People ex rel. Gannon v. McAdoo

117 A.D. 438, 102 N.Y.S. 656, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 273
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 117 A.D. 438 (People ex rel. Gannon v. McAdoo) 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. Gannon v. McAdoo, 117 A.D. 438, 102 N.Y.S. 656, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 273 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

McLaughlin, J.:

Michael J. Gannon, the relator, who had lieen a member of the police force of the city of New York for upwards of fifteen years, was charged with neglect of duty, conduct unbecoming an .officer and violation of the rules of the police department. The specifications were, in substance, (1) that between nine-thirty and ten-thirty a. m. of March 11, 1905, the relator was absent from his post and in the hallway leading to a liquor store at No. 4154 Broadway ' during his tour of patrol duty, which was from eight A. >r. to four p. m. ; (2) that at the time of such absence the relator willfully concealed his identity as- a patrolman in a conversation over the telephone with Inspector Brooks ; (3) that between the said hours of nine-thirty and ten-thirty a. m. the relator threatened Patrolman [440]*440Powers by stating to him. over the telephone, When I run across you, you can expect what you’ll. get from me; ” (4) that at the expiration of. his tour of patrol duty at four-fórty p. m. on the day named the relator neglected to report his absence from post, in violation of rule 46c ; (5) .that having been directed at the above hour to report forthwith at the office' of Inspector Cross the relator neg- " lected to report as ordered and failed to do so until six-three p. m. ; (6) that on being asked by Inspector Cross his reason for not explaining to Inspector Brooks in his conversation with him over the telephone that he was. apatrolman the relator falsely stated that he did inform Inspector Brooks of that fact. '

The relator was found guilty of the charges and of each specification after a trial before the third deputy police commissioner, who ' thereupon recommended his dismissal from the police force. The findings were approved by the police commissioner and the relator dismissed from the department. ' He instituted this proceeding by _ writ of certiorari for the purpose.of having the determination of the commissioner reviewed. '

The record is quite voluminous/and while the evidence as to what took place the day preceding the relator’s alleged breach of discipline is conflicting, there is little or no conflict except as to the third specification. On the morning of March 11, 1905, while the relator was performing his patrol duty, a boy named Cunningham informed"him that the previous afternoon he had witnessed a number of policemen indulging in target practice, the bullets from their' pistols falling in the neighborhood of certain work which Patrick J. Gannon (relator’s brother) was superintending; that when the latter requested the officers to desist, one of their • number assaulted him, fracturing his skull and breaking his nose; that the injured man was then.in the J. Hood Wright Hospital. On hearing this story, the relator went to the neárest public telephone, at H o. 4154 Broadway, and called up police headquarters, telling the operator that he was Michael J, Gannon, * . * * patrolman, attached to . the 33d Precinct,” and repeated the story told him by the boy. The operator said: Hold on, I will give you the general Inspector,” which he did, and the relator then told the story to Inspector ' Brooks, giving his name and address in 1 response to the latter’s inquiry, but not again stating that he was a patrolman. On return[441]*441ing to the station house, situate at One Hundred and Fifty-second street and Amsterdam avenue,, at the expiration of his-patrol duty, the relator was immediately directed to report to Inspector Cross, at the Twenty-ninth precinct station, One Hundred' and Fourth street, near Third avenue, and at'once left to obey the order — the ■time then being four-forty-six p. m. On the way he stopped for five or six minutes at a bakery to get something to eat, having been without food since seven o’clock in the morning, and arrived at the station house at twelve minutes of six, but Inspector Cross being engaged, he was unable to see him until six-three. In reply to inquiries made by Inspector Cross, the relator stated that he had conversed with Inspector Brooks over the telephone, and had informed him that he was a patrolman ; that’ he hád not at that time reported his absence from his post, but that he had intended to do so as soon as he returned to the station house, which he did at eight o’clock that evening.’

, In regard to the third specification, the relator denied having used the language complained of or having telephoned Patrolman Powers at all, while the specification is sustained by the testimony of Powers and another policeman. It is upon evidence establishing substantially the. above facts that the finding of guilty is based. A portion of the testimony taken at the trial related to what took place on the tenth of March (the day preceding the one on which compiaint was made of relator’s action). This evidence on the part of the relator tends to shew, through the testimony of the boy Cunningham, two other boys and three adult citizens, that during the afternoon of March tenth some thirty-three or forty policemen were shooting at a mark in. the neighborhood of a railroad tower house in a lot between One Hundred and Forty-seventh and One Hundred and Forty-ninth streets, .where they were accustomed to gather during the .continuance of a strike then m progress on the subway; that the laborers employed by the relator’s brother, working in that 'immediate vicinity, refused to continue their'work unless the firing ceased; that the lelatcr’n brother remonstrated with the policemen and endeavored to get them to stop firing; that in doing this he was assaulted by a patrolman named Powers, arrested, taken to the station house and subsequently admitted to bailthat of these facts the relator nad no knowledge until the following morning, when he was informed of them-by Cunningham, who had been sent by [442]*442an employee of his brother’s to tell the relator. The testimony given by several policemen in behalf of the respondent was to the efEect that there was no shooting' as alleged ; that, the relator’s brother was arrested, for attempting to break through the police lines ; that he became intoxicated after he was bailed out and sustained his injuries that evening by falling down the stairs Of a "saloon, and that the relator was informed of his injuries shortly after midnight of the tenth. ;

This evidence is conflicting, but it is of no importance, because it neither tends to prove nor disprove the charges made against the relator, and of which he was found guilty.

The first specification is that the relator 'was absent from his post for some time between nine-thirty and ten-thirty o’clock on the eleventh of March. The fact is not disputed that he absented himself from his post for three minutes by reason of information given to him that his brother was in a. hospital suffering from a broken nose and fractured skull. It is true there is some evidence that he ■had been previously informed of his brother’s injury, but such evidence is unreliable and of the most uncertain character. And, besides, the relator’s action . when-informed by the boy Cunningham of the injury to his brother would seem to indicate that he did not prior thereto have such ■ in forznation. The fact, therefore, that the relator, when infoimed of the serious injuries to his brother, absented himself for three minutes from his post, by going to the nearest telephone and communicating with a superior officer, to the end that the person who had inflicted the injuries might be apprehended, is not such a violation of duty or breach'of discipline as to justify his dismissal from the force.

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Bluebook (online)
117 A.D. 438, 102 N.Y.S. 656, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-gannon-v-mcadoo-nyappdiv-1907.