People v. . Flack

26 N.E. 267, 125 N.Y. 324, 8 N.Y. Crim. 87, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 722, 80 Sickels 324, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1488
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by114 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 267 (People v. . Flack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Flack, 26 N.E. 267, 125 N.Y. 324, 8 N.Y. Crim. 87, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 722, 80 Sickels 324, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1488 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Andrews, S.

This is an appeal by James A. Flack and William L. Flack from a conviction of the crime of conspiracy. The indictment contains sixteen counts, which may be divided into two classes. The first class charge the defendants, together with three other persons, with falsely instituting and maintaining an action for divorce in the name of Mary E. Flack, the wife of James A. Flack, against her husband, without her knowledge or consent. The second class charge the defendants with deception and imposition upon the court, and the procuring of a judgment of divoice in the said action by illegal and fraudulent practices.

The indictment is founded upon the statute which (omitting clauses not now material) makes it a misdemeanor for two or more persons to conspire “ falsely to institute or maintain an action or special proceeding, or to commit any act for the perversion or obstruction of justice or of the due administration of the law” (Penal Code, § 168). The action of Flack v. Flack was commenced April 22, 1889, by the service of a summons and complaint upon the defendant therein. The complaint purported to be verified by the plaintiff, Mary E. Flack. It alleged the intermar *89 riage of the parties in 1850, and charged that the defendant, since said marriage, had committed adultery with one Susan T. Reynolds, and that since the first day of October, 1888, and for several years prior thereto, he had lived in adulterous intercourse with the said Susan T. Reynolds, at 319 West Twenty-ninth street, in the city of Sew York. The complaint also contained the usual averments that the adultery charged was committed without the connivance, privity, or procurement of the plaintiff; that five years had not elapsed since its discovery by her, and that she had not voluntarily cohabited with the defendant thereafter. The complaint demanded judgment dissolving the marriage between the parties, with a provision therein for the reasonable support and maintenance of the plaintiff. The counts in the complaint charging a conspiracy between the defendants falsely to institute and maintain the action without the knowledge and "consent of Mary E. Flack, the nominal plaintiff were sought to be supported on the trial mainly by her testimony. She testified, in substance, that she never consented to or authorized the bringing of the action, and while it is inferrible from her testimony that she suspected her husband’s infidelity, she testified that she had no knowledge until after the judgment of divorce was rendered, either that such an action had been brought or that her husband had committed adultery as charged in the complaint. She admitted that she did consent that her husband' might procure a bill of separation,” but not that he should procure a divorce. She denied the signature purporting to be hers to the affidavit annexed to the complaint, and also the signature to the affidavit of regularity, taken by the referee and annexed to the judgment roll. She admitted that she signed certain papers on several occasions presented to her by her son, but testified that she supposed that they related to the separation which had been spoken of between herself and her husband and son, and that she signed them on that understanding and representation. The jury might undoubtedly have found upon the evidence that Mrs. Flack *90 was deceived into verifying the complaint and signing the affidavit of regularity, but there is very little room to doubt upon the whole evidence that whatever may have been the fraud practised upon her, the signatures to these papers were her genuine signatures.

The evidence of James A. Flack, taken before the grand jury, was read in evidence by the prosecution on the trial of the indictment, and the defendant William I. Flack was sworn as a witness on his own behalf. They denied any conspiracy or fraud, and testified that the suit was commenced and prosecuted with the full knowledge and acquiescence of Mrs. Flack.

The evidence given on the trial to sustain that part of the charge, that the defendants conspired to falsely maintain the action for divorce, did not proceed upon a denial of the fact of adultery charged in the complaint. On the contrary, it was proved on the part of the" prosecution, and was conceded by the defendants, that the defendant James A- Flack had for more than fifteen years before the trial lived in adulterous intercourse with a woman whose real name was Sarah Cherry, but who had passed by the name of Susan T. Raymond, and by whom he had a son, who, at the time of the trial, was about fifteen years of age. The claim on the part of the People was that this woman was intentionally misnamed in the complaint, which falsely stated the name of the adulteress to be other than her real name, and also that they induced two witnesses who knew of the adulterous intercourse between James A. Flack and the woman Raymond, and by whose depositions taken before the. referee the adultery charged in the complaint was proved, to suppress the real name, and to testify that the person with whom James A. Flack lived in adulterous intercourse was known to them as Susan T. Reynolds. It is also claimed that they were induced to swear falsely that they had.known Mrs. Flack for five years. It was not denied, indeed, it was conceded, that the testimony of these witnesses was perfectly true as to the material fact of the *91 adultery and the adulterous intercourse at the place and during the period named in the complaint, and that the only misstatements were as to the identity of the name in the depositions with that of the real adulteress and in respect of the time the witnesses had known Mrs. Flack.

These two witnesses testified on the trial of the indictment that they had never known Mrs. Raymond to pass by the name of Reynolds, and they gave as a reason for suppressing the true name in their depositions that Mrs. Raymond, who, as agent for James A. Flack, presented the depositions to them for their signatures, on her attention being called by them to the discrepancy, said “ it was all right, the name Reynolds, a covering for the boy’s sake; it was done for the boy, leaving out the name Raymond, and the name Reynolds was put in instead of Raymond.” The defendant James A. Flack, in his evidence before the grand jury (which was introduced by The People), testified that the woman Raymond went at times by the name of Reynolds.

The counts of the second class, viz.: those charging deception and imposture on the court, and the procuring of the judgment of divorce by illegal and fraudulent practices, were sought to be supported mainly by proof of certain acts and transactions not disclosed on the face of the judgment record in the divorce action, but proved by witnesses relating to papers embodied in the record and upon which the judgment was founded.

The judgment, although regular upon its face, was, as was claimed by the prosecution, fraudulent by reason of the circumstances disclosed by this evidence.

It appears that on or about the second day of July, 1889, Mr. Meeks, who, on the 10th of June, 1889, had been appointed by an order of Judge Bookstaver referee in the action of Flack v.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 267, 125 N.Y. 324, 8 N.Y. Crim. 87, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 722, 80 Sickels 324, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-flack-ny-1891.