People v. Hamilton

183 A.D. 55, 36 N.Y. Crim. 472, 170 N.Y.S. 705, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7911
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 17, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 A.D. 55 (People v. Hamilton) 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. Hamilton, 183 A.D. 55, 36 N.Y. Crim. 472, 170 N.Y.S. 705, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7911 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

The defendant is the principal of the Hamilton Detective Agency, conducting the same and holding the license therefor. Its place of business is on the ninth floor of an office building at Forty-third street and Broadway, in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York. It leases and occupies three rooms known as 906, 907 and 908. On the door of room 906 was an American flag, with the words beneath, “ Office of Captain H. A. Reed,” and Entrance, Room 907.” The door to room 907 bore no inscription. On the door of room 908 appeared the words, “ Hamilton Detective Agency — Wilham C. Hamilton Principal; James A. Hamilton Superintendent; Hamilton Patrol Company; Notary; Entrance.” The doors from these different offices led into the offices of the Hamilton Detective Agency. Part of the activities of the agency was composed of what is known as the “ deserter business,” engaged in by men named Harry Reed and James Eaton, and who, according to defendant’s testimony, had an arrangement with him by which he financed their operations, and all checks received for rewards for stragglers or deserters from the United States Navy, whether payable to defendant’s agency or to Reed, were indorsed by defendant and deposited in his bank account. The reward offered for a deserter was fifty dollars, out of which Reed and Eaton got fifteen dollars each and defendant got the remaining twenty dollars, from which he paid some expenses. He claims that he charged Reed and Eaton rent for their use of room 906 to the extent of ten dollars per month out of fifty dollars paid by him therefor. Defendant had been a patrolman on the New York city police force for two years and four months. Reed had been in the business of apprehending stragglers and deserters for sixteen years, and his connection with defendant had lasted for about two years. Two employees named Bain and Fields worked from time to time for either defendant or Reed. The defendant kept books of his business and entries were made from slips turned in by Reed and Eaton showing the details of each transaction affecting a deserter or straggler. It appears from the testimony of defendant’s witness Captain A. C. Hodgson, commanding officer of the receiving ship at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, that defendant’s agency was [57]*57authorized by him to arrest every deserter for whom he sent them notice of a reward of fifty dollars and of whom a description was furnished. He also says that he told Reed or Eaton that if a man had been twenty-four horns over liberty he was a straggler, and for each straggler brought to the ship he would pay a reward of twenty-five dollars. Hodgson’s dealing with defendant’s agency was because he understood it had been engaged by the commanding officers of ships and by the Bureau of Navigation. It appears by his testimony that a sailor in the United States Navy who overstayed his shore leave and did not return to his ship at the appointed time was over leave ” and was not classed as a straggler until a reward was offered. This reward was twenty-five dollars, and in the notice thereof the alleged straggler was not only specifically named but described with particularity. Upon the expiration of ten days from the end of his shore leave, the sailor becomes a deserter and the reward for his return in that event is fifty dollars if he has been announced by name and the reward offered. But he testified that the Bureau of Navigation can authorize the payment of this reward if a deserter is legally arrested, even if no reward has been prefiminarily offered. A sailor can also be declared to be a deserter by the captain of his ship, before ten days have expired, if conditions indicate that he has left the vessel on leave but with no intention of returning. Captain Hodgson testified positively that the sailor (whether straggler or deserter) is to be turned over as soon as he is arrested, and that no detective agency was authorized to keep either deserters or stragglers over night. ' ' '

Ray E. Davidson, eighteen years of age, a sailor on the Maine, was given leave of absence on July 26, 1917, expiring on the next morning, the twenty-seventh. He claims that with another sailor and two companions, whom he met after he left his ship, he came to New York, and after going to a restaurant he remembered no more (claiming to have been drugged) until he found himself in Yonkers eight days later, just before noon of August fourth. He then made his way to the foot of West Ninety-sixth street, where he asked the captain of a destroyer tied up at the dock what he was to do and (the Maine having sailed on July twenty-ninth) was [58]*58advised by him to report on board the Montana, then lying in the North river. The next morning he came again to the foot of West Ninety-sixth street, waiting for a boat to carry him to the Montana to report himself, and was sitting awaiting the boat when Eaton came up and asked him his name and where he was going. The court excluded testimony as to what Eaton said, but Davidson testified that Eaton took him in handcuffs to the building where defendant’s business was conducted. They arrived there about ten o’clock of the morning of August fifth, and Eaton took him at once to room 906, one of the rooms leased and occupied by the defendant’s agency, in which the “ deserter business ” was specially conducted. Here Davidson was allowed to wash and in a little while defendant came into the room. He was addressed by Reed as “ Captain ” Hamilton, but though he told Davidson he was a captain in the army, no effort is made to show he had any right to such a title, and Reed was known as “ Captain ” Reed, though how he acquired the title does not appear. These, titles, as well as the American flag upon the door of room 906, were intended to impress the victims of the institution with the idea that it was an official or governmental agency. Defendant asked Davidson what his name was and what ship he was off, and then left. At this time Davidson was a straggler, for whom no reward had been offered. His ship had sailed two days after his shore leave expired, and his captain is not shown to have offered any reward or sent out any notice for him. He had overstayed his leave nine days, and if he had been returned at once to the receiving ship at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, which was the duty of those arresting or detaining him, he would not have been a deserter, for the testimony is that no person or agency had the right to hold him over night, and his ten days’ overstay of leave would not have expired until the next morning (August sixth). But defendant’s “ deserter business ” was not conducted to help sailors or the government, but to collect rewards. So for nine days Davidson was kept a prisoner in room 906, at times shackled to the radiator therein, sleeping and having some of his meals there, though he had some meals elsewhere with Reed or one of the operators. During that time he saw defendant every day, saw him talking [59]*59to Reed and Eaton, and heard them discussing about getting ” other men. Davidson asked Reed and Eaton to let him go to the Navy Yard and to take him back there. He swears that defendant asked him if be was tired waiting and Davidson told defendant to take him to the Navy Yard and he said he could not do it. Davidson said that defendant saw him with handcuffs on several days after his first arrival at the office; he also testified that defendant said he (Davidson) would have to stay there until they received word from Washington about him.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A.D. 55, 36 N.Y. Crim. 472, 170 N.Y.S. 705, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hamilton-nyappdiv-1918.