People v. Glennon

79 N.Y.S. 997

This text of 79 N.Y.S. 997 (People v. Glennon) 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 v. Glennon, 79 N.Y.S. 997 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, J.

The defendant, a police officer of tlie city of New York, was indicted for willful neglect of duty in neglecting to carefully observe and inspect, and to use and exercise all proper, reasonable, and effective means within his power for the prevention of the keeping and maintenance of, a house of ill fame and a house of prostitution in the city of New York, and for the detection and arrest of the person keeping and maintaining the same. The defendant was convicted, and upon this appeal relies upon exceptions taken to the charge of the court, to rulings upon refusals to charge, and to rulings upon questions of evidence. The record is quite voluminous, and there are many objections and exceptions which are not insisted upon by counsel for the appellant, and which it will not be necessary to discuss. We have carefully examined this whole record, however, and can find no exception that, in the view that we take of the case, would justify us in reversing the judgment.

The defendant was attached to the Nineteenth precinct as a patrolman detailed by his superior officers to duty in citizen’s dress. His special duty was to examine and report, under the direction of the captain of the precinct, upon disorderly houses and other like violations of law. On or about the 31st day of May, 1901, the police department received a communication from an officer of the Society for the Prevention of Crime which stated that No. 148 West Thirty-Third street was a disorderly house; that it had been open for some time; that inmates thereof had accosted men from the stoop,—and requesting that the house be closed. This communication appears to have been referred to the inspector of the district in which this precinct was situated, and was by the inspector referred to the captain of the precinct, with instructions to' make a thorough and careful investigation of the matter, and to use all lawful means to remove the evil, if such evil was found to exist. Within an hour or two after the captain received this notice, on June 7, 1901, he told the defendant, with the other officers who were attached to the precinct, and assigned to duty in citizen’s dress, that he had received a complaint from the Society for the Prevention of Crime of the existence of a disorderly house at 148 West Thirty-Third street, and instructed the defendant and the other officers to investigate the complaint, and to use all proper means at their command to ascertain whether the house was as charged in the complaint. Subsequently the defendant reported to the captain that he had been to the house, and had endeavored to obtain evidence, and had not obtained it; that he went there a number of times, and watched the house from the outside, to see if there was any evidence of a disorderly house, without discovering any, and had been there a number of times and tried to get in, but was refused admittance. The defendant subsequently made like reports to the captain in relation to this house, and nothing was done by the defendant or the police of his precinct to suppress the house. It would seem that the defendant was on duty from the 7th of June to the 9th of August, 1901, with the exception of two days. On the 9th of August this house was raided, when its character was at once demonstrated, and arrests were made. A witness who resided at No. 146 West [999]*999Thirty-Third street, next door to the house in question, was called by the prosecution, and testified that the house 148 West Thirty-Third street had been a disorderly house for three years; that from the xst of January, 1901, to the time when the house was closed, in August, there was a woman on the stoop day and night; that she called to every man that passed by; that the witness had heard her invite men into the house; that she had invited the witness in; that there was hardly a time when the witness passed but that he had not been hissed at to come in; that they were dancing and singing in the house all night; that when the windows were open in the summer he could, in the adjoining house, hear constant singing and music coming from the house in question; that the women were in the habit of coming to the windows partially undressed; that he passed the house five or six times a day, and when on the step of his own house could see men going in and out by the dozens, and women on the stoop inviting them in; and that this was going-on openly day and night. Another witness, who lived at 146 West Thirty-Third street, testified that she had observed this house from the 1st of January until the commencement of June, when she left; that she heard dancing, music, and carrying on all night; that there were women at the windows calling men in as they passed, and that there was a woman on the stoop day and night, calling men in; that women stood on the stoop day and night, soliciting and beckoning men to come in; and that she saw men go into the place constantly. Another witness, who resided in the same house, testified that she had observed this house, 148 West Thirty-Third street, for about a year before August gth; that there were dancing, singing, and carrying- on there until 4 o’clock in the morning, so that the witness could not sleep; that this went on nearly every night up to the time the house was closed; that the women at the windows and on the stoop were lightly dressed; and that this continued from the 1st of January to August, when the house was suppressed. Another woman, who had lived at the same house for one year, testified that she saw men constantly going into 148 West Thirty-Third street; that she saw girls sitting at the windows, calling the men in; that this was kept up day and night until 2 or 3 o’clock in the morning. Another woman, who resided at 146 West Thirty-Third street, testified that from the 1st of January, 1901, to August, 1901, she saw men being solicited from the windows and from the doors all hours in the day, and in the. early hours in the morning, and at night ;„ that she noticed a woman on the stoop, calling the men in; besides the women in the windows; that the witness had reported this house to the police, but could not specify the officer. An officer for the Society for the Prevention of Crime testified that he visited this house 148 West Thirty-Third street on the nth of June at about half-past n at night, in company with another officer of the society; that they were admitted to the house by a woman, and taken into the parlor, where eight women were seated; that he was asked by one of the women to treat, which he did; that he and his companion were solicited by women in the house, and that there were several other men on the premises while they were there; [1000]*1000that between the ist of January and the ist of August he had passed through this street several times, and had noticed women sitting on the stoop, soliciting men to come in. And his testimony is corroborated by the other officer who accompanied him in the house. Another witness, connected with the same society, testified: That he had known the defendant about ió years, and that during all that time he was a police officer. That in the latter part of May or June, 1901, he had a conversation with the defendant on the southwest corner of Thirtieth street and Sixth avenue. That the "defendant stated to the witness that certain poolrooms were going to be opened, and that they would like to be protected from interference by the Society for the Prevention of Crime, and, if such a thing could be done, there would be good money in it. That the witness told the defendant that he would see what he could do. That some time in June he again saw the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y.S. 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-glennon-nyappdiv-1903.