People ex rel. Fitzpatrick v. French

39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 112
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 112 (People ex rel. Fitzpatrick v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Fitzpatrick v. French, 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 112 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.:

The relator was tried upon a charge of conduct unbecoming an officer.” The specification was, in' substance, that the relator on the 14th of April, 1883, “ during his tour of patrol duty, pretended that the window of a drinking saloon, No. 16 Dutch street, had been burglariously broken by some person unknown and a short time after entered the said saloon and wrongfully broke open boxes containing cigars, the property of the owner of the saloon, and surreptitiously, without consent of the owner, took and carried away in his pocket one hundred and sixteen cigars, which were subsequently found upon his person when he was searched and identified by "William A. Jennings, the proprietor of said drinking saloon, as his property.”

It is not asserted that there was any irregularity in form in the proceedings and trial of the relator, but it is insisted: First. That the charge imported a criminal offense of either burglary or larceny, [113]*113which the commissioners had no jurisdiction to try; and second. That the evidence was not sufficient to justify a conviction of any offense, or of “ conduct unbecoming an officer.”

What the evidence on the trial did. establish may be briefly stated. The relator was a patrolman of the police force and was on duty on the evening of the 14th of April, 1883. In passing along Dutch street, where the drinking saloon of one Jennings was situated, he discovered that the glass of one of the front windows had been broken under circumstances indicating that the saloon had been entered. He then went a little distance to the corner of the street and gave an alarm which brought to him officers Miller and Daly of the police force, with whom he returned to the saloon. He borrowed Daly’s pistol and he and Miller entered the saloon through the window (Daly remained outside), and examined the saloon and the room below, finding all right. The relator then told Miller to go to the station and report the case. Miller went for that purpose and reported to sergeant Oates, who told him to go back and tell officer Daly to go to his post, and the relator “ to go to his post and cover it,” and to remain himself at the saloon until relieved. Miller returned and directed Daly to go to his post and the relator to go to his, but the latter did not go. Miller entered the saloon and asked the relator if he was going to his post and he answered no. Miller then went down stairs to the water-closet and was absent five or six minutes, and when he came up sergeant Oates had arrived. Sergeant Oates testified that on receiving the report of Miller and giving him his directions, he telegraphed to Jennings at his residence to come to the station-house, and went to the captain’s room and reported the case to him, and was directed by him to go down to the saloon and investigate the case. He went there and when he arrived opposite the saloon he saw the relator standing at the bar taking cigars out of cigar boxes and putting them into his pockets. He stepped into the center of the street where he could have a better opportunity to see, and after the relator got through emptying a couple of boxes he broke the boxes up in his hands. He started and came toward the window. Oates stepped over and confronted him and he went back in the room. Oates went into the room and looked around. The relator’s pockets were so full of [114]*114cigars that be dropped some out oh the floor and Oates picked some of them up. He left some cigar boxes and empty wine bottles on the table and Oates told him to pick them up and come with him. Oates left Miller in charge of the place and took the relator to the station-house and made a complaint against him for burglary. The relator was searched and in his pockets were found sixty-six cigars and one full box of cigars.

Jennings, the owner of the saloon, came to the station-house and identified the cigars as his. The relator, on his trial, did not deny taking the cigars, but said, “ I took the cigars because I thought I had a right to take the cigars to bring them to the station-house as evidence of the burglary;” and when asked why he broke the boxes, he said, “ I tried to press the boxes together so that I would not have so large a bundle to carry.”

This is a brief summary of the evidence, but it gives the substance ; and it tended very strongly to show that the relator, in the absence of Miller, intended to and did freely help himself to the cigars in a manner not consistent with his official duty. His excuse, that he intended to take them to the station-house to show that a burglary had been committed, was not satisfactory to the commissioners. He had been directed by Miller to return to his post, but did not go, and said he was not going. Up to that time officer Daly had been with him, but had left, and when Miller went below and left the relator alone, he took advantage of the opportunity to help himself to the cigars, in a manner and under circumstances which can at least be called, in the language of the charge, “ surreptitiously.” His explanation of his breaking up the boxes after the cigars were taken out and put in his pocket, was certainly a lame one. There was no need to make a smaller package,” unless he designed to keep the cigars and show the pieces of the boxes at the station to give an appearance that the burglars had emptied and broken them. The evidence was abundantly sufficient to show that his conduct, if not criminal, was at least in violation' of duty, and “ unbecoming an officer.” It was not necessary to find him guilty of burglary or of larceny to warrant his removal. There was no evidence to justify a conviction of the former crime, and we are not called upon to say that a jury might not have convicted him of petit larceny. We are not able to see any ground for interfering with [115]*115the action of the board of police commissioners for want of sufficient evidence. (People ex rel. Flanagan v. Police Comrs., 93 N. Y., 97.)

The relator was, several days after his removal'from office, tried on an indictment for larceny and acquitted. Although that fact appears in the printed papers, it has really nothing to do with any question before us. It is no part of the return, and as it subsequently occurred, had no possible effect upon the action of the commissioners. If it were entitled to be considered it would simply establish that the relator’s misconduct for yphich he was. removed did not amount to the crime of larceny.

The other question of the ease is whether the-commissioners had jurisdiction to try the charge set out in the specification. This question arises only upon the assumption that the specification set out a criminal offense, for which the relator might be indicted and tried in a court of justice, and that therefore he could not be tried and removed by the commissioners until he had been convicted on trial by a criminal court. The People ex rel. Siebert v. The Board of Police Commissioners (20 Hun, 333), is relied upon as establishing that rule. That case was decided by a divided court, Potter, J., holding that under the act conferring their powers upon the commissioners (now sec. 272 of chap. 410 of' the Consolidation Act, Laws of 1882), they had no authority to remove a member of the police for any legal offense (which he defined to mean any crime or misdemeanor “ enacted by the legislature or existing at the common law ”) until after a conviction had. been had on trial by jury, in a criminal court of competent jurisdiction.

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Related

People Ex Rel. Flanagan v. Board of Police Commissioners
93 N.Y. 97 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Sherman v. . the Rochester and Syracuse R.R. Co.
17 N.Y. 153 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
People ex rel. Murphy v. French
60 How. Pr. 377 (New York Supreme Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-fitzpatrick-v-french-nysupct-1884.