In Re Colsey

306 A.2d 72, 63 N.J. 210, 1973 N.J. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 19, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 306 A.2d 72 (In Re Colsey) 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 Colsey, 306 A.2d 72, 63 N.J. 210, 1973 N.J. LEXIS 176 (N.J. 1973).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Respondent is charged with participation in a corrupt transaction involving the payment of moneys to public officials.

Respondent represented James Chiusano, a builder, whose corporation, White Birch Realty Corp., wanted to develop lands for housing in Gloucester Township. Respondent sought to obtain planning board approval. The negotiations were quite extended. An impasse occurred when the mayor, Joseph Menna, said the township would want White Birch Realty Corp. to donate 15 acres for a municipal building.

The acreage thus sought by Menna was very valuable. Respondent says he asked a friend, John Pasquariello, to intervene. Pasquariello was the deputy mayor of another municipality. Respondent explained that he enlisted Pas-quariello’s aid because Pasquariello could tell Menna that *211 five or six acres would suffice for a municipal building as was the fact in Pasquariello’s municipality. After meeting with Menna, Pasquariello reported to respondent that Menna was so persuaded, but that Menna wanted a “political contribution” of $25,000 to $30,000 in connection with an impending political contest.

According to respondent and Chiusano, both were outraged by this demand. It was not the thought of a “political contribution” that was repugnant, but rather the amount Menna sought. To respondent and Chiusano, a few hundred dollars would be appropriate; neither had experienced a contribution in excess of $1,000 in dealing with local government. Chiusano indignantly rejected the request. But Chiu-sano later relented; the project still needed final subdivision approval, and further, Chiusano wanted no trouble on the job. He told respondent he would pay $15,000.

We interrupt the narrative to say there is not the slightest doubt that everyone concerned, including respondent, knew the payment would be corrupt, 1 involving bribery or extortion or both depending upon statutory definitions of the offenses. One would be naive to suppose that respondent or anyone else thought the payment was a “contribution.”

*212 This' brings us to respondent’s role in the matter. Respondent says that when Chiusano decided to pay $15,000, respondent suggested that the payment be in “cash.” The reason he gives is that he knew there was a political rift within the official family in the township and it could be hurtful if the dissidents learned the mayor had received the contribution. It is not evident how cash would be more assuring in that regard, but if that postulate is accepted, the manner in which the cash was obtained remains incomprehensible. Chiusano had $6,500 in cash which he delivered to respondent and which respondent held as cash. Chiusano needed $8,500 more to complete the required total of $15,000. Respondent advised Chiusano to obtain the additional $8,500 through the medium of a check to respondent’s order which he would cash at his bank. But, says respondent, it occurred to him that if Internal Revenue Service should learn of the ichack, it might not accept the explanation that he was a mere conduit and might insist upon taxing respondent with respect to it. • Hence respondent asked Chiusano to add $4,000 to the $8,500, thereby increasing the check to $12,500. 2 What remains unexplained under that thesis is *213 why Chiusano or his corporation did not cash a check for $8,500 .and thus save $4,000. At any rate, the check for $12,500 was drawn to respondent’s order, endorsed by respondent, and then by his secretary who cashed the cheek at respondent’s bank and deposited $4,000 in cash in respondent’s bank account. That bank account was respondent’s individual account and not the account of the law firm in which he was a partner. 3

The cash sums of $6,500 and $8,500 were placed by respondent in a brown envelope, and respondent again called on his friend, Pasquariello, to make delivery. Pasquariello, who insisted in his testimony that he was just running an errand, said that before he could make delivery he was contacted by a member of the other local faction, one Donald Mitchell, who laid claim to a share. Pasquariello testified that he was troubled by this development, and after mulling it over for a couple of weeks, he decided to split the $15,000 between Menna and Mitchell. This he did, and without consulting either respondent or Chiusano. Pasquariello’s testimony is remarkable, and incredible, but we draw no inference on that account against respondent.

The payment of the $15,000 led to federal indictments against Menna and Mitchell. Menna pled guilty and Mitchell was convicted upon trial.

The foregoing establishes inescapably that respondent knowingly participated in a criminal event by aiding the participants, whether Chiusano or Menna was the moving party. Respondent counseled Chiusano as to how to make the payment, cashed a check to his own order to facilitate the transaction, and arranged for the transmittal of the money.

*214 And it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the check of $12,500 to respondent’s order was designed to mask the transaction because of its illegal character. Bespondent, a member of the bar, received $12,500 which on its face could suggest the payment of a fee for services. We are convinced the check was intended to create that appearance.

As we have said, there is no sensible explanation as to why Chiusano would part with $4,000 when he or his corporation could cash a cheek for $8,500 if there was nothing to hide. The sum of $4,000 could have been compensation to respondent for his role in the pay-off, but this respondent denies. He says he feared that Internal Eevenue might one day learn of the check and not credit his explanation that he was a mere “conduit.” Curiously, respondent says that before he filed his income tax return, the federal authorities had learned he was a mere conduit of the $15,000 and in fact the authorities were pursuing Menna and Mitchell on that factual premise. That being so, respondent could safely have returned the $4,000 to Chiusano before he filed his 1970 tax return. Instead his tax return, dated April 14, 1971, reads this way:

“Statement of Income Explanation
Primarily I practise law through the partnership of Powell, Davis, Dietz & Colsey, but in addition I do individual consulting work outside of the firm, thus, additional statement of income follows:
2. Whitebirch Realty Co. $12,500.00”

Thus respondent told the Internal Bevenue Service that the entire amount of the check represented a fee. This return of course contradicts respondent’s “conduit” thesis. Indeed, on the “conduit” thesis, respondent should have included the $6,500 Chiusano gave him in cash if he feared that being a conduit held the risk that the moneys handled would be taxable to him.

The record shows that Chiusano had treated the $12,500 as a fee for legal services and had capitalized that item as a *215 cost of the project.

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Bluebook (online)
306 A.2d 72, 63 N.J. 210, 1973 N.J. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-colsey-nj-1973.