People v. Cunningham

88 Misc. 2d 1065, 390 N.Y.S.2d 547, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2833
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 2d 1065 (People v. Cunningham) 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 v. Cunningham, 88 Misc. 2d 1065, 390 N.Y.S.2d 547, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2833 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Leonard H. Sandler, J.

The defendants, Patrick J. Cunningham and Anthony J. Mercorella, are charged in several indictments with violations of different provisions of the Election Law and the Penal Law arising out of circumstances attending Mr. Mercorella’s nomination by the Democratic Party in Bronx County as a candidate for Judge of the Civil Court in 1975.

The defendants have moved this court to inspect the Grand Jury minutes and upon inspection to dismiss the indictments for alleged legal insufficiency and for other reasons. Both are [1067]*1067named in one indictment and each is charged individually in the other two indictments. Although alleging violations of different sections of law, the indictments rest ultimately upon two propositions.

First, it is alleged that Mr. Cunningham, county leader of the Bronx Democratic Party, tendered his support for the Democratic nomination for Judge of the Civil Court in return for a promise by Mr. Mercorella, a city councilman, that he would resign that position at a time that would result in a political benefit to the regular Democratic organization.

Second, it is claimed that Mr. Cunningham offered his support in further consideration of Mr. Mercorella’s agreement to make a contribution to the Democratic county committee.

The legal issues presented by these indictments are important and in some respects novel. Significant issues are also raised by aspects of the presentation of the evidence to the Grand Jury as well as from the unusual, highly publicized events that preceded, and to some extent, accompanied the Grand Jury presentation.

THE EVIDENCE

Although the Grand Jury testimony and exhibits number substantially in excess of 1,000 pages, only a few pages include evidence directly pertinent to these charges. Most of this limited body of relevant evidence was derived from court-authorized electronic surveillance of the office phone and office of the law firm of Mercorella and Kase, instituted some months before the pertinent events in connection with an unrelated investigation. The legality of that surveillance is not before me on this motion. Apart from it, only one directly relevant fact was elicited from any of the witnesses called before the Grand Jury.

In addition, a body of appropriate background information was also presented coming from the electronic interceptions as well as from witnesses who testified.

Inevitably because of circumstances inherent in the investigation, this background information, although useful and appropriate, was less than complete. Much of it represented the necessarily limited perspective of one of the principal participants, Mr. Mercorella. And the other background information came from witnesses associated with the Bronx regu[1068]*1068lar Democratic organization, who were given immunity, and viewed by the former Special Prosecutor as hostile witnesses. Nevertheless, I think it helpful to an understanding of the evidence before the Grand Jury that some effort be made to set forth the context in which the critical events occurred.

Three Civil Court vacancies in Bronx County were to be filled in the November, 1975 elections. Two of these were county-wide contests. One involved a district election embracing only part of the county. Of the two county-wide vacancies, one had been filled on an interim basis by an appointment of the Mayor. The other county-wide vacancy was also available during 1975 for a similar interim appointment but none was made for reasons not explained in the testimony.

In 1975 there existed in Bronx County, as there had for a number of years, an ongoing factional struggle in the Democratic Party between the regular Democratic organization headed by Mr. Cunningham and an organization of Bronx Democrats associated with the city-wide Democratic Party reform movement. A characteristic of this struggle in The Bronx was that the reform movement had been generally unsuccessful in the election of district leaders who form the executive committee that designates the county leader, but it had achieved some degree of electoral success over the years in primary contests for public office.

It was thus anticipated that the designees of the regular organization would face opposition in the Democratic primary for the nominations in question. In light of previous results, it would have been a realistic judgment that the candidates of the regular organization for county-wide judicial positions would be favored to win such primaries, but contrary to the view advanced in the brief of the Special Prosecutor and implicit in the Grand Jury presentation, that result was by no means assured.

The electronic interceptions provide a relatively clear picture of the situation as it appeared from Mr. Mercorella’s viewpoint, although one by no means free from ambiguity.

Mr. Mercorella was then a member of the city council, having served previously for a number of terms in the Assembly. The impression conveyed from his intercepted conversations was that he wished to become a Judge but was by no means anxious that it occur in 1975, and that he was particularly unhappy at the prospect of having to undergo a primary race to achieve that position.

[1069]*1069Very little basis appears in the Grand Jury minutes for assessing Mr. Cunningham’s evaluation of the situation. Although a matter of some conjecture it would seem reasonable to suppose that he was influenced at least in part by a combination of traditional considerations weighed by party leaders who have a dominant role in determining the nominees of the regular Democratic organization. These would presumably include, among other factors, a desire to win the anticipated primaries, clearly important to his continued power and prestige, and to maintain the strength of the organizations supporting him by selections broadly representative of them. To what extent he was also influenced by a thoughtful concern for the qualifications of the candidates to be Judges is a matter on which the record before me provides no illumination.

It is clear that by accepted political criteria Mr. Mercorella had a strong claim to one of the judicial nominations if he wished it. He had demonstrated popularity in repeated elections; was a politically prominent member of one of the several ethnic groups in this city assiduously cultivated by political organizations; had demonstrated some political appeal to groups outside the regular organization; and had relevant prior service as a chief law assistant in the Civil Court in Bronx County. In addition, as Mr. Mercorella noted in an intercepted conversation, his election would make available a councilmatic position for another — a consideration often valued by political organizations.

It appears from intercepted conversations of May 7, 1975 that Mr. Mercorella had met shortly before with Mr. Cunningham who had offered him his backing for the Democratic nomination for one of the vacancies. From the tenor of those telephone conversations it is apparent that Mr. Mercorella intended to accept it. In one of the conversations of that date he expressed the view that support had been offered to him, although he had not actively sought it, because a member of his club wished to succeed him in the city council and that member had the strong backing of a family, identified in other conversations as wealthy business people.

It seems likely that the meeting described by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 2d 1065, 390 N.Y.S.2d 547, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cunningham-nysupct-1976.