People ex rel. Cross v. Greene

90 N.Y.S. 194, 98 A.D. 620

This text of 90 N.Y.S. 194 (People ex rel. Cross v. Greene) 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
People ex rel. Cross v. Greene, 90 N.Y.S. 194, 98 A.D. 620 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

PATTERSON, J.

The relator was an inspector in the police department of the city of New York. Charges were preferred against him on the 26th of February, 1903, by the then chief inspector of that department. A hearing or trial was had upon such charges and the specifications thereof before the deputy commissioner of police, who found the relator guilty, and recommended his dismissal from the force. On May 6, 1903, the then police commissioner approved the findings and recommendation of the deputy commissioner, and thereupon the relator was dismissed.

The charges preferred against Inspector Cross are, first, conduct unbecoming an officer; second, neglect of duty. The specifications of these charges are, first, that between September 21, 1897, and November 20, 1900, the relator neglected to suppress two disorderly houses (one at 56 Stanton street, and the other at 32 Stanton street) in the borough of Manhattan, in the city of New York; .second, that between October, 1900, and May, 1901, he neglected to suppress a disorderly house at 27 Stuyvesant street; third, that between September 1, 1899, and December 1, 1900, he neglected to suppress disorderly houses at 201 Allen street, 140 Chrystie street, 51 Eldridge street, 21 Rivington street, and 49 DeLancy street, in the same borough; fourth, that he neglected to suppress poolrooms at No. 293 Bowery and 9 St. Mark’s place between April, 1899, and June 15, 1901; fifth, that between April 15, 1899, and December 21, 1900, he neglected to suppress a poolroom [195]*195at 114 East Thirteenth street. All these places were within the inspection district of the relator; that is to say, the First Inspection District of the borough of Manhattan, in the city of New York.

In reviewing the evidence contained in the four bulky volumes of printed matter before us, it is our duty to determine whether there was competent proof o.f the facts necessary to be proved to justify a conviction, and, if so, then to determine whether there was such a preponderance of evidence against the determination of the commissioner as would necessitate setting aside a verdict, as against the weight of evidence, had a jury found the existence of such facts in an action in the Supreme Court. People ex rel. McAleer v. French, 119 N. Y. 502, 23 N. E. 1061; People ex rel. Stephenson v. Greene, 92 App. Div. 245, 87 N. Y. Supp. 172; Code Civ. Proc. § 2140. We are of the opinion that the evidence adduced against this relator was insufficient to convict him of the charges made against him, and the specifications thereof. There is no proof of the first charge as an independent offense, or otherwise than as associated with the second charge.

At the outset of the inquiry there are considerations which force themselves upon the attention of the court. Each specification is of alleged neglect of duty long anterior to the date at which the charges were preferred, and the derelictions imputed to the relator are stated as offenses occurring during the administration of police commissioners and chiefs of police, all of whom have testified in this matter to the capacity, skill, and efficiency of Inspector Cross, and to his faithful discharge of duty. It is also observable that the specifications of the charges refer only to neglect. The relator is not charged with connivance at vice, with the protection of vicious persons, with corruption, or with using the position of an important official for personal gain. The real gist of the charge of neglect is the relator’s failure to suppress vice in specified instances, and there is involved in the charge a willful abstinence from the performance of duty, with knowledge of the places mentioned in the specifications, or supineness and indifference; he having at his command all the agencies and means through which, in the discharge of duty, he procured or could have procured full information and knowledge upon which to act. It is material to consider what his position was, and what were his duties. He was bound to see to the enforcement of the law, and, as far as possible, that vice should be suppressed. In that regard, his was the same duty as that incumbent upon every member of the police force, from the commissioner down to the ordinary patrolmen—each in his own sphere. The first and perhaps the most important duty of an inspector is the supervision of the large force under his command, and within his inspection district. The relator’s district, from 1897 to 1901, consisted of all the territory south of Fourteenth street, and bounded on the west by Fourth avenue, Park Row to Ann street, to Broadway, to Whitehall street, to the Battery, the East river to Fourteenth street. In 1898 that part of the Fourth Precinct which consists of the Brooklyn Bridge and the station house in Brooklyn was added. There were eight different police precincts in that inspection district, each in charge of a captain, and were the 1st, 4th, 5th, 7th, 12th, 13th, 14th, and 15th. In those precincts were comprised the Wall street district, occupied by banks, trust com[196]*196pañíes, and insurance companies; the Brooklyn Bridge; the lower East Side, with a seething population of different nationalities, between 75,000 and 100,000 in number; a tenement house district with a population of 150,000; another containing residents, nearly all of foreign birth, to the number of about 200,000; another including the river front, with a population of about 150,000 dwelling in tenement houses; another with about the same population; and still another fully as populous.

The relator had the administration as inspector of this inspection district for years, and the real charge preferred against him is of alleged negligence respecting a few particular places. In the first specification the alleged negligence is stated to have occurred between 3 and 6 years before the charges were presented; that in the second specification, between 21 and 28 months before the charges were filed; that in the third, between 2% and 3 years before such filing; and that in the fourth, between lj^ and Zyí years prior to such filing; and that in the fifth, between 2 and 4 years prior to such filing.

In the first specification the neglect to suppress is charged with respect to two houses; in the second, to one; in the third, to four, but on the hearing that specification with reference to two of those places was abandoned. The fourth specification relates to one place, and the fifth to another. So that during all the years covered by these specifications the negligence is imputed only as to seven separate places. It has been very earnestly argued on behalf of the relator that an inquiry into what he considers the remote past to find an accusation against him evinces something on the part of those who preferred the charges other than a zealous desire to benefit the public. But we can see no reason for arraigning the motives of the police commissioner, notwithstanding what may be called the staleness of the charges. It is immaterial whether the offenses were committed shortly or long before the charges were presented. If the police commissioner considered it for the good of the public service that unworthy or negligent police officials should be dismissed from the force, it was his duty to bring them to trial, and to seek the accomplishment of that praiseworthy obj ect. Nevertheless it remains in this case that the relator has received the commendation of every one of his superior officers for the general excellent character of his work during the periods of time covered by these charges. How efficient the action of the police under Mr.

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Related

People Ex Rel. McAleer v. . French
23 N.E. 1061 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
People ex rel. Stephenson v. Greene
92 A.D. 243 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.Y.S. 194, 98 A.D. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-cross-v-greene-nyappdiv-1904.