ unmitigated unthinking,” both inapt and the latter senseless, as also the expression “ plain blundering,” are discourteous and insulting. When, as in this case, these are followed by expressions which can have no interpretation except to charge judicial insincerity and duplicity, the language becomes contemptuous. We cannot permit a brief of such a character to remain as a part of the records of this court. We direct that it be stricken from the files, and the clerk of this court is directed to return to the district attorney the copies thereof.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of requesting and accepting a nomination for a public office, upon the understanding and promise of a valuable consideration, and upon the payment of such consideration therefor. Upon a previous appeal we considered the sufficiency of the evidence introduced before the committing magistrate to establish prima facie the commission of this crime. (People ex rel. Willett v. Quinn, 150 App. Div. 813.) We deemed it sufficient. Upon the trial of the indictment subsequently found, the proof of guilt was so conclusive that without hesitation the jury rendered its verdict. The learned counsel for appellant, neither upon the oral argument nor in the brief submitted by him, contends that such verdict was contrary to the evidence or to the weight thereof.

We may pass at once to consideration of the exceptions. Some of these may have been involved in the previous appeal, but in view of the earnest argument of counsel for appellant, we have reconsidered them. They may be classified under three heads: (1) That the facts proved do not constitute a crime within the meaning of subdivision 3 of section 775 of the Penal Law; (2) that damaging testimony was erroneously admitted, to defendant’s prejudice; and (3) that the learned trial court committed error in its instructions to the jury.

With regard to the last point, it is sufficient to say that the language of the charge, commented upon by appellant, was in two instances wholly withdrawn, or was modified at the request of defendant’s counsel. No objection was made to the charge in its modified form. With regard to the remaining criticisms upon the instructions of the trial court, it appears that at the time no exception was taken to the language employed. While it is true that this court may “ order a new trial if it be satisfied that the verdict against the prisoner was against the weight of evidence or against law, or that justice requires a new trial, whether any exception shall have been taken or not in the court below” (Code Crim. Proc. § 527), none of the conditions referred to are here found to exist. Taken in its entirety, the charge was perfectly fair and impartial, and was not against the law. We have expressed our convictions as to the weight of the evidence. The cause of justice would be hindered, and not promoted, by ordering a new trial in this case.

Appellant’s position respecting his first point is thus stated by him: “There can be no violation of section 775 [of the Penal Law] or of any subdivision thereof, except by some occupant of a public position and wielder of official authority, or by some person in conspiracy with such official. Its violation always, of necessity, requires the co-operation of such a person.” Proceeding with the argument, he contends that as neither Cassidy nor Walter, with whom the indictment charges and the proof establishes that defendant made an agreement to nominate him for the office of justice of the Supreme Court at a judicial convention, held in the borough of Brooklyn on October 6, 1911, in return for the payment to them of a valuable consideration, to wit, a sum of money, held “ public positions,” or were the “ wielders of official authority,” conceding that the evidence established such agreement, no crime has been committed. Lex non ita scripta est.

The full text of the section under consideration is as follows:

“ § 775. Corrupt use of position or authority.
“ Any person who:
1. While holding a public office, or being nominated or seeking a nomination or appointment therefor, corruptly uses or promises to use, directly or indirectly, any official authority or influence possessed or anticipated, in the way of conferring upon any person, or in order to secure, or aid any person in securing, any office or public employment, or any nomination, confirmation, promotion or increase of salary, upon consideration that the vote or political influence or action of the person so to be benefited or of any other person, shall be given or used in behalf of any candidate, officer or party or upon any other corrupt condition or consideration; or,
2. Being a public officer or employee of the State or a political subdivision having, or claiming to have, any authority or influence affecting the nomination, public employment, confirmation, promotion, removal, or increase or decrease of salary of any public officer or employee, or (sic) promises or threatens to use, any such authority or influence, directly or indirectly to affect the vote or political action of any such public officer or employee, or on account of the vote or political action of such officer or employee; or,
3. Makes, tenders or offers to procure, or cause any nomination or appointment for any public office or place, or accepts or requests any such nomination or appointment, upon the payment or contribution of any valuable consideration, or upon an understanding or promise thereof; or,
4. Makes any gift, promise or contribution to any person, upon the condition or consideration of receiving an appointment or election to a public office or a position of public employment, or for receiving or retaining any such office or position, or promotion, privilege, increase of salary or compensation therein, or exemption from removal or discharge therefrom,
“ Is punishable by imprisonment for not more than two years or by a fine of not more than three thousand dollars or both.” Appellant contends because the caption of this section is in the words “ Corrupt use of position or authority,” that it should be read as if it were corrupt use of “ public ” position or “ official ” authority. This would be reading into such caption words not found therein.' If the caption of the section is to be resorted to at all in order to construe the meaning of the subsequent text, it would seem to us that it is sufficient if the person performing the act held any position or exercised amy authority which made it possible for him effectively to bargain with respect to such nomination, whether or no such position was that of a “ public officer ” or a “ public employee.” Walter was a delegate to the judicial convention. He placed defendant in nomination. He held a position in such convention and exercised an authority with respect to its action of greater or less efficiency, but it was “ position ” and it was “ authority.” The evidence would justify the conclusion that Cassidy held such “ position ” as chairman of the Democratic county committee in Queens county and exercised such “ authority ” over the delegates to that convention from said county as was little less than absolute. Again analyzing the language of the entire section, it consists of a subject relating to the whole thereof, expressed in the words “Any person who; ” four subdivisions, separately numbered 1, 2, 3 and 4, qualifying such subject, and an object relating in like manner to all persons affected thereby in the words: “ Is punishable by imprisonment for not more than two years or by a fine of not more than three thousand dollars or both.” Subdivisions 1 and 2 primarily (although, as we shall show, not exclusively) do relate to one who does hold a “ public office,” or to one who is a “ public officer or employee of the State or a political subdivision ” thereof. These words are expressly employed therein. But when we come to subdivision 3, under which this indictment was found, all reference to “ public position ” or to a “ public officer or employee ” is omitted. Treating these various subdivisions, divided in each case by a semicolon, followed by the disjunctive “ or,” as their arrangement and punctuation would require, as separate, distinct and not interdependent subdivisions, and the law is: “ Any person who: * * * 3. Makes, tenders or offers to procure, or cause any nomination or appointment for any public office or place, or accepts or requests any such nomination or appointment, upon the payment or contribution of any valuable consideration, or upon an understanding or promise thereof; * * * Is punishable by imprisonment for not more than two years or by a fine of not more than three thousand dollars or both.” Again, subdivision 1 of the section relates to two classes of persons, those “ holding a public office ” and those “ seeking a nomination or appointment therefor,” and the thing condemned is corrupt use of “ official authority or influence possessed or anticipated.” By its express language, while primarily it relates to the use of official power or authority, it is not necessarily limited to one at the time of the commission of the forbidden act actually holding such position or possessing such authority. When the language of a statute is ambiguous reference may be had to the title thereof as an aid to construe - tion and to interpret its meaning. (Endl. Interp. Stat. § 58; Den ex dem. James v. Du Bois, 16 N. J. Law, 285.) But when the language is clear and specific there is neither room nor occasion for construction, and the title of an act is in such a case never allowed to control or limit - the unambiguous language employed. (2 Suth Stat. Const. § 210; Commonwealth ex rel. Alliance Petroleum & Coal Co. v. Slifer, 53 Penn. St. 71; Neumann v. City of New York, 137 App. Div. 55.) But if we wander somewhat afield, the title of the act, of which section 775 is a part, is “An Act providing for the punishment of crime, constituting chapter forty of the Consolidated Laws.” (Laws of 1909, chap. 88.) The section under consideration is part of article 74, entitled “ Elective Franchise,” which article is wholly devoted to defining offenses against the pure and uncorrupted excercise of the voting privilege, and of matters and things connected therewith, by any person whomsoever. Finally, as we have pointed out, the caption of this particular section is not corrupt use of “ public position ” or “ official authority,” but of any position, whether that of a public official or otherwise, carrying power, or authority with it. We think appellant’s contention in this regard is not sustained.

We are still to consider whether any evidence was improperly admitted during the course of the trial to defendant’s prejudice. After defendant was nominated at the Democratic judicial convention on October 6, 1911, and during the succeeding campaign, and on October eighteenth of the same year, the Standard Union, a newspaper circulating in the borough of Brooklyn, published an article entitled, “ Tammany’s Tainted Touch on a Judiciary Ticket,” which, among other things, contained the following language: “ The first ■nominations to the Supreme Court bench in this district were made under the Tammany method this year. The tainted hand of Tammany rests on them. The Democratic people had nothing to do with these nominations. The candidates are Boss nominees pure and simple, and as to one of them there is already a rumor of a shocking scandal involving the payment of a large sum of money. If the taxpayers and rentpayers want to encourage the deliberate raid made by Tammany on their pockets when these judgeships were óreated they will vote for the Tammany judiciary ticket. The defeat of that ticket would be the sort of warning future Tammany raiders would heed.” Immediately thereafter defendant, in connection with Mr. Herbert T. Ketcham and Mr. Patrick E. Callahan, his associates upon the judiciary ticket nominated at said convention, filed separate informations, one being verified by this defendant, and to which the article in question in its entirety was attached, in which informations they charged Mr. William Berri, the publisher of said paper, with criminal libel in connection therewith. A warrant was thereupon issued for his arrest. When arraigned before the magistrate, on October twentieth the proceeding was adjourned to October twenty-third and on that date it was again adjourned to October twenty-seventh. On October twenty-sixth defendant united with Mr. Ketcham and Mr. Callahan in a letter addressed to Mr. Berri, which is in the following language:

“ Referring to the matter of the proceedings now pending in the Magistrate’s Court, wherein we are the complainants against you, certain facts have been brought to our attention which make it apparent that the prosecution was instituted mistakenly. We now join in saying that we sincerely regret having instituted these proceedings or having thereby caused you any annoyance. We shall instruct our counsel to terminate the matter by withdrawal of the proceedings in court.”

The criminal proceeding against Mr. Berri was thereupon withdrawn. On October twenty-eighth Mr. Ketcham and Mr. Callahan each issued a statement to the newspapers published in the borough of Brooklyn, which was on that day published by them. Each of them asserted his complete innocence of any criminal or improper conduct. In Mr. Ketcham’s statement, among other things, were these words, referring to the institution of the proceeding for criminal libel: “ The only mistake on my part which required the withdrawal was my original confidence that, with respect to all Democratic nominees, the article contained an unjust accusation.” Mr. Callahan’s statement contained these words, among others: “ Since the proceedings were taken, certain facts concerning the nomination of Mr. Willett, before unknown to me, were brought to my attention. Those facts convinced me, so far as Mr. Willett was concerned, there were strong grounds for the position taken by Mr. Berri and the Standard Union.” After seeing these statements, defendant also issued and caused to be published in the same papers a statement in which, referring to those issued by his associates, which he characterized as “ extraordinary,” he purported to give what he termed “ a plain statement of my financial affairs during the past month, which is now assumed to be the foundation of the Standard Union attack.” In that statement he asserted that “ I have had occasion to borrow, from certain banks, the sum of twenty thousand dollars and no more, within about thirty days.” He then stated that $5,000 of this amount was used to take up a note of $5,000, due October 22,1911; $5,000 to purchase some stock from Louis T. Walter (who, as we have seen, was one of the delegates to the convention, and the man who nominated him thereat), and that the remaining $10,000 was borrowed for the purpose of spending it, should that much be needed during the campaign, and that the most of the latter amount was still in his possession. That this was not the whole truth in regard to his financial affairs in connection with his nomination was conclusively established by the evidence in this case. Although the evidence may not establish that he directly borrowed more than $20,000 from banks, it did establish that he had also borrowed upon his note to the order of Mr. Frank R, Merrill, a personal friend, and discounted at the bank of the latter, for his accommodation, within thirty-six days of the date of said statement, an additional sum of $5,000. When defendant obtained this loan he asserted that it was to be used in connection with the primary elections in Queens county at which delegates to the assembly conventions were chosen, which in turn elected delegates to the judicial convention. It appeared from the evidence that in no true sense had $5,000 of the $20,000 subsequently borrowed been used to pay this note. If it was the fact that $5,000 of the cash obtained by defendant in 66 big bills ” mostly of the denomination of $1,000 each from the National Bank of Far Rockaway, upon the first loan of $10,000 on the thirtieth of September, was used to pay this note, it was only after defendant had obtained an equal sum in cash by the sale of stock belonging to said Merrill, which he had given to defendant’s brother, with defendant’s knowledge, to enable him to take up said note. Though there was a cash payment to Walter of $5,000 also in “ big bills,” and some evidence of a transfer of certain certificates of stock in two corporations, if the payment was in consideration of such transfer, the jury were justified in finding that the stock was of little or no value, and the transaction merely colorable. Finally, there was evidence to contradict defendant’s statement that at the date thereof he still had in his possession the greater portion of the remaining $10,000.

Appellant contends that the admission in evidence of the article from the Standard Union, of the subsequent statements of Mr. Ketcham and Mr. Callahan respecting the same, and of the institution and withdrawal of the criminal prosecution of Mr. Berri on account thereof, and of the evidence respecting the manner of payment of the Merrill note, was erroneous and prejudicial. If any of this evidence had been admitted as of itself establishing the fact of defendant’s guilt or innocence, it might be criticised. It was admitted for no such purpose. In addition to the evidence establishing defendant’s guilt, the evidence now under consideration was admitted solely with relation to defendant’s conduct in the face of accusation thereof. When the evidence was offered, the learned trial court was careful to state to the jury that it was admitted solely for the latter purpose; and in its instructions to the jury it was careful to say, referring to the statements of Mr. Ketcham and Mr. Callahan, “ These are allowed in evidence for the purpose of determining whether this defendant’s conduct in the light of those statements was indicative of guilt or innocence; ” and again, “ The same is true as to the article published in the ‘ Standard Union.’ These are admitted in evidence so that you can see just what the charge was, and whether this man’s conduct, when he knew what he was charged with, when he knew how vicious the charge was, indicated his freedom from guilt or his consciousness of guilt.” So with regard to the manner of payment of the Merrill note, the trial court again •instructed the jury as follows: “ Now, there is testimony before you as to the payment of the note made by Merrill. You will remember that as a part of the People’s case I allowed testimony to be given as to the method by which that note was paid. Mr. Willett had issued a statement in which he said that this loan that he had subsequently procured was for the purpose of paying that note made to Merrill, so the People were entitled to show that that statement was false; and in order to do that, in order to furnish evidence which they claim showed it to be false they had the right to show just the method by which it was paid, as one of the links necessary in the chain. * * * Originally that was all that you could consider that testimony for, as bearing upon the question as to whether that payment was made by the defendant or was made by means of money which his brother raised from the stock or bonds of Mr. Merrill. But as the case progressed, Marinus Willett was called as a witness for the defendant, and then this chain of circumstances became of value in another way. It became of value as bearing upon his interest in the case, his truthfulness and his credibility as a witness; and at last, if you find from the evidence in- the case, that this was done by the direction of the defendant and you find that these circumstances indicate guilt, you may consider them upon the question as to whether the defendant is guilty. But unless you find that this was done at his instigation, then it cannot be considered as direct evidence of his guilt. So, to make that plain, I will say that you cannot make the defendant responsible here for something that his brother did, and the inference which would result from his brother’s doing something in a circuitous manner cannot be attributed to the defendant by inference. You cannot base one inference or presumption upon another inference or presumption; you must find the direct connection.” Thus limited, the evidence was properly received. Conduct, when it emanates from a party to the cause, can be justified equally as an admission or a self-contradiction. (1 Wigm. Ev. § 267, subd. b.) No conduct is necessarily conclusive. On the other hand, no conduct is without significance of greater or less weight, according to circumstances. “ Prominent among admissions by conduct is the making of false statements by the accused regarding important matters involved in the inquiry. The inference is * * * that one who seeks to deceive others or a court of justice as to the truth of the facts involved knows that he will be shown to be guilty in a criminal proceeding * * * were the facts fully known. The government, therefore, is at liberty to show the most self-serving explanations or other statements of the accused with a view to proving the fact that they are false and that the accused must have known it.” (2 Chamberí. Mod. Ev. § 1417. See, also, Wigm. Ev. § 278; Moriarty v. L. C. & D. Ry. Co., L. R. 5 Q. B. 314, 319; McAdory v. State, 62 Ala. 154; Walker v. State, 49 id. 398; Hinshaw v. State, 147 Ind. 334, 362; State v. Benner, 64 Maine, 267, 289; Commonwealth v. Devaney, 182 Mass. 33; Coleman v. People, 58 N. Y. 555, 560; Wilson v. United States, 162 U. S. 613, 621.)

Defendant’s statement was shown to be false. To make it intelligible that to which the statement was a reply must also be shown. As the learned trial court aptly put it (in speaking of tlie article in the Standard Union) : “ No matter what it charges against anybody else or against any organization, or the purposes of any change in the district, or anything of that kind, or even a charge direct against Mr. Willett, that is not evidence against him, and the sole purpose of admitting the article is that it may illustrate, if it does tend to do so, any remark, or omission to remark, upon the part of Mr. Willett.” And again, in speaking of the statements of Mr. Ketcham and Mr. Callahan, the court said: “ This is what prompted his statement. It is just like a part of a conversation. * * * The question that is asked that prompts the statement made by the defendant, is competent, the same as the defendant’s statement.” And again: “ Suppose I accuse you of something and you say, 6 Well, then, I will have to make a denial of it,’ but you make a statement which is not a denial. Then the accusation and the statement are both competent.” The evidence was properly received. The jury were abundantly cautioned as to the use to be made of it.

The case is an important one; important to the people, and vitally important to defendant. The affirmance of this conviction may mean the wreck of a promising life. We have carefully examined every page of this voluminous record. Defendant’s guilt seems conclusively established. Regardless, therefore, of consequences, we must discharge the duty devolved upon us. The springs from which the fountain of justice flows must be kept clear and unpolluted. The judgment of conviction in this case must be affirmed.

Carr, Rich and Putnam, JJ., concurred; Jenks, P. J., concurred in separate opinion.

Jenks, P. J. (concurring) :

I concur in the opinion of Burr, J., as it affirms the judgment, but not as it disposes of the brief submitted by the district attorney. I vote that the clerk be directed to strike out from all copies of that brief submitted to this court for any purpose the following sentences in pages 65 and 66 thereof: “ This is a perfect manifestation of intellectual inertia. These words are just unmitigated unthinking. They are used apparently to conceal whatever ideas may have been in the judicial mind.” I think that there should be no other notice taken of the brief or of the writer thereof.

The district attorney undertook to criticise the opinion of the justice who granted the certificate of reasonable doubt. In the course of that criticism he had the right to say, if he so thought, that the justice was careless, that is, that the justice did not exercise due care in the consideration of the matter before him. He had the right to assign the discussion or the determination of the justice to lack of an exercise of his intellectual powers. He had the right to characterize the opinion or any part thereof as manifesting lack of thought for which there was no mitigation. And my vote is not in denial or in disparagement of these rights. But my vote is given because of disapproval of the verbiage of the criticisms made in a brief submitted to an appellate court. The words are not of utterance but of writing, not spoken in the ardor of advocacy, but set down in the calm of composition. And while the words are addressed to those only who are supposed to be convinced by argument alone, they are published and they may be read by any one. Language permissible in harangue or admissible in controversy or debate is not, therefore, style for discussion of the errors of the head and not of the heart of a judge when his decision is under legal review.

The third sentence is subject to further criticism. A man may conceal his ideas without blame, and may use speech to conceal them. But the suggestion is that a judge apparently had used language in the course of a judicial opinion to conceal any ideas which may have been in his judicial mind. Of course the reference is to ideas, if any, which were pertinent to the case in hand, otherwise it would be meaningless. To suggest that a judge concealed such ideas, if any, by judicial utterances made for that purpose permits the inference that for some reason he was guilty of guile or of suppression. If such inference is permissible, it naturally suggests the inquiry, why should a judge do this thing? Was there any reason peculiar to this case why the judge should not be outspoken as to any judicial ideas in his mind pertinent to the case, rather than attempt to cover them up by language used only for that purpose? I do not impute any intention to the district attorney by these words to allude to any judicial obliquity. I do not believe that he had such an intent. But the criterion is not his intention, but a reader’s possible inference. I am careful to note that the sentence is hypothetical, for the reference is not to any ideas that were, but to whatever ideas may have been in the judicial mind. If one should say that I thus attribute too much to the words, then in any event they are within the criticism made upon the other two sentences in the brief.

I regret the incident. I believe that the learned district attorney thought that he was within the bounds of legitimate criticism when he set down these words. The sentences do not make for a brief which is able, thorough and convincing, and naturally may give umbrage to a justice distinguished for his labor, his learning and his character.

Judgment of conviction affirmed.