State v. Link

102 A.2d 609, 14 N.J. 446, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 8, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 102 A.2d 609 (State v. Link) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Link, 102 A.2d 609, 14 N.J. 446, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 328 (N.J. 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wachenfeld, J.

The query presented is whether the currency seized by law enforcement authorities in the execution of a search warrant directed to the residence of Leo Link, an admitted bookmaker, who later pleaded non vult to an indictment charging him as such, was properly forfeited to the State.

The seizure was made from a wall safe in Link’s residence, where he concededly conducted part of his bookmaking operations. The circumstances were as follows:

The sole occupation of Leo Link, alias J. W. Donaldson, in 1950 and for a long time prior thereto, was bookmaking. He received and paid off bets over the Western Union Telegraph system. Originally he operated and resided in Hudson County but moved from Jersey City to 479 Beatrice Street, Teaneck, Bergen County, New Jersey, in 1943 with his wife Violet Link and his mother-in-law Louise Schanals.

In 1947 and thereafter he carried on his bookmaking activities through the Passaic office of the Western Union Telegraph Company. He received bets by telegraph from all parts of the country, but the main volume of this illegal *449 business was transmitted to and emanated from the office of the telegraph company in Bridgeton, Cumberland County.

In June 1948 the police authorities of Cumberland County initiated an investigation in reference to the operations of the telegraph company at Bridgeton. It was disclosed that wagers on horse races were sent by telegraph from Bridgeton to Link, using the name of Donaldson, in Passaic County, and to C. J. Rich & Company in Illinois, and the winnings were sent to Bridgeton by telegraph money orders.

In April 1950 a Deputy Attorney General and other law enforcement officials raided the telegraph office, seized and impounded the many messages referring to horse race bets. The grand jury of Cumberland County on June 5, 1950 indicted the company and Drake, its manager, for maintaining a disorderly house at the Bridgeton office. Both defendants were convicted after trial and the judgment was affirmed on appeal. State v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 12 N. J. 468 (1953).

The evidence in that case indicated that on frequent occasions there were 20 to 25 people in the office sending telegrams to Donaldson and that approximately 8,000 money orders issued out of the Bridgeton office to Donaldson in Passaic County and Rich & Company during the six months commencing with November 1949.

Another indictment was returned against the company, Drake and Donaldson, alias Link, who were charged with conspiracy to make book.

On October 23, 1950, pursuant to a search warrant issued for that purpose, a number of law enforcement officials, headed by Mr. Stamler, then a Deputy Attorney-General of the State, went to the Beatrice Street, Teaneck, address and there seized $127,000 in United States currency which they discovered, as already alluded to, in a safe recessed in a wall of the basement adjacent to a room where Link had a desk and a telephone from which he had apparently directed his bookmaking activities.

In the safe the raiding party found a warehouse receipt which led them to a warehouse in Palisades Park, Bergen *450 County, where they took possession of records of a bookmaking operation conducted at the Teaneck residence.

No arrests were made for the ostensible reason that the appellant Leo Link had, prior to October 23, 1950, been arrested and admitted to bail to answer separate charges for violation of bookmaking statutes in Cumberland County and Passaic County.

On May 31, 1951 Link was indicted by the Bergen County grand jury for violating the gambling laws on April 24, 1950 and divers other dates at Teaneck, New Jersey.

He pleaded non vult to this indictment on June 20, 1952, at which time the prosecutor apprised the court that the defendant had been indicted in Passaic County and in Cumberland County for “what is tantamount to the same offense.” Link’s counsel then said:

“I admit that Mr. Link was operating, or was associated in the operation, of a bookmaking activity prohibited by the statute. There was a single operation as has been indicated by the Attorney General. I am willing that a plea of non vult shall go in one jurisdiction, because it was one offense. I have indicated to the Attorney General that it makes very little difference to me whether it is in Bergen County, Passaic County, or Cumberland County.”

Upon the entering of the plea of non vult in Bergen County, the indictments in Passaic County and Cumberland County were nolle prossed.

On June 21, 1952 Link was sentenced to a jail term and a fine.

On June 24, 1952 Louise Schanals, Link’s 19-year-old mother-in-law, instituted suit against the County Treasurer of Bergen County in an attempt to recover the $121,000 of seized currency, and in her answers to interrogatories in that litigation she asserted $80,000 of this money belonged to her, $21,000 to her daughter Violet Link, and $20,000 to Leo Link. The ease was duly tried before a jury and a verdict of no cause of action was returned.

In her depositions Mrs. Schanals testified the cash was received by her as gifts from her husband, who died in *451 February 1936. She did not know the amount of his annual income, but the proof in reference thereto indicated Mr. Schanals' last position paid an annual salary of $2,100. There was other evidence in reference to his financial status which made the claim of accumulating that amount of money from his income rather fantastic.

After the entry of judgment, an order was issued requiring the appellants to show cause why the currency in the possession of the county treasurer should not be forfeited “to the sole use and gain of the County of Bergen." The hearing came on before Superior Court Judge Leyden, who had issued the original search warrant, received the indictment handed down against Link, taken his plea, imposed sentence, and also had presided at the trial of Mrs. Schanals action.

Both counsel agreed upon the record that the trial court was to take judicial notice of the pleadings, the testimony, the verdict and the judgment in the case of Mrs. Schanals against the county treasurer and also of the indictment against Leo Link, his plea thereto and his sentence thereon.

The interest now claimed in the money varies widely from that originally made, and it is obvious the alleged ownership heretofore asserted mirrored the consciousness of the forfeiture proceedings which would inevitably be encountered. Leo Link now contended he owned $82,000, Violet Link $20,000, while $25,000 had been assigned by all of the appellants to John E. Selser for professional services rendered and to be rendered.

At the hearing no additional proof was offered except the testimony of Violet Link, in which she attempted to establish her ownership of $20,000 of the fund by claiming it had accumulated from gifts and savings over a period of 30 years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A.2d 609, 14 N.J. 446, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-link-nj-1954.