Dunnigan v. Murray Transp. Co.

53 F.2d 502, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1796
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 23, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 53 F.2d 502 (Dunnigan v. Murray Transp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunnigan v. Murray Transp. Co., 53 F.2d 502, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1796 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge

(after all parties had rested at the end of the case).

[503]*503I hold Joseph Dunnigan in criminal contempt of this court for having willfully testified falsely regarding a material matter in these causes.

I. In open court, just before we adjourned yesterday, I told Mr. Ash, the counsel for the libelant, Catherine Dunnigan, that in my opinion Joseph Dunnigan, her son, had consciously and willfully perjured himself in the evidence which he had given on this trial when he said he was on board the scow Dunnigan Sisters on Sunday evening, January 20, 1929, and saw the accident.

II. I was coming to this conclusion from various items of evidence that had come out early in the trial, but I was finally confirmed in it when I heard the testimony given yesterday by two of the witnesses who had met Dunnigan when he arrived on Monday morning, January 21, 1929, at the scene of the disaster. By that testimony it was shown that Dunnigan was first informed that morning of the sinking of the scow Dunnigan Sisters.

III. In dealing with this matter in this way, I want it to be distinctly understood that there does not attach to Mr. Ash or to the members of his firm, all of whom are well known and highly regarded by me, the slightest criticism of any kind in regard to the false story which was told by this witness when he testified.

IV. It is most unfortunate that a matter of this kind should occur, but it seems to mo that, when it does occur, and when a judge becomes aware of it, he should, in so far as his doing so is consonant with appropriate and dignified procedure, punish those who are guilty; for it is settled law that willfully false evidence as to a material fact given in the presence of the court or a contumacious attitude of a witness who has been sworn in court constitute criminal contempt of court because they are obstructive of justice.

I think that offenses of this kind too often escape notice, and that, when they are suspected, they are not often enough followed up by punishment.

V. In this ease, after I had spoken to Mr. Ash, he conferred with his client and with the witness Joseph Dunnigan, and he informed me this morning that, after persisting until this morning that his story was true, Dunnigan finally admitted that it was false, and that he had not been present on board the scow on the night of Sunday, January 20, 1929; as he testified he had.

Various circumstances such as the fact that his wife was ill, that he has two small children, that he is working for his mother, who is an old woman, were put forward as reasons why the punishment, which I told Mr. Ash I should have to give him, should not be too severe.

VI. There is nothing which occurs in our courts more to be deprecated nor to be punished more promptly when such punishment is procedurally possible than conscious willful perjury in a trial. The offence in this ease I think is aggravated by the fact that the libelant was the mother of the witness. Whether she was aware of the fact that his story was not true I do not know. That is not before me. But this witness has confessed, and, I must say this much to his credit, has at last met the situation in a manly way.

After anxiously waiting during the day, he has taken the stand and stated that what he testified,to at the commencement of the trial with regard to what he considered to be, and what is a most important question, namely, the watching of the scow on the night of the accident, was not true.

VII. It is a disagreeable but necessary duty for courts to punish instances of this kind of perjury, for which an offense tends to undermine the foundation of justice, which is truth.

On the other hand, in dealing with the punishment which should be imposed, I have to consider the fact that the witness, though certainly under pressure, has allowed his better self to rise to the surface, and has confessed openly before me and before all the counsel present and all the other witnesses the falsity of his story. He has not forced me to turn him over to the United States Attorney for criminal prosecution for his perjury, nor has he forced me to hold a special hearing on the question of the truth of his evidence as would have been necessary if he had persisted in a denial that he had perjured himself.

In effect, his testimony on rebuttal, confessing his previous false testimony, is a plea of guilty to a charge of criminal contempt, and I shall so treat it.

But I shall not give him so heavy a punishment as I should have given him, if, after a hearing on the matter, I had been forced to find that he was guilty of the perjury now admitted.

I think that under the circumstances shown, in view of Ms change of attitude, a fair punishment — given with the hope that it will serve as a warning to other witnesses who may bo tempted to follow a similar course of false swearing before me or any [504]*504other judge of this court — will be to commit Joseph Dunningan to the United States Detention Headquarters for a period of fourteen days, commencing from this afternoon.

The marshal will be here at once to take him in charge.

(Various counsel present requested that this sentence should be suspended, or at least that there should be an opportunity for Joseph Dunnigan to take his mother home to Haverstraw in his ear, which was waiting outside the court. After these arguments were heard, the court continued.)

I will not suspend the sentence, but I will do this: I will suspend the commencement of the sentence until tomorrow, and parole Dunnigan in your custody, Mr. Ash, so that he can take his mother home, and you must see that he is here in court to-morrow morning. You can then take up with'me further, if you wish, the precise sentence which I shall give him. He has to have some punishment, and I think that what I have given him is a very moderate punishment considering the nature of his crime.

His mother was going to benefit from his perjury, if his testimony had been believed, and she had been successful in the case. As I have said, I do not know whether she knew about his testimony beforehand or not, but she was going to benefit by it, and probably he was going to benefit indirectly also. It is a sordid situation.

I have strong feelings on matters of this kind, and I believe so much in candor, no matter whom it may hurt, that I cannot suspend the sentence. But I will parole him in your custody so that he may take his mother home.

Second. On Reargument by Mr. Ash on October 23, 1931, as to the Sentence to be Imposed on Joseph Dunnigan.

(continuing).

The answer to your plea for a change in the sentence is that there cannot be any change.

I. The recanting and changing of evidence on the part of Joseph Dunnigan was not the result of a yeast working in himself, of his own conscience; it was the result of my suggestion to you that you should find out about his story and force him to tell you the truth, because I felt from- the evidence which I had heard, and from observing'him, that he was not telling the truth.

It was only as the result of your efforts made at my suggestion that he came forward and told the truth finally.

Now I am going to set my face with the utmost sternness against loose ideas of testifying. They are getting far too current in our courts.

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Bluebook (online)
53 F.2d 502, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunnigan-v-murray-transp-co-nysd-1931.