In re Paris

4 F. Supp. 878, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1376
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 F. Supp. 878 (In re Paris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. 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 Paris, 4 F. Supp. 878, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1376 (S.D.N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

CAFFEY, District Judge.

The present inquiry is whether the respondent, David Paris, committed a contempt of this court in presenting to it affidavits which were forged, in support of an application by him, as attorney in behalf of his brother Sidney Paris, for a new trial.

The question is important. It is important to the respondent; it involves him as a member of the bar of this court. It is important to the government officials who are accused, in the affidavits alleged to be forged, of misconduct; even worse, of subornation of perjury in connection with the five persons in whose names the alleged forged affidavits were made and who testified as witnesses for the government at the Bennett trial. It is important to the court. The court sits to do justice; it cannot succeed in'the performance of that office unless it can trust documents presented to it by members of the bar. The court is helpless to administer justice if it must stop to investigate in every instance, when a member of its bar presents for its consideration a document, as to whether or not it is genuine. The court has a right to rely with confidence on the good faith of documents brought to it by lawyers. It is therefore of extreme importance to the court to determine whether or not affidavits submitted for its action upon a motion for a new trial are forged and fictitious.

Jn the challenged affidavits, on their face, it is sought to disclaim the testimony of five persons who were witnesses for the government at the trial of the Bennett case. In those affidavits it is charged by each of the alleged signers: First, that what they then testified was perjury; secondly, that they were procured so to perjure themselves by coercion or by offers of reward by those connected with the government, both in the United States attorney’s office and in the postal service, that they were induced either by threats or by promises to testify falsely, to commit perjury, the government officials therefore being charged with having suborned perjury; third, that now the alleged makers of those affidavits recant their testimony given at the trial and explain that they gave it under the circumstances I have related about being suborned by the government officials to give it.

What could be graver for the consideration of a court than to determine whether such affidavits, which are handed up for its official action upon a motion for a new trial, are genuine, when in response there are presented on the same day, in opposition, affidavits, eoneededly signed by the same individuals whose names purport to be affixed to the affidavits in support of the motion, which say that their names were forged to and that there is not a word of truth in the affidavits presented in support of the motion ?

When that situation arose, it became the duty of the court, instantly, immediately, and to the sacrifice of the conduct of other business of the court, to institute this inquiry. It has been pursued since the 10th of July. Adequate opportunity has been afforded to both sides to put in whatever testimony they saw fit. Much consideration has been given to this testimony.

I repeat, hardly anything can be of more importance in the administration of justice by the court than to reach a correct solution of the problem thus presented.

There are five affidavits which it is claimed were forged.

First are those by Samuel Walters and David Walters. The testimony as to the genuineness of the signatures to those two affidavits is in dispute. It is not essential to the disposition of the present inquiry that I determine that dispute. Those affidavits I shall dispose of when I come to the motion for a new trial. I shall, therefore, for the present purposes lay them aside for the moment.

The other three affidavits are by Mrs. Mayer, Lapkin, and Waterman. Were they forged? The proof is manifest and incontrovertible that each of them was forged. It is beyond the realm of rational controversy that three of the affidavits presented to this [880]*880court by the respondent in support of the motion for a new trial were forged. In argument yesterday it was conceded that they were forged.- Counsel for the respondent frankly said so. This admission was not necessary, however, because the proof had already established that they were forged, though, it should be noted, it is not claimed that the respondent personally signed the affidavits. Nevertheless, the- admission removes the issue as to whether they are forged.

Under the proof also no issue arises as to who forged the affidavits, except as between Samuel Walters and Sidney Paris. Plainly one or the other forged the three affidavits. I am satisfied by the proof that all of them were forged by Sidney Paris. The testimony is convincing that that is what happened.

The witness Bertha Friedman told the truth. There is no need to resort to experts about the Lapkin affidavit. Bertha Friedman’s testimony satisfied me that Sidney Paris signed the name of Lapkin to the affidavit presented.

Neither in law nor in common sense is a judge or a jury, any trier of facts, bound to abide by the opinions of people as to the facts. Expert testimony is taken for the assistance of triers of the facts. The proof here convinces me, without resort to any expert opinion, that the handwriting in which the names of Mrs. Mayer and Waterman are signed to the affidavits presented in the names of those two-, is that of Sidney Paris. Even the signature of one of the notaries is forged. The elderly gentleman, Mr. Paul, who appeared on the stand perfectly satisfied me that where the name of Mr. Peterson is included, bunglingly made and altered, even misspelled, in one of the affidavits, it is not the signature of Mr. Peterson.

There was therefore forgery of the three, affidavits, ánd the name of the notary public was forged in one of them.

What is the responsibility of the respondent? That is the serious feature of the inquiry.

No action should be taken by this court affecting a member of its bar without the exercise of great caution. Moreover, in a case of this character guilt should not be declared unless it be established by a high measure of proof.

There is a good deal of conflict in the testimony bearing on this phase of the matter; whether the respondent had knowledge or what would be the equivalent of knowledge; whether he exercised due care or whether he closed his eyes; whether he presented the forged affidavits to the court without any effort to ascertain whether they were genuine. He testified as to the two Walters affidavits that he was present when they were signed. I have laid them aside to be dealt with when I come to the motion for a new trial. I am now dealing with the three affidavits of Mrs. Mayer, Lapkin, and Waterman. They are coneededly forged.

What is the duty of a lawyer who comes into court and lays affidavits before it as a basis for its action? As T have indicated, no conclusion adverse to the respondent should be drawn unless it be based on proof beyond reasonable doubt. I shall not give weight for the moment to the testimony given by other witnesses to the contrary of what was said by the'respondent himself. I shall take up for consideration now only what he himself said. What is it?

First, he personally drew all the affidavits.

Second, he never made inquiry of any of the persons whose names purport to be signed to the affidavits.

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In re Gladstone
28 F. Supp. 858 (S.D. New York, 1939)
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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Supp. 878, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-paris-nysd-1933.