People v. Newspaper & Mail Deliverers' Union of New York & Vicinity

250 A.D.2d 207, 683 N.Y.S.2d 488, 1998 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13074
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 3, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 250 A.D.2d 207 (People v. Newspaper & Mail Deliverers' Union of New York & Vicinity) 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. Newspaper & Mail Deliverers' Union of New York & Vicinity, 250 A.D.2d 207, 683 N.Y.S.2d 488, 1998 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13074 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Tom, J.

This case arises from a widespread investigation into corruption in the Newspaper and Mail Deliverers’ Union of New York and Vicinity. The Union, an unincorporated association, controls the distribution and delivery of newspapers, magazines and periodicals in the New York Metropolitan area. The Union has collective bargaining agreements with the New York Times, the Daily News, the New York Post, El Diario and the Metropolitan News Company, many of whose employees are Union members.

The investigation, as set forth in the indictment, revealed several illegal schemes operated by the Union’s officers, members and agents, including organized crime associates, as well as employees of the newspaper companies. A brief overview will suffice to place the issues in context. The Union leadership maintained allegedly fictitious employees on the Union books, for whom target employers would pay wages and Union fees as per collective bargaining agreements. In order to maintain the fiction, duly appointed foremen had to conspire [209]*209with the Union chapel chairmen (basically shop stewards) who were supposed to monitor payrolls. Others falsified newspaper returns, for which newspaper distribution companies, specifically Metropolitan, would refund thousands of dollars. For this, foremen had to cooperate with the distributors. Some stole newspapers off of the loading docks that would be delivered to “bootlegger” (i.e., non-Union) distributors. Others received bribes from the bootleggers to ensure quiescent labor activity. The bootleggers’ very existence depended on cooperation by the Union’s business agents who would decline enforcement of the Union’s collective bargaining agreements, and by company foremen who would assign Union drivers to make deliveries to the bootleggers. Some paid bribes to newspaper company employees. Some also stole strike funds held in trust for members for the 1990 Daily News strike. The Union’s Executive Board, elected by and acting on behalf of the Union, ensured Union membership for confederates who were ineligible for membership under the Union’s rules, from whom the Union received dues. The People’s theory is that Union members implicitly ratified those decisions. Several foremen and other members received expedited seniority to which they were not entitled, essentially depriving bypassed members of the correlating seniority benefits. Union members who complained about the activities done in the name of the Union were assaulted. Numerous unindicted enterprise members who were Union members also were alleged to be members or affiliates of organized crime.

As a consequence of this investigation, an indictment was filed against the Union charging it with a single count of enterprise corruption under Penal Law § 460.20, predicated on 81 pattern acts allegedly committed by these officers, members and agents in connection with newspaper distribution and various racketeering activities. Several of the individual enterprise members were separately indicted for enterprise corruption as well as for several of the substantive offenses that made up the pattern acts alleged against the Union. The pattern acts include grand larceny arising from the theft of newspapers from loading docks; falsifying business records; conspiracy to falsify business records relating to health insurance, checks issued to phantom members and newspapers stolen from loading docks; conspiracy to commit grand larceny by improperly promoting favored members and thereby stealing the seniority rights of others; commercial bribery; bribery of a Union official; assault in the second degree, accomplished by the time-honored [210]*210tradition of using a baseball bat on an uncooperative Union member; coercion; and coercion with the intent to impair the integrity of the Grand Jury.

The individual participants who were separately indicted included: James Galante, allegedly a member of the Bonanno crime family, who pleaded guilty to enterprise corruption; John Vispiano, a New York Post Union foreman, who also pleaded guilty to enterprise corruption and to bribe receiving; Joe Steo, also a New York Post foreman, who pleaded guilty to grand larceny; Michael Diana, a Union business agent, who pleaded guilty to enterprise corruption arising from his theft of strike funds from another union; and Leo D’Angelo, general foreman at Metropolitan News Company, who pleaded guilty to enterprise corruption arising from his participation in a phantom employee scheme, the improper elevation of an employee resulting in the theft of seniority rights from others and his arrangement of an assault on a noncooperating Union member. Two assistant foremen, Jackie Piervencenti and Thomas Carrube, pleaded guilty to perjury. Michael Alvino, the Union president from 1989 to 1991, pleaded guilty to criminal contempt arising from his Grand Jury testimony in connection with his delivery of bribes to another former Union president, Douglas LaChance. LaChance, for his part, had been convicted on a Federal indictment for his receipt of bribes during his tenure as president during the 1970’s, a history that did not dissuade voting members from re-electing him to that post in 1991. Nor did Alvino’s testimony in the Federal action, conceding his delivery of the bribes to LaChance, similarly dissuade members from electing Alvino in 1989. The facts as alleged in the present indictment portray a corruption sufficiently pervasive to have converted the Union hierarchy into a subterfuge, where the confederacy actually operated the Union for the benefit of the confederates.

The issues as to whether the Union, as an unincorporated association, could be indicted, and whether the Grand Jury instruction on Labor Law § 807 (6), holding unions liable for the acts of their officers, members or agents, under appropriate circumstances, properly communicated the correct principles of law, are presented for review on this appeal. The theory of the prosecution against the Union is that these acts by the indicted individuals were made possible by the Union’s complicity.

In presenting the case to the Grand Jury, the prosecutor instructed it on Labor Law § 807 (6), a provision insulating unions in labor disputes from liability for the acts of individual [211]*211officers, members or agents, except upon proof of the union’s actual conduct, established by proof of “actual participation in, or actual authorization of, such acts, or ratification of such acts after actual knowledge thereof by such association or organization.” The prosecutor instructed the Grand Jury that in order to indict the Union, it had to find this section satisfied. The Grand Jury indicted.

When the indictment against the Union was filed, the prosecutor also filed a special information seeking forfeiture of Union property, including contract rights, pursuant to Penal Law § 460.30.

In moving to dismiss the indictment on legal sufficiency grounds, the Union claimed that as an unincorporated association whose putative liability was predicated solely on the purportedly unauthorized acts of its members and agents, it cannot be held liable since such conduct could not be imputed to it. The Union also argues that it was impossible to establish the mental state, in toto, of an unincorporated association, requiring proof of the aggregate mental states of its members. The Union also challenged the Grand Jury instruction as being inadequate to explain the basis of the Union’s liability.

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Bluebook (online)
250 A.D.2d 207, 683 N.Y.S.2d 488, 1998 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-newspaper-mail-deliverers-union-of-new-york-vicinity-nyappdiv-1998.