Phelps v. McAdoo

47 Misc. 524, 19 N.Y. Crim. 126, 94 N.Y.S. 265
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 Misc. 524 (Phelps v. McAdoo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phelps v. McAdoo, 47 Misc. 524, 19 N.Y. Crim. 126, 94 N.Y.S. 265 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.:

A captain of police, with twenty-five policemen armed with axes, suddenly broke into the rooms of the West Side Club on the second story. They did not seek admission in an orderly way by the door, but ran up ladders and broke in the windows. They thep broke and smashed, with axes and other weapons, doors, windows, ceilings, mantelpieces, water closet bowls and urinals, electric fans, pictures and other things. The photographs exhibited to the court show that they wrecked the place. They arrested three persons, but Mr. Justice Blanchard, of the Supreme Court, discharged them on a writ of habeas corpus for total lack of evidence, and with the concurrence of the district attorney of Hew • York county. The above act of mob violence was one of a series of trespasses by the police authorities upon the said premises.

They acted without a warrant. But it should be said in vindication of the law that no warrant would have justified such acts of violence and wantonness. The law does not even permit a police officer to break into a place under a search warrant unless “ after notice of his authority and purpose he be refused admittance” (Code of Criminal Procedure, sec. 799), and it is made a criminal offence for him to do so (Penal Code, sec. 120).

It may be that the members of this club commit the crime of betting on horse races in the privacy of their rooms, as the police authorities claim, but there is no evidence of it. Ho doubt there is much private betting and gaming m our clubs. It might be well if the police authorities should soon break into and smash the interior of one of our leading clubs with mob violence, for every one would then perceive the enormity of their offence, although it would be no greater than their lawless trespasses against the houses and persons of the weak and uninfluential. One reason given for the lawless violence on this place is that the building is reported,” as an affidavit of a police captain says, to be owned by one Theodore Allen.” I do not know who he is; but the law does not permit his building to be unlawfully broken into by the police any more than another man’s. The way the law directs the police to do is to get evidence through their secret [526]*526service or otherwise against the club, a thing easy enough, if it he such a gross offender, and then get a warrant for the arrest of the guilty ones, and have them tried, and surely convicted and sent to prison. That is the way of the law, and it is the only efficient way.

The notion of any police official that he may go about smashing into houses and clubbing people without evidence or a warrant, simply because he, forsooth, suspects ” them, would have to he deemed insane in a free government, if it did not arise out of ignorance or a bad motive. And to malee the police force do such lawless work is to degrade them. It is not to be wondered at if policemen who are thus taught lawlessness by their superiors occasionally do individual acts of lawlessness.

If it be asked, “ What is to he done if no evidence can he obtained ? ” the answer of the law is plain and emphatic, D'o nothing.” Hot even a murderer can be arrested and imprisoned without evidence. Cannot the police officials understand that ? And if any house or place be so decorous and orderly that no one can see anything wrong about it, and no evidence can he got against it, it must be left alone. That is the law of all free governments. In despotisms they sack houses and arrest people at will.

. Do the police ever get any evidence against betters on horse races and cause a conviction? Hare they caused even one conviction ? The law does not sanction government by the axe and club. That is the way in Russia, to some extent, but not here in our free government. Ours is a government of laws and not of men. Russia is a government of men and not of laws. The highest official with us has to keep within the laws prescribing his duties and the limitations of his powers.

The pernicious and destructive notion is abroad to some extent that good ” officials, that a “ good ” police commissioner and “ good ” police captains should he permitted to overstep the law. Cannot people, who talk like this understand that the good official who oversteps the law is making a precedent for his had successor ? As Rufus Choate said in warning, to public officers in an argument before them:

[527]*527“ You are good men, and live in good times, but you set an example for bad men in bad times.”

It was on the same occasion that he read that great article of the Massachusetts Bill of .Rights promulgating government in the three departments, legislative, exécutive and judicial, to the end that it should be a government of laws and not of men, declaring that he never read it “ without a thrill of sublimity,” viz:

“In the government o,f this Commonwealth, the Legislative department shall never exercise the Executive and Judicial powers, or either of them: The Executive shall never exercise the Legislative and Judicial powers, or either of them: The Judicial shall never exercise the Legislative and Executive powers, or either of them: To the end that it may be a government of laws and not of men.”

It is criminal for officials to set at naught and trample upon foundation principles of free government like these. It is for the police authorities, who belong to the executive department, to get evidence of criminal offences and present it to the judicial department, and not go about passing judgment themselves and doing unlawful violence.

The counsel for the plaintiff advances the extraordinary argument that the police should have entered the place in the way prescribed by section 318 of the city charter. It purports to empower the police to enter any house in the city of Hew York if two householders report in writing to the police commissioner or deputy commissioner that there are good grounds for believing that it is a common gambling house.

But this section of the charter is unconstitutional and void. Ho house can be forcibly entered and searched anywhere in this country, except under a warrant obtained from a magistrate on sufficient cause proved before him on oath. Our ancient Bill of Rights, which is deemed fundamental law, contains the following explicit provision, which is also in the Constitution of the United States, and in the constitutions or bills of rights of all of our States, viz:

“ The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue [528]*528but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place.to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.”

We have far more to fear from the loss of this priceless inheritance of free government than from all kinds of betting and gaming; than from all the ordinary vices and crimes combined. Exercise of arbitrary power in a free government is the arch-vice; and it brings in its train a horde of vices, especially the despicable vices of official oppression, extortion and blackmail. If the police authorities are permitted to invade houses at will, they can by threats thereof levy extortion and blackmail without limit, as they long have done by that means in the city of Hew York.

The contention of the police officials is that they acted under section 315 of the city charter.

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Related

People v. Di Carlo
270 A.D. 789 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1946)
People v. Brinker
27 N.Y. Crim. 37 (New York City Magistrates' Court, 1912)
Colby v. Bingham
62 Misc. 396 (New York Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Misc. 524, 19 N.Y. Crim. 126, 94 N.Y.S. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelps-v-mcadoo-nysupct-1905.