People ex rel. McCormick v. Partridge

95 A.D. 323, 88 N.Y.S. 657
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 A.D. 323 (People ex rel. McCormick v. Partridge) 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. McCormick v. Partridge, 95 A.D. 323, 88 N.Y.S. 657 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

The relator, a sergeant of police, was charged and convicted of the offense of having received on the night of September 2, 1902, from the friend of a prisoner in the station house the sum of five dollars for accepting a bondsman as surety for the prisoner’s appearance on the following morning in the Police Court. The testimony against him was to the effect that he permitted the five dollars to be placed on his desk and pushed it to one side, from which the inference was drawn that he willingly assented to taking it as a bribe or gratuity.

[324]*324We' would not, if we could, minimize the gravity of the charge, which, if proved, would amply justify the action of the commissioner in dismissing him from the force. It is because of the gravity of the offense charged and its effect upon the character and position of the relator that we feel called upon to deal at some length with the weight and credibility of the testimony, to the end that, if it sustains the charge, the force may be freed from an unworthy officer, and if insufficient, the relator may be saved from disgrace and the loss of a life’s work.

It appears that the relator, by long service covering a period of thirty years and a good record in the department, had risen from the ranks to the position of sergeant and had earned the right to a pension. Taking, therefore, the charge, the open manner in which the money was said to have been given, the serious results which the relator must have known would naturally follow if informed against, and which from the commissioner’s conclusion as to his guilt has followed, we are required to examine with care the testimony in order to determine whether the finding is or is not against the weight of evidence. Upon a conflicting question of fact we are bound by the conclusion of the commissioner, and it is only in cases where we are satisfied that the one reached is clearly against the weight of evidence that we are at liberty to interfere. (People ex rel. Stephenson v. Greene, 92 App. Div. 243.)

The record shows that about three o’clock in the afternoon of September 2, 1902, William McIntosh was arrested for intoxication and taken in. an unconscious condition to the station house in the precinct of which the relator was sergeant. At about eleven o’clock that night, a friend of the prisoner, Dr. Kepke, appeared before the sergeant’s desk to give bail, and the sergeant stated that he did not know- him. The doctor said he owned property in Brooklyn, and the relator rejected him, as Brooklyn was without the jurisdiction. He then asked to talk with the prisoner, and the relator gave him permission. Nothing was said by the relator, according to the doctor’s own testimony, about making any other arrangement for bail ; but he says that while in the rear of the station house he was approached by a patrolman, who told him a surety could be obtained who would-be accepted. The doctor’s statement is that he asked how much it would cost and was told [325]*325twelve dollars, to which charge he assented, and the patrolman left and then returned with Thomas Summers, who offered himself as bondsman; that without anything more being said, the sergeant filled out the bond and called the prisoner, who came'to the desk, in front of which the doctor and Mr. Summers were standing, and went inside to sign the bond, which he did, having considerably recovered from his intoxication ; that Summers signed the bond as surety for the prisoner’s appearance, and the relator told the prisoner to take his valuables, and produced' an envelope which was opened on the desk, and two dollars in bills and a watch and chain were taken out and received by the prisoner. The doctor testified that after the bond was signed he took out a roll of money, and he continues: “ I said to Mr. Summers, ‘ Here is the $5.00,’ and Mr. Summers said, Give it to the sergeant,’ and I stood there with the $5.00 in my hand, and Mr. Summers took the $5.00 from my hand and laid it on the desk in front of the sergeant, and the sergeant took the $5.00 and moved it to some other place; * * * laid it over to the left of himself.” The doctor further says thát thereupon he and McIntosh and Summers left the station house and got into a coach and drove to Summer’s saloon, but when Summers brought out to the coach á glass of whisky for McIntosh, he refused to -let him have it and threw it away.

McIntosh testified that he was called to the desk and the bond was given to him to sign, which he did and received his property; that he did not remember the precise conversation, but saw the doctor give Summers a bill, and saw Summers hand it over to the relator, who, he thought, pushed it to one side. He further testified that, instead of appearing at court the next morning, he remained in bed because he “was in no condition;” and it appears that Summers went to Brooklyn for him and in the afternoon got him, and that further expense was incurred, it being testified that altogether thirty-one dollars Was expended, which included the five dollars to Summers claimed to have been handed to the relator, five dollars for the coach, one dollar to the patrolman for calling Summers, fifteen dollars to a man at the court, and five dollars to the policeman who made the arrest for failing to appear.

The relator denied that there was any conversation about money,, or that either Summers or the doctor placed any money on his desk* [326]*326or. that he accepted, asked for or knew of any money being paid by the doctor, and stated that the only money on his. desk was that which he gave back to the prisoner together with the watch. The doorman testified that he was standing immediately behind the doctor and Summers at the time; that Summers did not put any money on the relator’s desk, and that no such conversation occurred, and that he did not see the doctor give any money to Summers. A patrolman named Wilbur testified that he was at the door, looking towards the group at the desk, and that no money was handed over the desk to the sergeant by the doctor or Summers. Summers’ testimony as to what occurred is, that while they were standing before the sergeant and without anything being said about money, the doctor slipped a bill into his pocket and pressed it into his hand, and that subsequently he found, outside the police station; that it was a five-dollar bill. He denies that he passed over to the sergeant any money whatever. A Mr. Barber called by the relator testified that with respect to the five-dollar transaction, the doctor had told him that he paid the money but did not know who got it.

Apart from the almost incredible character of the charge itself,, that a bribe was thus given to the sergeant openly upon his desk, in the presence of inferior officers and even of strangers, by one who it is claimed was a professional bondsman, and when given was accepted by an officer who had a good record of thirty, years, our' attention, in considering the conflict of testimony presented at the trial, is drawn to the fact that, according to the version of the doctor and McIntosh, the bondsman was left entirely without payment for becoming surety upon the bond of the prisoner, with whom he was not personally acquainted. The natural inference would be that Summers, if a professional bondsman, as claimed, in going upon a $500 bond for an entire stranger, expected some, compensation. This the doctor anticipated and. agreed to the price named of twelve dollars; and the account of what was paid that' night shows that eleven dollars was expended, namely, five dollars for the bond, five for the coach,, and one dollar to a patrolman who called the bondsman.

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143 A.D. 17 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
95 A.D. 323, 88 N.Y.S. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-mccormick-v-partridge-nyappdiv-1904.