People ex rel. Strauss v. Roosevelt

2 A.D. 536, 38 N.Y.S. 27, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 456
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 A.D. 536 (People ex rel. Strauss v. Roosevelt) 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. Strauss v. Roosevelt, 2 A.D. 536, 38 N.Y.S. 27, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 456 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Barrett, J.:

Ho error of law in the proceedings under review is urged upon us by the counsel for the relator. He claims simply that • the. respondents reached.an erroneous conclusion in view of the facts proved, and asks us to set aside the decision as contrary to the weight of evidence. (Code of Civ. Proc. § 2140, subd. 5.)

On September 2, 1895, an organization called the Cherokee Club had a parade. The members went from the club house, at Seventy-ninth street and First avenue, to Eighty-sixth street and East river, where they embarked. They were expected to land at the latter spot on the evening of this day, and an order was sent to the relator from the central office to have men present along the route of- the parade, so far as it lay in his precinct (the twenty-fifth) to-prevent the discharge of fireworks. A roundsman named Buckley and six men were sent upon this duty. Instead of going to Seventy-ninth street and First, avenue, which was in the twenty-fifth precinct, they went first to Eighty-sixth street and East river, which is in the twenty-seventh. The relator subsequently charged Buckley with neglect of duty in going to the wrong place. The trial resulted in his acquittal. The respondents claim that the pliarge against Buckley vras false; that the relator directed him to go to-Eighty-sixth street, and subsequently attempted to cover up his mistake by procuring an erasure of the entry in the station house blotter, which recorded the mis-direction.

The principal witnesses for the prosecution were Hammond, the acting sergeant, and Buckley, the roundsman. The testimony of these two men is in entire accord. They say that about six p. m. on September second, the.-day of the parade, the relator told Buckley that the Cherokee Club would land at Eighty-sixth street [539]*539and First avenue about eight p. m., and that he wanted Buckley and six men to go to this place, and escort the procession; that Hammond sent the men on this order, without himself intervening ; that after Buckley and his men started out, the former returned to make sure that there had been nO' mistake in sending him to a place outside of the precinct., and that Hammond told him to obey the relator’s orders. Hammond further says that he made the entry of a direction to go to Eighty-sixth street in the station house blotter about six-thirty p. m. ; and that between eleven-thirty and twelve the same evening the relator told him he had better change it to Seventy-ninth street, since the entry, as it was, might get them into trouble, and Hammond accordingly made the change.

Buckley further states that when he got back with his men to the station house he had a talk with the relator, who declared that he had sent the witness to Seventy-ninth street, which the latter denied. Also that the next morning the relator called him into his office and told him that he was getting up a report to send to Chief Conlin; that he showed him part of it, which contained the statement that witness had been sent to Seventy-ninth street; and that witness told the relator that this was not true, and that if he sent this he would send in a false report.

The relator, in his own defense, denied these charges, and his counsel vehemently assails Hammond’s credibility. That the latter has perjured himself there can be no doubt. On the trial of Buckley he testified in the relator’s behalf, and swore that he himself ordered the men to go to Seventy-ninth street, and made the entry accordingly; that he did not make the erasure under anybody’s direction, but because of his own mistake; and that the correction was made before the men left the station house. On the present trial the witness, after some evasion and attempt to reconcile his different statements, admitted the falsity of his. former testimony, and said that it ivas given to shield the relator, and at his instigation. Another circumstance is also alleged' against him. It is undisputed that the relator, at the time the order to Buckley was given, made out a card on which were written the names of the men who were to go ivith Buckley, and the location to which they were sent. From this card Hammond made the entry in the blotter. At the trial a torn fragment of the card was produced, [540]*540which contained the.names of the men, but not the location. Hammond said,he found this torn fragment in an ash barrel some days afterward, and gave it to Commissioner Roosevelt. The "relator points out as suspicious the circumstances that the card,, which' was last in Hammond’s possession, should lack the very portion which, fie says, would have vindicated him. He' also pro yes-facts tending to discredit Hammond’s story of how he found the card. The respondents’' argument, however, leaves the effect of this circumstance in equipoise. Why, they say, should Hammond have produced the card at all if it made against him? They argue, also, that the card in all probability contained the very Eighty-sixth street address which the blotter contained .at first, since the entry in the blotter was made from the card.

We now come to the relator’s own testimony. He swears that he told Hammond that the men must go to Seventy-ninth street and First avenue, and also wrote the direction on a card. The other half of the card, he says, contained this, direction. Ho thus declares that it was Hammond who gave the order to the men, and in this Hammond’s former testimony supports him. He also swears that" later this same night Hammond told him that the men had come back from Eighty-sixth street; that he asked what they were doing up there; and that Hammond said he did not know, for he told them to go to Seventy-ninth street. In this he is corroborated by Clements, a friend of the relator’s of ten years’ standing, who was in the relator’s office, and swears that he overheard what was said. It is, however, peculiar and somewhat significant that the relator, in testifying as to the admission made by Hammond that he sent the men up to Eighty:sixth street, at first inadvertently substituted Seventy-ninth street for Eighty-sixth street. In other words, he made the same mistake at the trial which the witnesses against him say that he made on September second.

The discrepancies and difficulties in the relator’s testimony are many and serious. His testimony varies from that, given on the Buckley trial nearly as much as that of Hammond himself. On the Buckley trial he swore, first, that he had no conversation with Buckley whatever on the night of September second, and then that he had one, but merely abotit certain pay rolls. On his own- trial he had another access of memory, and recollected the whole of the conver[541]*541sations; admitting Buckley’s strenuous- assertion, made in the course of these conversations, of his present position. On the Buckley trial he swore that on the morning of the third, he did not mention Chief Conlin’s name, though now he fully admits the conversation about the report, to which Buckley testifies. On the Buckley trial he swore that Buckley, when he asked why he went to Eighty-sixth street, said it was because the sergeant (Hammond) so ordered him. On his own trial he admits that Buckley said it was' because the relator himself so ordered him.

■ Upon his own trial he also denied in toto Hammond’s testimony as to the erasure in the blotter, and said, he knew nothing about it until the Buckley trial. But he testified that after his talk with Buckley in the evening of September second, he examined the blotter to make sure that the direction given to Buckley had been Seventy-ninth street, and found that the entry was correct, viz., Seventy-ninth street and First avenue.

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.D. 536, 38 N.Y.S. 27, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-strauss-v-roosevelt-nyappdiv-1896.