In re Attorney

175 A.D. 653, 161 N.Y.S. 504
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 A.D. 653 (In re Attorney) 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
In re Attorney, 175 A.D. 653, 161 N.Y.S. 504 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Cochrane, J.:

The respondent was admitted to the bar on or about the 1st day of July, 1914. This proceeding for his removal from office was instituted by the New York Central Railroad Company. On September 27, 1913, the respondent, then a law student, and another law student purchased tickets at the Albany station of the railroad company from Albany to Ravena. The respondent represented a life insurance company and his mission to Ravena was for the purpose of soliciting insurance. The mission of his companion, the other law student, was to accompany him. After purchasing their tickets and while waiting for a departing train the respondent was taken ill and the two abandoned their project. They contend that they thereupon presented their tickets to the ticket agent for redemption and that the agent refused to redeem the same. The fact of such presentation is denied by the railroad company, and on this disputed question of fact depends the result of this proceeding. Shortly thereafter each of the two law students commenced an action in the City Court of Albany against the railroad company to recover the penalty of fifty dollars provided by section 1562 of the Penal Law for improper refusal by the railroad company to redeem unused tickets presented to it for redemption. The railroad company succeeded in the actions in the City Court, but on appeal to the County Court the judgment of the City Court was reversed and on further appeal to this court the judgment of the County Court was affirmed. The cases were retried in the City Court of Albany in February, 1915, and again resulted in judgments in favor of the railroad [655]*655company. All of such trials were before the city judge without a jury and the records before us disclose no statement of the reason for his decisions. Thereafter this proceeding was instituted, it being alleged that the respondent entered into a preconceived plan and conspiracy to defraud the railroad company out of the amount of the penalty, and that for that purpose he resorted to an improper use of the processes of the court in prosecuting a fictitious and unfounded claim, and that in such unlawful scheme he gave false testimony and committed the crime of perjury. A referee appointed .to take the testimony and examine into the truth of said charges has found that the facts alleged in the petition are true and his, report is now before this court for confirmation. It is needless to say that if the facts are as alleged the respondent is not only unfit to be a member of an honorable profession but is also unfit to be a member of society. The facts alleged constitute serious crimes against the laws of the State.

After careful consideration of the facts we have reached the conclusion that the charges against the respondent are not fairly sustained. He and his companion who was with him both vigorously assert that they did present the tickets to the agent for redemption. Two witnesses who knew the respondent hy sight testify that they were in the Albany station and saw the respondent and his companion approach the ticket office and hand their tickets to the agent, who returned them. These witnesses were not sufficiently near to hear the conversation, but if they are stating the truth their testimony is strongly corroborative of the contention of the respondent. They were not sworn on the trial of the action in the City Court because it was not then known that they possessed any material information. That the respondent was in fact taken ill while waiting for the train in the Albany station is clearly established by the testimony of Dr. O’Keefe who testifies that on that day, which he fixes by a charge in his books against the respondent, he prescribed for the latter who was ill and vomited in his presence. If the respondent was thus taken suddenly ill, such fact explains his change of purpose in not going to Kavena after purchasing the tickets and goes far to discredit the contention of a preconceived design to purchase 'the railroad [656]*656ticket for the purpose of making such purchase the basis of a fictitious claim against the railroad company for a refusal to redeem the same and making a sham illness the pretext for demanding' such redemption. The findings of the referee are apparently based on alleged admissions made by the respondent and his companion to two detectives to the effect that they had not in fact presented the tickets for redemption. Prior to the last trial of the actions in the City Court of Albany these detectives sought out the acquaintance of the two young men, particularly the companion of the respondent, the latter having left Albany at that time and gone to another county where he resided, for the purpose of practicing law. One of these detectives was occupied 128 days in investigating- the case. Much of their energy seems to have been exerted in forming a strong friendship between themselves and the young law student, the companion of the respondent. They posed as theatrical men and took him to theatres and otherwise made him the subject of their entertainment. It appears from the record that in their association with the respondent and his associate these detectives repeatedly and constantly brought the conversation around to the subject of the pending law suits against the railroad company with a frequency and lack of adroitness which must have made their purpose manifest to the most ordinary intelligence. That purpose clearly was to gather some admissions or something which might be construed as admissions from the young men. The latter seem to have understood the purpose of the detectives and indiscreetly perhaps led them on. That they were believed to be detectives and not theatrical men as they represented themselves to be appears from the testimony of the woman who kept the boarding house where one of the law students boarded, who had been in theatrical work herself, and who told him that one of the detectives whom she had seen at her house was not a theatrical man, but as she believed a detective. That she so told him in the presence of this detective himself is not denied by the latter. The respondent testifies that he believed them to be detectives. His associations with them, however, ■were rather limited because, as above stated, he had left Albany at the time when they began their operations in that city. On two occasions he visited the city and met these detectives arid [657]*657was the recipient of their entertainment. What occurred between them and the nature of the admission which the respondent made to them is best described by himself in his testimony as follows: “Q. G-o ahead now and tell anything you remember said or done between you or by you and Switzer together, or separately at this second trip ? A. Why, it was down at the Hotel Hampton, and I believe Lewis —■ is it Lewis ? He goes under two names. Q. Lambert he was known as ? A. Lambert and Switzer were down there and I believe Foster with them. I don’t know; I think he was. We were starting out of the hotel and walking up the street. He says, ‘ do you see that coal hole there ? ’ There was a coal hole. Q. Who said that, Lewis? A. Lewis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 A.D. 653, 161 N.Y.S. 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-attorney-nyappdiv-1916.