People v. Stolof

The five defendants have been convicted upon an indictment which charges that they "on September 6, 1935, in the County of Kings, attempted to obtain three hundred dollars in money from Louis Rogoff, by the wrongful use of force and fear induced by the threat of the defendants to do an unlawful injury to the property of the said Louis Rogoff, to wit, preventing him from continuing his business of painting contractor and refusing to allow union painters to work on his jobs."

The defendants in August and September, 1935, were officials of "Brooklyn District Council, No. 18 of the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of America." The complaining witness, Louis Rogoff, was at that time engaged in business as a painting contractor. He held eight contracts for work to be performed in Brooklyn and Queens county. All the contracts provided for the employment of union labor. On August 27th the union called a general strike upon all "jobs" within that district. The complaining witness could proceed with work on the contracts which he had, only if he made his peace with the union and obtained from the union a satisfactory agreement permitting him to *Page 240 employ members of the union. He visited the office of the union to obtain such an agreement. He was told to return after Labor day, the following Monday. He returned to the office thereafter. He was told to return again. He did so again and again during that week without obtaining a contract. There were discussions as to the reason for the delay; there was talk as to whether he had violated rules of the union and whether for such alleged violations the union should withhold a new contract. He brought his lawyer to one of the meetings of the council of the local to urge the council to give him a contract. He failed to obtain such a contract until after he paid the defendants $300 at the office of the union.

Before Rogoff paid the money, he complained to the District Attorney. As soon as the money was paid, detectives from the District Attorney's office, acting upon a prearranged signal, came into the room and found the money upon the person of one of the defendants. The People produced testimony, to which reference will be made hereafter, to show that the defendants had brazenly demanded the $300 for personal graft. The defendants did not at any time and do not now deny that they refused to deliver to the complaining witness a contract which would permit the complaining witness to carry on his business unless he paid them $300, but they all maintained that they informed the complaining witness that the money must be paid because, in violation of the rules of the union by which he had agreed to abide, he had paid some of his employees less than the union rate of nine dollars per day and had compelled the employees to sign receipts for the union rate. They testified that in demanding and receiving the money they were acting for the union and pursuant to authority intrusted to them by the union, and that the money was intended to make good to workmen "kick-backs" from previous payments of union rates to which the workmen were entitled. *Page 241

There is conflict of testimony only upon the narrow issue of whether in demanding the payment of $300 the defendants were attempting to induce the payment of the money for their own use "by a wrongful use of force or fear" in violation of section 850 of the Penal Law, or were acting for the union and in accordance with authority conferred upon them as officers of the union. The jury resolved that issue against the defendants. The Appellate Division affirmed the judgment of conviction under section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, though it found that the trial judge had erroneously excluded competent evidence offered by the defendants for the purpose of impeaching the testimony of one of the witnesses for the People. The District Attorney in his brief urges forcefully that the error should be disregarded as harmless, but with a conscientious recognition that a prosecuting attorney owes to the court and to the accused a duty to present his case fairly, he states that: "We cannot, after examining the authorities dealing with the rule which binds the interrogator to testimony constituting new matter elicited on cross-examination (Kay v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co., 163 N.Y. 447;Deutschmann v. Third Avenue R.R. Co., 78 App. Div. 413), and comparing them with the authority relied upon by the appellants (Larkin v. Nassau Electric R.R. Co., 205 N.Y. 267), agree with the ruling of the trial court excluding testimony which sought to impeach the witness Greenberg, Rogoff's lawyer, by admissions contradictory to his testimony on the trial to another lawyer, Mr. Null, one of the attorneys for the appellants. However, we believe that the error may be disregarded if this court is satisfied that the proof of the appellants' guilt was not affected by the ruling."

There is, in fact, no room for possible argument or difference of opinion on the point that the ruling of the trial justice was erroneous. I proceed, then, to consider whether the error may be disregarded. *Page 242

In his opinion, Judge HUBBS has made a summary of evidence produced by the People which he finds establishes the guilt of the defendants. No opinion of reasonable length could contain a complete summary of all the evidence produced on a long trial. Always the judge writing the opinion must select what he deems important and omit what he deems unimportant. Exigencies of space, too, may, at times, justify bare statement of conclusions as to the probative value of evidence without analysis or even statement of the grounds for that conclusion. If the question presented upon this appeal were only whether the competent evidence properly admitted at the trial is sufficient to justify the verdict, I should be content without more to accept Judge HUBBS' conclusion that "there is abundant evidence in the record to sustain the finding of the jury." I agree, indeed, that if the evidence of the prosecution is true the defendants have, for their own illicit gain attempted to betray the trust which the members of the union have confided in them and are enemies of society deserving punishment at least as severe as the law has affixed to the offense. If that testimony is true, I agree that "it took courage on the part of the witnesses Rogoff and Cohen, even when possessed of a just cause, to make the complaint which they made." Under our system of law the jury alone is the judge of whether or not that evidence is true or false. Throughout the opinion there is the assumption that the evidence is true; but only the jury may pass upon the truth and probative force of the evidence against an accused — only the jury may place upon the accused the stigma of guilt and subject him to the pains and forfeitures of liberty and reputation which arise from a finding of guilt. If the evidence erroneously excluded by the trial judge might, if admitted, have so impeached the credibility of the evidence produced by the prosecution that the jury might have reached a different conclusion, then the exclusion of that evidence constituted reversible error, though the trial judge or the judges of the Appellate *Page 243 Division, and of this court, might find in the record ample justification for the jury's verdict establishing the guilt of the defendants.

Trial by jury becomes an empty form unless at such trial the accused may challenge the truth of the testimony produced against him, by cross-examination of the witnesses and the introduction of evidence intended to contradict or explain the evidence of the prosecution. It is the duty of the appellate court to determine whether by erroneous ruling the trial court has denied the accused any substantial right. It may overlook errors only when they "do not affect the substantial rights of the accused. The right of the accused to present to the jury for its consideration all the competent evidence relevant to the issue and which might affect the conclusion of the jury is not only substantial but is fundamental. Erroneous admission or exclusion of competent evidence does not affect that right where it clearly appears that the weight of such evidence is too slight to influence the balance of the scales of justice, and that the conclusion of the jury must have been the same even had the judge ruled correctly, but the question of whether the accused has been prejudiced by erroneous ruling excluding competent evidence must not be confused with the "abstract question of guilt or innocence. * * * Error is substantial when we can say that it tended to influence the verdict." (People v. Sobieskoda, 235 N.Y. 411, 420.)

In Makin v. Attorney-General ([1894] App. Cas. 57) the Lord Chancellor, HERSCHELL, speaking for himself and the other Law Lords, forcibly stated the reasons why a statute similar to section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure may not be construed as conferring upon an appellate court power to disregard error in the admission or exclusion of evidence because the court concluded that other evidence established the guilt of the defendant.

"It is obvious that the construction contended for transfers from the jury to the Court the determination *Page 244 of the question whether the evidence — that is to say, what the law regards as evidence — established the guilt of the accused. The result is that in a case where the accused has the right to have his guilt or innocence tried by a jury, the judgment passed upon him is made to depend not on the finding of the jury, but on the decision of the Court. The judges are in truth substituted for the jury, the verdict becomes theirs and theirs alone, and is arrived at upon a perusal of the evidence without any opportunity of seeing the demeanour of the witnesses and weighing the evidence with the assistance which this affords. * * *

"It need scarcely be said that there is ample scope for the operation of the proviso without applying it in the manner contended for.

"Their Lordships desire to guard themselves against being supposed to determine that the proviso may not be relied on in cases where it is impossible to suppose that the evidence improperly admitted can have had any influence on the verdict of the jury * * *."

For the purpose of showing the significance of the erroneous exclusion of evidence I must make brief reference to some parts of the testimony which, I think, have been passed over too lightly in Judge HUBBS' opinion. The complaining witness testified that at first he could not obtain from the defendants any statement of the reason why the union did not give him the contract he sought for the employment of union men. Then through one of his employees, Cohen, he was told that he could not have a contract unless he "paid the bums upstairs" $300. He testified that when he protested, one of the defendants said to him: "Well, we need the money for ourselves; we have to divide for ourselves," and that on a different occasion another defendant said: "Don't be a wise guy. We don't want you in the business. We don't like you. Everybody pays us. You are no exception." The complaining witness was corroborated by his employee, Cohen, but on cross-examination the credibility of both was seriously impaired. *Page 245

On that point I shall not here attempt to analyse the testimony of these two witnesses. I content myself here with quoting a few comments from the admirably fair brief of the District Attorney. In beginning the summary of the testimony elicited on cross-examination, the brief states: "It is to be conceded at the outset that Rogoff developed a serious lack of memory as to his personal and business history."

The details of the cross-examination which follow in the brief show that Rogoff not only "developed a serious lack of memory," but that when questioned as to his failure to produce books and records which might show whether there was basis for the defendants' claim that the witness had not always paid his employees the amount of the union wages for which he exacted receipts, the witness gave an explanation of the loss of his books and records which, it subsequently appeared, was false.

Again it is said in the brief: "Despite their shortcomings and their failing memories upon details of their personal history, which, after all, were collateral issues not entering into the merits of the accusation upon which the appellants were tried, Rogoff and Cohen were clear, positive and explicit upon the subject of the unlawful demands made upon Rogoff by the appellants in the course of their negotiations for the contract which it was in the appellants' power to furnish."

Perhaps a juror, seeking to discover where the truth lies, might find in the contrast between the "clear, positive and explicit" testimony of the witnesses upon their direct examination, and their "shortcomings" and "failing memories on cross-examination," an indication that their testimony was not entirely ingenuous. A conscientious jury might well hesitate to find that such testimony, without corroboration by a more reliable witness, was sufficient to outweigh the denial of the defendants.

It appeared in the testimony of the complaining witness, Rogoff, and also in the testimony of one of the *Page 246 defendants, that Mr. Louis E. Greenberg, the attorney for Rogoff, had accompanied Rogoff to a meeting of the union and upon leaving the meeting had a conversation on the street with one of the defendants. Mr. Greenberg was then called in rebuttal. He testified without objection that he was admitted to practice in September, 1915, and had conducted an office in New York city; that Rogoff was his client and that he went with him to the rooms of the association at the time in question; that he asked Stolof in the presence of the other defendants the reason why his client, who had always maintained a union shop and paid union wages and was ready to accept union conditions, should not receive his contract. According to the testimony of Mr. Greenberg, Stolof replied that there was a grievance; that Rogoff had agreed with one Sickels, a business agent, that he would employ men from Sickels' local and had failed to do so. Rogoff denied that. Sickels was then brought into the room and a discussion took place upon that subject. Finally, Stolof said: "I will see that your client gets the agreement." Thereafter, the witness left the room and when on the street was accosted by the defendant Wellner who stated to him that $300 would have to be paid for the bums upstairs, or the gang. The witness testified also that nothing was said in the conversation upstairs that Rogoff would have to put up security or pay to make up the back pay of underpaid former employees who were union men. He testified that the only objection there discussed was that Rogoff had failed to take men from Sickels' local union and that that objection was obviated before the promise was made that Rogoff should receive his contract.

The witness was cross-examined in regard to injunction proceedings he had brought thereafter against the union. In those proceedings the union was represented by the firm of Markewich Null who appeared on this trial as attorneys for the defendants. In the course of these *Page 247 proceedings the witness, Mr. Greenberg, had some conferences with Mr. Samuel Null. The witness was asked: "Did you tell Mr. Samuel Null that at the conference at which you were present, between Rogoff and the defendants, there was a claim made by the officials of the union that your client failed to pay the union scale of wages?" The witness answered, "No." He was also asked: "Didn't you tell Mr. Null at that conference that at no time at that conference or outside of the conference that any of the defendants asked for money in the shape of graft?" to which the witness answered: "Mr. Markewich, you know that is not so." Thereafter, Mr. Null was called as a witness by the defendants and specific questions were asked for the purpose of contradicting and impeaching the witness Greenberg. Objections to those questions were sustained on the ground that the defendants had made Mr. Greenberg their own witness in the cross-examination and were bound by the answers to the questions. The defendants excepted to the ruling.

The error of the ruling is, as I have pointed out, conceded. The truth of testimony may be effectively challenged by proof that at other times the witness had made statements inconsistent with his testimony on the stand. Cross-examination of the witness as to such prior incompetent statements is necessary to lay the foundation for the introduction of proof that the inconsistent statements were made. Denial by the witness on cross-examination that an inconsistent statement had previously been made by him does not bind the cross-examiner, and exclusion of evidence thereafter offered to prove that such statement had, in fact, been made, constitutes in effect a denial of the right to challenge the truth of the testimony of the witness and to impeach its credibility. We have said that whether an error affects the substantial rights of the parties "necessarily depends upon the nature of the case and the narrowness of the issue. Good judgment rather than definite rules of law *Page 248 must in such cases be our guide." (People v. Purtell,243 N.Y. 273, 275.) There may be room for the exercise of judgment as to the materiality of an error which denies to an accused the right to produce evidence tending to impeach the credibility of a witness for the People where the testimony of the witness is itself negligible or where the evidence excluded would have affected the credibility of the witness in only negligible degree. There can be no room for the exercise of judgment where the evidence erroneously excluded might, if admitted, have justified rejection of testimony which otherwise would have decisive probative force.

That is the case here. Unimpeached, the testimony of Mr. Greenberg, an attorney of standing and experience, might reasonably induce a jury to find the defendants guilty though otherwise the jury might well have hesitated to find proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in the testimony of the other witness who suffered from "failing memories" and "shortcomings." In this case, inference that in fact the jury did give heed to the testimony of Mr. Greenberg rests on more than conjecture. An hour and a half after the jury retired, it returned to the court with a request that the testimony of Mr. Greenberg be read to them again, and that they be permitted to inspect the minutes of the meeting at which Mr. Greenberg was present and "five kick-back affidavits" of former employees of Rogoff, the complaining witness, which the defendants had introduced to substantiate their claim that the $300 was exacted only because it was required to make good the "kick-backs" or difference between the union wages which the employees should have received, and the amount they did receive from Rogoff. Two hours thereafter the jury returned with a verdict of guilty.

I cannot find, under such circumstances, any ground which is even debatable for the conclusion that the error did not affect the substantial rights of the accused. Unsupported assertion cannot take the place of argument *Page 249 and I have found no support in the record for such assertions as that no one "can read this record and have a doubt" that the defendants intended to keep the money for themselves as graft. It cannot possibly be disputed, and no person has attempted to argue otherwise, that the exclusion of the testimony of Mr. Null might have affected the credibility of the testimony of Mr. Greenberg. Assuming, arguendo, that the jury might have found the defendants guilty even without Mr. Greenberg's testimony, it remains true that his testimony was presented to the jury for its consideration; that the trial court specifically called the jury's attention to it; that the jury interrupted its deliberations by request to have the testimony read to it a second time, and that Greenberg's unimpeached testimony is well calculated to remove any doubts which otherwise the jury might well have had. Denial to the defendants, then, of opportunity to present evidence which indubitably would challenge the truth of the testimony and might affect its credibility is a denial of the right of fair trial. I cannot see how the opinion of the trial judge, or of appellate judges, as to the guilt of the defendants, can affect that. Arguments that the guilt of the defendants is sufficiently established by other evidence seem to me quite beside the mark.

It is unfortunate when the court is constrained to reverse a conviction for serious crime because of error in the admission or exclusion of evidence which, perhaps, might not have changed the result. Swift and certain punishment of wrongdoers is the most effective protection of society. It is even more unfortunate if the court for any reason feels itself constrained to affirm a conviction where the accused is denied a fair trial. Because I am profoundly convinced that these defendants have been denied a fair trial, I feel compelled to register, in this manner, my dissent against the decision of the court. Judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered.

O'BRIEN, LOUGHRAN, FINCH and RIPPEY, JJ., concur with HUBBS, J.; CRANE, Ch. J., dissents in memorandum LEHMAN, J., dissents in opinion.

Judgments affirmed. *Page 250