P. Henry Dugro


Philip Henry Dugro was an American lawyer, judge, and United States [House of Representatives|U.S. Representative] from New York, serving from 1881 to 1883. He is best known for a 1909 ruling in which he argued that the reputations of African Americans had less legal value than those of whites.

Biography

Born in New York City, Dugro attended the public schools and was graduated from the school of arts of [Columbia University|Columbia College, New York City], in 1876 and from the law department of the same institution in 1878.
He was admitted to the bar in the latter year and commenced practice in New York City.

State legislature

He was a member of the New York State Assembly in 102nd [New York State Legislature|1879].

Congress and judicial office

Dugro was elected as a Democrat to the 47th [United States Congress|Forty-seventh] Congress. He was not a candidate for reelection.
He resumed the practice of law in New York City and also entered the real estate business. He declined the office of state commissioner of immigration in 1885. He served as judge of the Superior Court of New York County from 1887 to 1896, when the Superior Court was merged with and into the state Supreme Court. He was elected to the New York Supreme Court in 1896.

Racist ruling in ''Griffin v. Brady''

In 1909, Dugro gained national attention for his decision in a case involving George W. Griffin, an African-American Pullman porter. On a train headed to Montreal, a railroad executive named Daniel N. Brady accused Griffin of stealing his wallet. Griffin was pulled off the train and detained for hours before being released for lack of evidence.
Griffin then sued Brady in Dugro's New York court for false arrest and imprisonment. A jury found in Griffin's favor and awarded him $2,500 in damages. Dugro said that the amount was excessive and ordered it reduced to $300 because of Griffin's race — that a black man's reputation was not as harmed by a false accusation as a white man's:
The ruling spurred outrage among African Americans nationwide, who called it "perhaps the most infamous opinion in a Northern court of law during the present generation" and Dugro a "20th century Judge Taney," after Roger Taney, author of the notorious Dred Scott decision.
Griffin appealed the ruling three times, seeking restoration of the $2,500 judgment, but he was denied each time; however, the final appeal, in an opinion written by Edward Everett McCall, resulted in the damages being raised to $1,000. Two later legal scholars called the case "perhaps the most celebrated instance of racial devaluation in early-20th-century tort litigation." The writer and activist James Weldon Johnson wrote of Dugro:

Death

Dugro remained on the New York Supreme Court bench until his death in New York City on March 1, 1920. He was interred in Woodlawn Cemetery.