Slater v. Wood

9 Bosw. 15
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 21, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Bosw. 15 (Slater v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slater v. Wood, 9 Bosw. 15 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court—Bosworth, Ch. J.

The plaintiff has recovered a verdict against the defendant for an assault and battery committed upon him on the 16th of June, 1857, in the rear of the City Hall of the City of Kew York. The injury was inflicted by some person or persons in a crowd collected at the place where the violence was suffered. The defendant was not present when the injury was committed, nor was he one of, or in sight of, the crowd from which it proceeded.

The complaint alleges that the persons who injured the plaintiff, “ acted under the orders and directions of the defendant, who commanded and incited them to commit the •said assault upon him.” The answer “denies that the persons mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint, or any other person •or persons, acted under the orders or directions of this [21]*21defendant, in committing any assault.upon the plaintiff; defendant denies that he incited or comhianded said persons, or any person or persons, to commit any assault upon the plaintiff.”

These allegations present the only questions of .fact raised by the pleadings, except the question whether the plaintiff was assaulted while in the peaceable discharge of his duty as a policeman.

A few weeks prior to the transaction in question, the existing Metropolitan Police Act took effect. The Mayor and certain members of the police force did not recognise the validity of this statute, nor the authority of the Commissioners of Police created by it. The crowd was composed mainly of these disaffected or insubordinate members of the police force, and had been assembled by order of the defendant, and are called in this case, the Municipal Police. The defendant insisted that he assembled them solely to resist the expulsion by force, of Turner, the Deputy Street Commissioner, from his office. The Street Commissioner had then recently died. Mr. Conover had been appointed by the Governor to fill the vacancy, and was making vigorous efforts to obtain possession of. the office, and of the property pertaining to it. The plaintiff insisted that the assembly was convened to resist the-service of process on the defendant, and to obstruct the Metropolitan Police, (as those are called who recognized the new law,) in the performance of their duty. The judge declared this crowd or assembly to be,, as matter of law, an unlawful assembly. Prior to the assault complained of, the Coroner had been to the Mayor’s office to serve an order of arrest upon him. He did not see the defendant", but had conversation'with-an officer stationed at the door of defendant’s office; and he and that officer are in direct conflict, as to what was then said by either' of then? to the other. After that, and on the same' day, the Coroner returned with a posse consisting of members-of the Metropolitan Police, for the purpose of serving, that order of arrest.

[22]*22They had a conflict with the crowd or Municipal Police at the rear entrance to the City Hall; the plaintiff was one of the Coroner’s posse, and was injured. This suit is brought to recover damages for that injury. This brief statement will make those portions of the charge, which we have specially considered, intelligible, and their application obvious.

The Judge charged, that “there is no proof that the defendant gave any direct command that this attack and assault should be made,” “ and the great question before us is, whether the Mayor, (the defendant in this action,) incited or commanded the men who committed this assault—assuming that they did commit it—to do it.”

The Judge also instructed the Jury that the act of April, 1857, (ch. 569), entitled, “An act to establish a Metropolitan Police District, and to provide for the government thereof,” took effect from and after the first meeting of the Board of Police created by it, and that such first meeting was held on the 23d of April, 1857.

That from and after that event, the power of the old Board of Police was at an end. That its right to act as an organized body for the- preservation of the public peace was gone. That the act of the defendant, in attempting to perpetuate the organization of the old police, after the first meeting of the new Board of Oommissioners under the new laws, and in supplying by new incumbents the places of* those who united with the new police, was illegal; “and the body of men thus organized by him under the nam'e of police, was an illegal body, in so far as it assumed to be a police organization.”

■“ This body of men were assembled in the City Hall on .the morning of June 16, 1857, principally by directions of the defendant, * * -* * and I feel bound to say, that the meeting in question constituted an unlawful .assembly.” (The defendant excepted to this instruction.)

“The Court, on the evidence before it, pronounces, as ¿matter of law, that the assemblage was unlawful; for it .holds that the assembling together of an illegal force, [23]*23armed, and with circumstances to create terror, or to provoke to a breach of the peace, of itself constitutes the meeting unlawful. Did its illegality depend on the motive of the act, or the object of the meeting only—and. there was doubt on that question—upon the evidence, it would have been your province to have decided, whether or not this was an unlawful assembly.” (The defendant excepted to the instruction “ that there was no question for the Jury as to the character of the assembly referred to, and that, as matter of law, it was unlawful.”)

The Judge also charged, that “even if it be admitted that the object for which this force was thus assembled was that contended for by the defendant, to wit, the protection of Mr. Turner, the then acting Street Commissioner, in the possession of his office and its properties, against the threatened violent attempts of Mr. Conover, with the assistance of the Metropolitan Police, or others, to wrest that possession from him, the assembling of this force for that purpose was illegal.” (To this instruction the defendant excepted.) #

He also charged, that conceding Turner to be the lawful incumbent of the office; that he and not Conover was in the actual possession of it, “ and that the Mayor, in his discretion, was authorized, as chief magistrate of the city, to interpose by force, if necessary to prevent his ouster; this could be done lawfully, only by the employment of the Metropolitan Police force itself.” (To this instruction the defendant excepted.)

“And it is no answer to this to say that that was the very body from which the wrong was apprehended.” (To this proposition the defendant excepted.)

“It makes no difference either, that the apprehension of a violent attempt, on the part of the Metropolitan Police, to force Mr. Conover into this office may have been well ‘ .founded;” (To this proposition the defendant excepted.

“There is no aspect of the question which this case presents in which the Court can do otherwise than pronounce [24]*24the act in question an illegal act.” (To this proposition the defendant excepted.)

Having instructed the Jury that this assembly was an unlawful assembly, the Judge then proceeds to state the rules by which the liability of the defendant, for the acts of the persons composing it, was to be tested and determined.

He charged the Jury that “the plaintiff” [at the time and place, when and where he was injured] “was there as a part of a posse comitatiis,

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Related

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41 Jones & S. 107 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Bosw. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slater-v-wood-nysuperctnyc-1861.