People v. . Jackson

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 295 The learned recorder held that the indictment was defective because it charged that the suspicious death, which was the subject of inquiry before the defendant as coroner, is alleged to have occurred in the state of New Jersey while the act causing death is alleged to have been done in the state of New York.

The statute under which the indictment was found provides that "A judicial officer * * * who asks, receives, or agrees to receive a bribe * * * upon any agreement or understanding that his vote, opinion, judgment, action, decision or other official proceeding, shall be influenced thereby" is guilty of a felony. (Penal Code, § 72.)

It is provided by the statute governing the duties of coroners that "whenever a coroner is informed that a person has been killed or dangerously wounded by another, or has suddenly died under such circumstances as to afford a reasonable *Page 297 ground to suspect that his death has been occasioned by the act of another by criminal means, or has committed suicide, he must go to the place where the person is and forthwith inquire into the cause of the death, or wounding, * * * and if it shall appear from the sworn examination of the informant, or complainant * * * that any person, or persons, are chargeable with the killing or wounding, or that there is probable cause to believe that any person or persons are chargeable therewith, and if such person or persons, be not in custody, he must forthwith issue a warrant for the arrest of the person or persons charged with such killing or wounding; and upon the arrest of any person or persons, chargeable therewith, he must be arraigned before the coroner for examination, and the said coroner shall have power to commit the person or persons so arrested to await the result of the inquisition or decision." (Code Cr. Pro. § 773.)

Section 783 provides that the coroner "when the defendant is brought before him, must proceed to examine the charge contained in the inquisition or information, and hold the defendant to answer or discharge him therefrom, in the same manner in all respects as upon a warrant of arrest on an information."

A motion in arrest of judgment can be granted only in two cases: 1. When the court has no jurisdiction over the subject of the indictment. 2. When the facts stated in the indictment do not constitute a crime. (People v. Meakim, 133 N.Y. 214; Code Cr. Pro. §§ 323, 331, 467.) As it is conceded that the Court of General Sessions of the Peace in which the indictment under consideration was found and tried has jurisdiction of the crime of bribery, the power of the recorder to arrest judgment depends upon the sufficiency of the indictment itself. The question before us, therefore, is the same as if the defendant had demurred to the indictment upon the ground that the facts stated therein do not constitute a crime.

While the chief duty of a coroner is to hold an inquest when a suspicious death has occurred within his county, by recent legislation he has been given the power of a magistrate *Page 298 in a limited class of cases. (L. 1887, ch. 321; L. 1899, ch. 404.) He can exercise that jurisdiction only when some person has been killed or dangerously wounded by another, but in that class of cases he has the right to issue warrants, hold examinations and commit or discharge the accused, the same as any of the regular magistrates. He is, therefore, a judicial officer within the meaning of section 72 of the Penal Code, and, indeed, his duties as an inquisitor simply, were regarded as "principally judicial" as long ago as when Blackstone wrote his celebrated commentaries. (1 Blackstone's Com. *348, Sharswood edition.)

It is insisted that the indictment is defective because it shows upon its face that the defendant had no jurisdiction to act as coroner, inasmuch as it is alleged that the wounding took place in New York and the death in New Jersey, while it is not alleged that the dead body was ever within the state of New York or that the defendant viewed it therein. It is argued that for time out of mind the jurisdiction of a coroner depended upon a view of the body; that the Criminal Code makes it his first duty "to go to the place where the person is" who has been killed or dangerously wounded, and that the city charter requires a view of "the body of such deceased person" by a coroner's physician. (Code Cr. Pro. § 773; Consolidation Act, § 1773; Charter, § 1571.)

The decision of this appeal does not rest upon the actual jurisdiction of the defendant as coroner, for, assuming that he was without jurisdiction because he had not seen the unfortunate woman after she was dangerously wounded and had not viewed her body after death, still we think the indictment is sufficient.

The defendant was in fact a coroner, and he assumed to act as such in a case of death by violence, of which he would have had jurisdiction if the death had occurred in the borough where the act causing it was committed. He issued a warrant in due form of law, signed by himself as coroner, and, hence, necessarily decided that he had jurisdiction to act as coroner. He issued it as lawful process, and, as it was valid on its face, *Page 299 it was a complete protection to the officer who made the arrest and brought the accused before the defendant. Thus, by exercising powers purporting to belong to his office, he had a prisoner on his hands. Clearly, he had the power to discharge the prisoner even if he had no power to hold him for trial or admit him to bail. He admitted the accused to bail, however, and again necessarily decided that he had jurisdiction to act as coroner. His decision was an official act within the true meaning of the statute. He asked and agreed to take five hundred dollars in money, and promised that in consideration thereof he would discharge the accused after hearing the charge against him. While "in judicial place," he agreed to take a bribe for doing an act official in character and which was in the nature of an "official proceeding." For a certain amount of money he was to make a certain decision as coroner and it was because he had power to make that decision that he was able to exact a bribe. All his acts were official in form and all that he did was by color of his office. He dealt with a subject over which he had jurisdiction. Every step he took, he assumed to take in his official capacity. An act may be official in character without being lawful and he neither pretended nor intended to act otherwise than officially. "An official act does not mean that which was lawfully done, but whatever was done under color or by virtue of the office." (Inhabitants of Williamstown v.Willis, 15 Gray [Mass.], 427, 430.)

The defendant complied with all the forms of law in attempting to act as coroner. His action was such as a coroner might properly take in a proper case. Every function he attempted to discharge belonged to the office which he held, and could have been performed with the full sanction of law if the victim had died in the borough of Manhattan. This case is not like some of those relied upon by the appellant where there was not only no jurisdiction in the particular case but there could be none in any case, because the function was foreign to the office and could not be exercised by the officer under any circumstances. Here the function was such as a *Page 300 coroner could perform when a certain fact existed and the defendant took jurisdiction and kept it just as if that fact had been proved before him. A coroner cannot act in a case of larceny, for instance, no matter what the facts are, but he can take cognizance of cases of dangerous wounding or violent death occurring in his county, for those subjects are intrusted to him by law. The latter class of cases belongs to his office, and when he assumes jurisdiction of such a case his action therein is so far official as to support an indictment against him if he accepts a bribe for doing an act apparently in the line of his duty. The learned Appellate Division so held in a carefully prepared opinion.

The law does not protect a corrupt judge because he exceeds his powers and his action is colorable merely. It does not mind whether when accepting a bribe to do an act apparently within his jurisdiction he actually had jurisdiction. The statute against bribery says nothing about jurisdiction and official action means such as properly belongs to the office and is intended by the officer to be official. It is sufficient if the defendant assumed, colore officii, to perform a function belonging to his office even if the right to perform it did not exist in the particular case. (State v. Ellis, 33 N.J.L. 102; Glover v.State, 109 Ind. 391; State v. Lehman, 182 Mo. 424; Murphy v. State, 124 Wis. 635; People v. McGarry, 136 Mich. 316;State v. Potts, 78 Iowa 656.)

Just as an officer de facto is punishable for malfeasance in office the same as if he had been an officer de jure, so an officer de jure acting apparently with, but really without jurisdiction, is punishable for accepting a bribe the same as if he had had complete jurisdiction, provided the action to be corruptly taken was in form appropriate to the office held by him. (State v. Goss, 69 Me. 22; Mechem on Public Officers, § 336; 1 Bishop on Criminal Law, § 917.) We have just held that the City Court of the city of New York has no jurisdiction of an action against that city (O'Connor v. City of New York,191 N.Y. 238), but is it possible that the statute against bribery has no application to the discharge of official duties in the cases in *Page 301 which that court assumed jurisdiction without having it? (Roderigas v. East River Savings Institution, 63 N.Y. 460.)

No precedent in this state holds jurisdiction in the particular case essential to establish the crime of bribery when the defendant had general power as an officer to act in like cases upon proof of a particular fact and we decline to follow such courts in other states as have so held. The weight of authority is the other way. We do not hold that the defendant is estopped from denying that he had jurisdiction, but, as his action was in the apparent line of his duty as a public officer, was official in form and intended to be official in fact, that he was guilty if he accepted a bribe whether he had jurisdiction or not. Any other rule would be a reproach to the law, for it would encourage official corruption and tend to subvert the honest administration of justice. The offense of the defendant, whether he was with or without jurisdiction is the same in morals and we think it is the same in the eye of the law.

The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.

CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, HAIGHT, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT and HISCOCK, JJ., concur.

Order affirmed.