Gumbs v. Martinis

40 A.D.2d 194, 338 N.Y.S.2d 817, 1972 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3079

This text of 40 A.D.2d 194 (Gumbs v. Martinis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gumbs v. Martinis, 40 A.D.2d 194, 338 N.Y.S.2d 817, 1972 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3079 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

McGivern, J.

This is a proceeding pursuant to article 78 of the CPLR to review the mandate of the Supreme Court, New York County (Martinis, J.), dated November 8,1972, summarily adjudging the petitioner in contempt of court for conduct committed in the presence of the court, imposing a sentence of $250 [195]*195fine or 10 days ’ imprisonment, and excluding the petitioner from the Criminal Court Building, 100 Centre Street, New York, N. Y., while the case of People v. Richard Moore was on trial before Martinis, J.

The petitioner, it seems, is associated in some capacity as a “ writer ” with the Panther Party newspaper, known as Right On, and is represented as no stranger to the courts, having been seen over the years as a frequenter of the courtrooms and corridors of 100 Centre Street. This is to be gleaned from the papers submitted by the petitioner, including the affidavit of Deloris Costello, who describes herself as a reporter for WBAI-FM, and involved in reporting trials of political activists in the Supreme Court of New York ”. It is to be noted she observed him distributing literature on request: I have only seen him give literature to people who specifically ask”. The affidavit of Martinis, J., says: “ Petitioner Gumbs is no stranger to the Criminal Courts Building. He has been a frequent spectator at these trials; court officers and policemen have informed me that on a number of occasions they have seen him distributing Black Panther or related literature in and around the courthouse; and has even been depositing leaflets under spectators benches. ”

The unfolding drama leading up to his contempt began innocently enough on October 26,1972, when a prospective juror struck up a conversation with him in the corridor outside Trial Part XXXVI. In this Trial Part, the jury selection process was going on, in a case involving the attempted murder of two policemen with a machine gun. And in certain remarks before the panel of jurors, defense counsel made reference to the Black Panther party, of which the defendant was a member. At the time in question, out in the corridor, petitioner was alone and aloof. And he did not initiate the conversation with the prospective juror; although it cannot be said the prospective juror was not unaffected by the encounter, for in narrating the incident,- she (a Mrs. Levine) testified that she saw the paper Right On,11 three [papers] together, plus something else underneath ’ ’ next to petitioner as he sat alone ‘1 quite by himself in a corner and minding his own business. ” The paper attracted her attention. She asked to glance at the paper. The contents were so completely negative about the United States ”, and in answer to a query by her, petitioner “ spouted ” his views about injustice in the United States. Thus, the need for insulating other prospective jurors from a possible unfavorable reaction to the party cannot be ignored.

[196]*196The circumstances of this encounter, however, seem to have been carried back to the Presiding Justice in a fashion not completely accurate. ' Given the impression that the petitioner had been propagandizing, and openly displaying various papers, Martinis, J. convoked a hearing in the robing room, the petitioner initially not being present. Then he summoned the petitioner, ordered him to keep out of the courtroom, the corridor and the building and after several interchanges, including a trenchant personal taunt by the petitioner, directed at the Judge, the following developed:

a man [Petitioner]: But I’m going to continue coming in this building. If you want to bust me, go ahead.
1 ‘ THE COURT : O.K.
a man: You know what I am. Just go ahead and do that. I understand. Because you know what you are, you’re a fascist weak pig.
the court: All right.
‘£ a man : That’s what you are.
‘ ‘ the court : Now, I could hold you for contempt, what you said.
“a man: Hold me for contempt. I’m not intimidated by fear from you. I’ve been in this country four hundred years being fucked over by people like you.
the court : Because of disrespect and your language.
“ a man: Who are you for disrespect? Ninety-eight percent of the people in your concentration camps are black and Puerto Bican.
“ the court: You are contumacious.
‘ ‘ a man : Ninety-eight are Puerto Bican.
“ the court: —and I’m holding you in contempt and adjudging you in contempt and I’m fining you two hundred and fifty-dollars or ten days in the work house ”.

Then, following an intervention- in his behalf by Mr. Bloom, the attorney for the defendant on trial, the court said:

££ the court: I’ll take your suggestion. I’ll vacate the contempt. Outside. Go outside. And remember my directive. ’’

Come November 8, 1972, or about two weeks later, the petitioner reappeared in Trial Term XXXVI, apparently again with papers in his hgnd, as he had previously, and with the ease of People v. Moore then in full progress, lit is noteworthy that in the interim the petitioner took no steps to nullify the exclusion order, nor did he make any effort to lift the ban, although he seems to have been knowledgeable in the ways of the courts and to have had ready access to legal help. He made no timely [197]*197application; and he proffered no explanation. (Walker v. City of Birmingham, 388 U.S. 307.) In onr view, if he thought the grounds for his ban to have been infirm, as indeed, they may have been, he had his remedy, as available to him then as in the instant proceeding. (Matter of Katz v. Murtagh, 34 A D 2d 517, affd. 28 N Y 2d 234; Judiciary Law, § 752.) But he was not free to flout the court’s charge. (Walker v. City of Birmingham, supra, p. 320.) He had been warned by Mr. Bloom, his informal counsel on October 26, 1972, that he was bound by the court’s order and was inviting contempt and could be jailed if he disobeyed the order. And the Judge’s parting words on October 26, 1972, were: “Remember my directive”.

And so on November 8, 1972, the following developed:

‘‘ the court : Didn’t you appear before me last week?
‘‘ the mah : I was in this court, but it wasn’t last week, it was the week before.
11 the court : The week before.
‘ ‘ the mah : In your chambers.
£ ‘ the court : Yes, and I directed you and ordered you to stay out of this Court and out of the corridors of this courtroom while this Court was in progress, otherwise I would hold you in contempt.
‘ ‘ the mah : For what? For what reason?
‘ ‘ the court : Because I ordered you out.
“ the mah : That ain’t good enough. You can’t arbitrarily keep the public out of a courtroom.

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40 A.D.2d 194, 338 N.Y.S.2d 817, 1972 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumbs-v-martinis-nyappdiv-1972.