Matter of Greenebaum v. . Bingham

94 N.E. 853, 201 N.Y. 343, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1249
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 853 (Matter of Greenebaum v. . Bingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Greenebaum v. . Bingham, 94 N.E. 853, 201 N.Y. 343, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1249 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

*345 Vann, J.

The relator, a member of the police force of the city of Mew York, was charged with violating the rules of the department and after a trial was removed by the commissioner. The rule in question provided that members of the force “ shall not willfully maltreat nor use unnecessary violence to any person, prisoner or otherwise.” It was alleged in the charge that the relator, a patrolman, “ during his tour of patrol duty from 10 p. m. October 6th, to 2 a. m. Oct. 7th, 1908, willfully maltreated and used unnecessary violence to patrolman Michael J. McGrath.” While there was ample evidence to sustain the charge there was a sharp conflict in the versions of the witnesses.

It appeared that on the night in question Patrolman McGrath had been assigned to a duty which required him to wear citizen’s clothes. Shortly after eleven o’clock, while sitting on the steps in front of a pawnbroker’s office waiting for a superior officer with whom he had an appointment, he fell asleep and was found in that condition by the relator as he was patroling the street. The relator testified in substance that lie did not know McGrath and finding him dressed in an old suit of citizen’s clothing asleep in the street, at that hour, with his head down and his elbows on his knees, thought he was intoxicated and a rough character. He shook him three times to wake him up, when McGrath sprang forward, seized him by the arm and struck him with a blackjack, just grazing his face. The relator then hit McGrath with his nightstick, whereupon McGrath drew a revolver and pointed it at the relator, who in turn drew a revolver and said, Drop that oi I will shoot.” McGrath said nothing and still held his revolver in a threatening attitude when the relator fired at his arm. to make him drop his revolver. McGrath still said nothing but apparently continued to take aim, when the relator fired again almost instantly. At that time a third officer ran up and arrested McGrath, who had two fresh bullet wounds in his arm and a contusion on the left ear.

On the other hand, McGrath testified that he had been up the night before with his sick wife and while waiting at the *346 time and place in. question to keep liis appointment with another officer, fell asleep and was awakened by a blow on the ear. He jumped up in a dazed condition, backed away and as the relator raised his nightstick to hit him again, drew a blackjack and raised it, whereupon he was shot twice by the relator in the arm. One of the wounds was serious and for a time placed McGrath’s life in peril. He denied that lie was intoxicated, but said he had taken three table glasses of beer with his supper and two ponies of beer in the afternoon before supper. He also testified that at the outset, as he jumped up he told the relator that he was a “ cop,” meaning a policeman, and that he at no time drew a revolver, although he had one on his person.

The version of each of these parties was corroborated to some extent by several witnesses, and the conflict was such that the case could have been decided either way. One Marshall, apparently disinterested, was called by the complainant, but supported the relator in nearly all the essential parts of his story. There is nothing in his evidence as printed in the record to raise any suspicion as to his truthfulness. After he had testified, one Poole was called by the relator and swore that he found McGrath asleep in “the door of the pawn shop ” and shook him, but could not wake him up, and then went on about about his business. He was asked by the deputy commissioner who conducted the trial and heard the evidence, “You tried to shake this man and could not get him up ? ” The witness answered, “ Tes, sir. I got a block and a half away when I heard the shooting and came back to that spot and saw the man coming —.” He did not finish the sentence, for the deputy commissioner interrupted him and apparently addressing the relator said, “ As to one of your witnesses, Greenebaum, I am informed on most reliable information, that he was not there. As to this witness he never saw it. There is no question about that. He did not shake McGrath.” A colloquy followed between the deputy commissioner and the relator from which it appeared that the commissioner referred to the witness Marshall *347 when he said that he was informed “ on most reliable information ” that one of the relator’s witnesses “ was not there.” The trial had not ended when this took place, and several other witnesses testified before the evidence was closed and the case submitted. 1STearly three months later the deputy commissioner filed a decision in which he found the relator guilty as charged, and recommended that he be dismissed from the force. Six days afterward the police commissioner approved the recommendation and removed the relator from his position as patrolman. The Appellate Division reviewed the proceeding upon certiorari and “unanimously ordered that the proceedings of the respondent be and the same hereby are in all things affirmed and said writ dismissed,” with costs.

The relator could be lawfully removed only “ for some legal cause, to be ascertained and adjudged as matter of fact upon a hearing.” (People ex rel. Kasschau v. Board of Police Comrs., 155 N. Y. 40, 44.) While the hearing may ¡ be more or less informal, the trial must be fair in all substan- ; tial respects. Some latitude is allowed as to rules of evidence, ¡ methods of examination and the like, but no essential element ’• of a fair trial can be dispensed with unless waived, and no vital i safeguard violated without rendering the judgment of convic- ! tion subject to reversal upon review. A fair trial, according to j existing practice, requires that the accused shall be confronted by the witnesses against him and given an opportunity to hear their statements under oath, and to cross-examine them to a¡ reasonable extent. Hearsay evidence cannot be received ; evidence cannot be taken in the absence of the accused and, the trier of the fact can find the fact only on the evidence' and not on his own knowledge. Facts of such common knowledge as to become the subject of judicial notice without, proof are an exception to the general rule and not now importtant. The use of an officer’s record, not as evidence of guilt but merely to fix the punishment, is no departure from these rules.

The relator did not have a fair trial. The commissioner himself did not hear the. evidence nor see the witnesses, but acted upon the report and the recommendation of the deputy *348 commissioner. A part of that report is the official announcement or ruling of the deputy commissioner, made while the trial was in progress, and before the evidence was closed, that a witness who had sworn that he was present when the occurrence took place, and that the facts were substantially as the relator claimed, was not present and did not see the event at all. The deputy commissioner based this statement on what he said was the “ most reliable information,” and we have no doubt he thought so, but he did not state the source or nature of his information, nor give the name of his informant, nor call him as a witness.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 853, 201 N.Y. 343, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-greenebaum-v-bingham-ny-1911.