People v. Henry

196 A.D. 177, 39 N.Y. Crim. 157, 187 N.Y.S. 673, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5498
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 8, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 A.D. 177 (People v. Henry) 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. Henry, 196 A.D. 177, 39 N.Y. Crim. 157, 187 N.Y.S. 673, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5498 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Greenbaum, J.:

Defendant was tried under an indictment by the extraordinary grand jury upon the charge of perjury.

[179]*179The indictment alleges that on March 30, 1920, there was pending before the grand jury a certain investigation and inquiry for the purpose, among other things, of ascertaining whether one James E. Smith, an assistant district attorney for the county of New York, had asked, received or agreed to receive a bribe, in violation of section 372 of the Penal Law, and whether the said James E. Smith * * * had wilfully neglected to perform his duty as a public officer, in violation of Section 1841 or of Section 1857 of the Penal Law, and whether any person or persons had conspired or associated with him (the said James E. Smith) to violate any of the said Sections of the Penal Law.” It further sets forth that the defendant was called, appeared and was sworn before the grand jury, and that defendant willfully and knowingly swore falsely to certain matters material to the investigation and inquiry.

The false testimony charged in the indictment was in substance as follows: That pursuant to a suggestion of one James J. Hines, he was introduced to Assistant District Attorney Smith on the evening of February 9, 1918, at the corner of One Hundred and Third street and Amsterdam avenue; that during the course of the conversation that followed Smith stated that he was going after the Jew gamblers, but would not touch a hair of the head of any Christian who was running a place; ” that during a conversation on February 12, 1918, between defendant and Smith, the latter said that “ if there were any Christians who were gamblers that he, the said Dominick Henry was interested in, who wanted to do a little business in his district, that it would be all right, so far as he, the said James E. Smith, was concerned and that he would not interfere with them; ” that on the evening of the 9th of March, 1918, defendant met Smith by appointment and during the conversation that ensued Smith spoke of an occasion “ when it was arranged with Lieut. Costigan of the New York City-Police Force and others to trap the said patrolman Kerrigan taking graft money, he the said James E. Smith had sent for the said Kerrigan and tipped him off and that when the trap was ready to be sprung, Kerrigan was prepared to meet the situation and that the money was to be taken from one Frederick A. Hopler.” Defendant also testified that [180]*180by coincidence, while he and Smith were talking, a man stepped up and spoke to Smith and that he, Henry, was then introduced to him as Mr. Hopler and that he had never seen Hopler before or since; that on the 11th day of March, 1919, one Joe Heyman informed defendant that he, the said Joseph Hey-man, formerly for a period ran a gambling house for Assistant District Attorney James E. Smith in 105th Street,” and asked the defendant if he would meet Smith’s brother-in-law, one Dennis J. Quinn, which defendant agreed to do at five-thirty p. m., March 11,1919, at Seventy-second street and Broadway; that Heyman introduced defendant to Quinn at the appointed time and place; that the latter stated that his brother-in-law Smith had sent him to meet defendant “ about the advisability of opening some gambling houses, that he was in a position to guarantee that no raids would be made by the District Attorney’s office over the head of the said, Dominick Henry, that he, the said James E. Smith, was in close touch with the man representing the Rockefeller Institute in the city who was not averse to shutting his eyes to a few things, providing a little change came his way, that the said James E. Smith was in a position to do the said Dominick Henry many favors; that the district of the said Dominick Henry was the best in the city, that we only live once and that this Administration was then in its second year and that in his opinion they stood no chance of being re-elected and that then was the time, if ever, to make a little change, that a few wheels and a few stiff games of poker would never be noticed in a District like the Fourth; that the reporters could publish only what /they knew and were only working for a salary and that they could be seen by the right party and that the said James E. Smith knew them all and could take care of that end of the game.”

It thus appears that the charge of perjury is predicated upon the testimony of the defendant, concerning three conversations with Smith which defendant testified he held with Smith on February 9, February 12 and March 9, 1918, respectively; a conversation with one Joe Heyman on March 11, 1918, and one on the same date with Dennis J. Quinn.

The defendant at the time of his indictment and trial was an inspector in the- police department, On January 23, [181]*1811918, he was designated as an “ acting inspector ” and assigned to duty in the fourth district, the boundaries of which are Forty-second street to One Hundred and Tenth street, Eighth avenue and Central Park West to the Hudson river.

The proofs show that the incidents as to which the defendant testified before the grand jury had according to his testimony and that of Commissioner Enright been substantially embodied in oral reports made by him to the police commissioner shortly after they had taken place, ostensibly in the course of his official duties, and that they were thereafter embodied in the form of affidavits which were turned over to the commissioner. There is no evidence that defendant disclosed the matters set forth in the affidavits to any person other than the police commissioner, and defendant expressly testified upon the trial that no such disclosure was ever made by him.

The testimony tendered by the People with respect to the various interviews testified to by defendant was as follows: As to the first of these, Hines denied that he had introduced the defendant to Smith or that he had ever met them together, and Smith denied both the asserted introduction and the meeting at One Hundred and Third street and Amsterdam avenue, and testified that the first time he ever met defendant was in the latter part of February, 1918, at police headquarters in the office of the defendant.

As to the conversation! which defendant swore he had with Smith on February 12, 1918, the latter denied that he had any conversation with him at the time and place stated or that he had ever had any such conversation. There were no independent corroborative circumstances established by the People in connection with the perjury charged, arising out of the defendant’s testimony as to the happenings of February 12,1918. There was thus no corroboration of Smith’s testimony. It was a matter of Henry’s oath against Smith’s oath.

As to the asserted meeting between Henry and Smith on March 9/1918, at the corner of Sixty-eighth street and Broadway, the latter denied that such a meeting or any such conversation as defendant had testified to, took place and he was corroborated in those respects by Hopler, who testified that he never met Smith and never saw them together. Hopler also [182]*182testified that he had met defendant shortly after March 9, 1918, at the Sixty-eighth street police station, and that about a week later he also met him at Sixty-eighth street and Broadway, and that Henry at that time asked him whether they were shooting craps at the Chauffeurs’ Club, of which the witness then was president. In this connection it appears that Henry testified that he wished to correct his testimony as to Smith introducing Hopler to him, and that the fact was that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A.D. 177, 39 N.Y. Crim. 157, 187 N.Y.S. 673, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-henry-nyappdiv-1921.