In Re Callahan

358 A.2d 469, 70 N.J. 178, 1976 N.J. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 11, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 358 A.2d 469 (In Re Callahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Callahan, 358 A.2d 469, 70 N.J. 178, 1976 N.J. LEXIS 189 (N.J. 1976).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This disciplinary proceeding against respondent, a member of the bar of this State, grows out of an investigation by the Ocean County Prosecutor’s office of official corruption in Jackson Township of which respondent was Township Attorney during 1969 and 1970. As a result of the investigation, respondent and several others were indicted on various charges of conspiracy, bribery and corruption arising out of Township approval of an application for a trailer park license. A separate indictment was also returned against respondent charging him with soliciting a bribe, misconduct in office and conspiracy to bribe involving a senior citizens garden apartment in the Township. Respondent was tried separately on each indictment and ultimately acquitted of the charges by jury verdict. Thereafter, at the direction of this Court, respondent’s conduct as an attorney in these same matters was investigated by the Burlington County Ethics Committee, which filed a statement of charges in two counts. 1

The first count alleged that respondent, while Township Attorney, worked against his own client’s interests and conspired with two individuals to bribe public officials in Jackson Township to remove an age restriction on occupancy of an 18 to 20 unit senior citizens garden apartment owned by Doral Construction Company. A summary of the factual background of this matter is set forth in this Court’s opinion in In re Sabatino, 65 N. J. 548 (1974).

The owners of the garden apartment had attempted to comply with the restriction which limited occupancy to persons over 62 years of age, but were plagued by substantial *180 vacancies with resultant serious financial problems. Consequently, they began to rent to persons without regard to age. Efforts were then made to have the age restriction lifted, but the Township took no action on these applications. The owners also were confronted with a suit brought by the municipality to enforce the restriction.

Prank Vogel, who had been one of the principals of Doral, suggested that the most expeditious way to have the restriction lifted was to bribe certain Township officials. He called upon Murray Eisdorfer, another principal of Doral, to furnish $9,000 which was to be used largely for that purpose. 2 Eisdorfer, however, reported the matter to the prosecutor’s office and implicated Vogel and one Arthur Sabatino, who was then a New Jersey attorney representing Vogel. As a result, the prosecutor’s office, with Eisdorfer’s cooperation, made recordings of telephone conversations which Eisdorfer had with Vogel and Sabatino and of a personal conversation between Eisdorfer and Sabatino. 3

When Vogel and Sabatino were confronted with the incriminating evidence against them they agreed to assist the prosecutor’s office which was trying to reach the public officials involved. It was through their cooperation that recordings of conversations were made which directly implicated respondent in the case.

The transcripts of these conversations demonstrate that a conspiracy to bribe public officials existed, that respondent knew of the plan and discussed terms and ramifications of the bribe or attempted bribe with Vogel and Sabatino.

On one occasion, May 15, 1970, Vogel and Sabatino went to respondent’s office with $4,000 in marked money and tendered it to him on the basis that it would “take care *181 of everything.” Respondent refused the money saying he had originally figured “I could get it for a thousand dollars a vote. I can’t guarantee that now * * adding that the members of the Board of Adjustment were suspicious and that if he walked in with four thousand dollars they would think he “got ten.” He suggested that the Chairman of the Board of Adjustment be approached directly.

At a subsequent meeting between the same parties held in respondent’s office on June 16, 1970, a discussion was had about how to get the Board of Adjustment to recommend that the senior citizen restriction be lifted. In answer to an inquiry from Sabatino as to whether each member would have to be paid individually, respondent answered “no” and he gave the name of an individual who he said would be the “hag man” for the Board of Adjustment and probably also for the Township Committee.

Respondent also said that at least three members of the Board would have to be paid and suggested a thousand dollars “for each vote.” However, with regard to the Township Committee, which would have to approve the Board’s recommendation, respondent said three councilmen would have to be paid and he did not think “you’ll get by” for a thousand apiece; that it was “usually a thousand dollars a unit they go, that’s for the entire package.” (The project contained 18 to 20 units.) When Sabatino expressed amazement at the figure, respondent merely said “It’s a big business Art.”

Respondent concedes, as indeed he must, that the transcripts indicate the proposed bribery of Jackson Township public officials. His explanation is that he did not want to appear to be a “goody goody,” nor did he want to hurt the feelings of Yogel and Sabatino by refusing to indicate his participation. Accordingly, he just strung them along with talk but “I never went along” and never intended to be a party to an actual bribery.

This explanation is incredible. If words mean anything, respondent’s recorded conversation plainly implicates him in the proposed bribery. Even were we to give some credence *182 'to respondent’s story, which we do not, his failure as Township Attorney to report an ongoing plan to bribe Township officials to the appropriate authorities constituted a gross violation of his ethical responsibility. The Ethics Committee’s finding that respondent’s conduct was a violation of the then Canons of Professional Ethics, Articles 15, 16, 29, 32 and 44, is supported by clear and convincing evidence.

The second count of the statement of charges heard by the Ethics Committee set forth that respondent, while Jackson Township Attorney, knowingly participated in an illegal plan whereby one Clarence Sprinkle paid $5,000 in return for a favorable vote from Committeeman “X” approving an application for a trailer park license in Jackson Township. In particular, respondent was charged with having received the $5,000 for his friend and client Committeeman “X”, knowing the money was a bribe.

The record shows that Sprinkle, who was a former Township Committeeman, had entered into an agreement with the principals of the proposed trailer park, which was to be located in Jackson Township, in which he was to help obtain approval of the pending application for a trailer park license. In return, he would be awarded the park building contract on a cost-plus basis (he testified that this is where the “real money” was) and was to receive a $35,000 cash payment. It was understood that the $35,000 was to be used to the extent necessary to buy votes. Sprinkle received the money in several installments, one of which, $20,000, was paid by one of the principals of the trailer park on May 5, 1970, the day after the application had been approved by the Township Committee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
358 A.2d 469, 70 N.J. 178, 1976 N.J. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-callahan-nj-1976.