In re Deuel

111 N.Y.S. 969

This text of 111 N.Y.S. 969 (In re Deuel) 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 Deuel, 111 N.Y.S. 969 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, J.

Charges against the respondent were submitted to this court upon the petition of William Travers Jerome, James W. Osborne, and Edward M. Shepard, attorneys and counsellors at law, one of the petitioners being the district attorney of New York county, and the other petitioners being counsel for the defendant in a criminal action brought in the Supreme Court in which the respondent appeared as a witness, and the charges were based upon the testimony of the respondent in that action. The petition alleged that the respondent is a justice of the Court of Special Sessions of the City of New York, for the First Division, having been appointed on or about January 1, 1904, and, as such justice, was forbidden by law to carry on any business; that the respondent was from the 1st of July, 1895, to the 1st of January, 1904, a city magistrate of the city of New York for the First Division, and as such city magistrate was forbidden by law from carrying on any business. The petitioners then charge that the respondent since the 1st of January, 1905, has been carrying on, and from time to time has carried on, business, and has been engaged in and carrying on various businesses and business enterprises, among others the following, to wit: The business of owning, managing, editing, printing, canvassing for, and selling certain printed publications known as “Town Topics,” “The Smart Set,” and “Fads and Fancies”—and the business of owning, managing, directing, and controlling certain corporations known as the “Town Topics Publishing Company,” the “Ess Ess Publishing Company,” the “Smart Set Publishing Company,” and the “Printers’ &i Publishers’ Realty Company.” It is further alleged that the Town Topics Publishing Company was engaged in the publica[971]*971■tian and sale of a certain weekly paper, known as “Town Topics,” wherein there was repeatedly and continuously published and printed abusive, salacious, scurrilous, scandalous, and libelous matter, as the said respondent well knew; that it was a part of the business ■carried on by the respondent, and one of the functions performed by him in carrying on the said business of publishing, editing, and .managing the said “Town Topics,” and managing and controlling the said Town Topics Publishing Company to read the said abusive, salacious, scurrilous, scandalous, and libelous matter so published as aforesaid, and to read the same proposed to be published in the said publication, and so to edit, phrase, and modify the matter so proposed to be published as to decrease the risk and dangers of civil or* criminal liability which the authors thereof and the said corporation were incurring, or might incur, by reason of the publication of such matter. It was further alleged that it was a part of the business carried on by the said corporation and by divers persons associated therewith to solicit, urge, coerce, and compel the payment of large sums of money to them, or to the said companies, or to persons associated therewith, by means of overt or covert threats; and that it was the custom in the conduct of the business of the said publishing company to cause to be published of persons thus refusing to pay, matter that was derogatory, and to publish matter in praise or favorable comment upon persons thus paying, all of which the respondent at all of the times mentioned either knew or should have known, and by the exercise of due care and diligence could have known.

The gravamen of this charge seems to be that the respondent was carrying on, during the period for which he had been a justice of the Court of Special Sessions, a business in violation of section 1416 of the charter of Greater New York (chapter 466, p. 605, Laws 1901). The relator was charged with owning, managing, editing, printing, canvassing for, and selling certain printed publications known as "“Town Topics,” “The Smart Set,” and “Tads and Fancies,” and the "business of owning, managing, directing, and controlling certain corporations specified. These charges having been served upon the respondent, he submitted an answer. The evidence - in relation thereto was taken before a referee, and the question was then presented to the court for such action as was required.

Section 17 of article 6 of the Constitution provides that:

“Justices of the peace and judges or justices of inferior courts not of record, and their clerks may be removed for cause, after due notice and an •opportunity of "being heard, by such courts as are or may be prescribed by law.”

Section 28, c. 601, p. 1295, Laws 1895, provides that:

“The justices of the Court of Special Sessions and the clerks of said court appointed pursuant to this act may be removed for cause after due notice and an opportunity to be heard * * * by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the First Department.”

Upon an application of this character, the court is required to investigate charges made against a judicial officer. In neither the Con[972]*972stitution nor the statute is the ground for removal specified; but the court can act upon no charges, unless the respondent has had notice thereof, and an opportunity to be heard. We are confined, therefore, in determining this question to an investigation of the charges preferred against the respondent, and to determine whether those charges, if proved, are a sufficient cause for his removal. Section 25, c. 601, p. 1294, L,aws 1895, re-enacted as section 1416 of the City Charter of Greater New York, provides that'.

“No person shall be appointed to the office of justice of the Court of Special Sessions in the city of New York, unless he shall be a resident of said city and of the division of the city for which he shall be appointed; nor unless he shall have been admitted to practice as an attorney and counsellor at law in the courts of this state at least ten years prior to the date of such appointment. No such justice shall receive to his own use any fees or perquisites of office; nor shall any such justice hold any other public office, or carry on any business, or practice as an attorney or .counsellor at law in any court in this state, or act as referee or receiver; but each such justice shall devote his whole time and capacity, so far as public interests demand, to the duties of his office.”

I have no doubt but that a persistent and intentional violation of the prohibition contained in this statute would be a sufficient cause for removal. The object of this statute is not only to insure the prompt and efficient discharge of the duties of a justice of the Court of Special Sessions, but also to prevent a justice of the court from making such connections and having such relations with others as would justify a question as to the impartial and proper performance of his judicial duties. The justice is required to be an attorney of 10 years’ standing, and, upon his acceptance of the office, he is required to relinquish the practice of the law, is prohibited from acting as referee, or' receiver. He can hold no other public office, can carry oh no business, but is required to devote his whole time and capacity to the duties of his office.

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.Y.S. 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-deuel-nyappdiv-1908.