Commonwealth v. Avery

18 N.E.2d 353, 301 Mass. 605, 1938 Mass. LEXIS 1113
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 18 N.E.2d 353 (Commonwealth v. Avery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Avery, 18 N.E.2d 353, 301 Mass. 605, 1938 Mass. LEXIS 1113 (Mass. 1938).

Opinion

Qua, J.

These are three indictments under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 268, § 8, charging the defendant with accepting bribes while he was a member of the board of selectmen of Braintree.

The material part of said § 8 reads as follows: “A legislative, executive, judicial, county or municipal officer who corruptly requests or accepts a gift or gratuity or a promise to make a gift or to do an act beneficial to him, under an agreement or with an understanding that his vote, opinion or judgment shall be given in any particular manner, or upon a particular side of any question, cause or proceeding, which is or may be by law brought before him in his official capacity or as a consideration for any speech, work or service in connection therewith, or that, in such capacity, he shall make any particular nomination or appointment, shall forfeit his office . . . and be punished by imprisonment in the state prison . . . .”

In the first case there was ample evidence that the defendant accepted $200 from one Pearlstein with the understanding that Pearlstein should be employed for a year “as physician for the town welfare cases” at a salary of $1,000; that within a week afterwards Pearlstein received notice of his appointment from the board of selectmen; and that he actually served for the year and received the stipulated salary. The defence now urged is that the employment of a “welfare physician” for a year at a fixed salary was not a matter which could “be by law brought before” the defendant “in his official capacity,” as it is contended that the town had no power to employ such a physician at a salary; that if the town had such power, it should be exercised by the board of public welfare, and it did not appear in evidence that the selectmen constituted the board of public welfare in Braintree; and that even a board of public welfare could not make an executory contract performance of which would not be completed until long after the next town meeting, at which the personnel of the board might be changed.

This defence has a strange sound coming from a public officer who has received money upon the representation that [608]*608he could and would perform his part of such a bargain. The office of selectman is regarded by the public generally as the embodiment of the official authority of the town. In most towns election to that office is deemed a high honor. The duties of the office touch intimately practically all municipal activities. Unless the town votes otherwise, the selectmen constitute the board of public welfare. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 41, §§ 20, 21, 31. They approve all bills and payrolls. § 52. They doubtless often exercise an influence upon the management of town affairs which cannot be measured by reference to any express statutory definitions. Plainly the judge could find, on evidence which need not be recited in greater detail, that the defendant used the real or supposed power of this office to obtain money for himself by a corrupt trade in violation of his public duty, and that under color of his office he exercised de facto the power needed to accomplish what he set out to do. In a situation of this kind there is present every element which renders the acceptance of a bribe abhorrent to all right thinking people. On principle, the facts being established, the defendant was properly found guilty. His offence is not excused or mitigated by the fact, if it be a fact, that he usurped powers which did not properly pertain to his office.

We think there is nothing in the wording of § 8 herein-before quoted which should lead to a different conclusion. The clause “which is or may be by law brought before bim in his official capacity” as a matter of syntax relates only to “question, cause or proceeding.” It does not qualify that part of the section which precedes the words “in any particular manner.” The attempt to make it do so interrupts the even flow of the sentence. The conviction can rest upon the first four and a half lines of the section down to and including the word “manner,” in conjunction with the penal clause. The alternatives following the word “manner” may be disregarded as inapplicable.

We do not mean to say that an officer can be convicted of bribery in respect to acts entirely unrelated to his office. But where as here he acts under color of his office we think that a sufficient relation exists. In Commonwealth v. [609]*609Donovan, 170 Mass. 228, at page 238, this court held that a city councilman would act “in his official capacity” as those words are used in what is now the immediately preceding section (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 268, § 7), if he voted to remove a person claiming to be city treasurer, although the person’s appointment to that office was invalid. See Commonwealth v. Lapham, 156 Mass. 480, 484. One who is merely an officer de facto may be convicted under § 8. Commonwealth v. Wotton, 201 Mass. 81, 84.

We are aware that there are numerous decisions in other jurisdictions under varying statutes which construe the requirements to prove guilt of bribery more narrowly and technically than we are disposed to construe them. State v. Butler, 178 Mo. 272, is an illustrative case and cites many others. There is, however, other authority substantially in accord with the views which we have here expressed. Fall v. United States, 49 Fed. (2d) 506, certiorari denied, 283 U. S. 867. People v. Anderson, 75 Cal. App. 365, 372-374. York v. State, 42 Ga. App. 453, 461, 462, affirmed, 172 Ga. 483. State v. Potts, 78 Iowa, 656, 658. State v. Campbell, 73 Kans. 688, 713. State v. Ellis, 4 Vroom, 102. People v. Clougher, 246 N. Y. 106, 111-112. People v. Lafaro, 250 N. Y. 336, 342. Roberts v. State, 45 Ohio App. 65. Commonwealth v. O’Brien, 107 Pa. Super. Ct. 569, 574-577.

In the second case there was evidence of these facts: In December, 1934, one Wilson filed an application for a package store license. Wilson saw the defendant in the presence of another selectman and asked for a license, but the defendant gave no definite answer. Later Wilson called the defendant on the telephone, and the defendant said, “Why don’t you come up to the hall and see me?” Wilson went to the selectmen’s office, where the defendant took him into a private room, no one else being present and the door being closed, and told him that he could have the license, and said that “he [the defendant] was asking everybody to contribute $100 for campaign expenses.” Wilson said that he could not pay just then, as he had “quite an expense,” but that he would pay “later on.” [610]*610The defendant said that would be all right. The license was granted December 21. Wilson paid a license fee of $200. The town, at a meeting in the following March, voted to pay $200 to Wilson’s mother-in-law, to compensate her for the use of her land for depositing refuse and other material. The defendant had put an article relative to this in the warrant for the meeting, and he spoke in favor of it at the meeting. Wilson made two demands upon the treasurer for payment of this money, but it was not paid. The warrant for payment required the approval of the selectmen. The defendant testified that he and one other were “the majority members,” and that the money for the use of the land was not paid from March until November. In November Wilson saw the defendant alone at the town hall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.E.2d 353, 301 Mass. 605, 1938 Mass. LEXIS 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-avery-mass-1938.