80 N.Y. 327 | NY | 1880
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *329 After a careful consideration of this case, and the points made for the plaintiff in error, we think that no error is shown in the judgment.
First. It was not error to allow facts to be shown on this trial that tended to prove the guilt of the principal. Doubtless the record showing the conviction of the principal is proof sufficient prima facie of that fact; and proof that he was convicted is proof prima facie that he was properly convicted. But still, the question of his guilt of the offence charged is not *331
thereby put entirely at rest as against an accessory; and the one charged as such may controvert the propriety of the conviction of the principal. Cases have arisen, in which the record of conviction of the principal was deemed not sufficient proof of his guilt, on the trial of the alleged accessory; and it was ruled that it must be established by other means. (Rex v.Turner, Ryan Moody Cr. Cas. Res., 347; 1 Lewin, 119;Ratcliffe's Case, id., 121.) A learned author has doubted, whether it is strictly in accordance with the principle respecting the admissibility of verdicts in evidence against third persons, and insists that the record of conviction of the principal, is not admissible in evidence of his guilt as against another charged with being connected with him in the crime. (2 Phil. on Ev. *49.) In this State, the doubt thus put forth has not prevailed; for here it is said that the record is primafacie evidence of the principal's guilt, but is not conclusive. (Per SUTHERLAND, J., The People v. Buckland, 13 Wend., 592.) Yet, as it is not conclusive, and the prisoner may controvert it, and may show that the principal was not properly convicted, the People are entitled to rebut his proofs thereon, and make evidence of the commission of the principal crime aliunde the record of his conviction. So that the question made here is but one as to the order of proof, which is in the discretion of the court trying the case. The admission of the testimony was not within the reprehension given in Coleman v. The People
(
Second. The indictment was well drawn in charging that the fire was set to and burned the dwelling-house of Isaac Koenigsberg. The averment was in accord with the facts as they afterwards came out. The indictment averred in the principal the crime of arson in the first degree, and the proof showed that it had been committed. The statute declares that the setting fire to or burning, in the night time, a dwelling-house, in which there shall be at the time some human being, is arson in the first degree. (2 R.S., 657.) And to put beyond doubt what is a dwelling-house, it declares that every edifice which shall have been usually occupied by persons lodging therein at night, shall be deemed a dwelling-house of any person so lodging therein. (Ib.) Here the proof is enough that the fire set by the principals did burn somewhat the realty; so that the question on which Dedieu v. The People (
It follows that the indictment and conviction of the principals here for that offence was good in law; and that if the facts show the prisoner inducing them thereto, he was well convicted as an accessory before the fact.
Third. It was not error to take testimony that the prisoner conferred with the principals after the fire. That he was with them, served to show his knowledge of them. The closeness of his companionship, and the frequency of it, would show how intimate was his acquaintance. If close and frequent, it was inferable that it was not newly formed and dated back to a time before the fire. Besides, it was competent, in view of his denial afterwards that he knew them at all. It was an act in the prisoner's life, at the time of the occurrence with guilty participation in which he was charged, and it was competent to be shown to the jury. Though after the principal fact, it was not necessarily confined to that aftertime, in its power to give ground for inferences. It may be that no act of his after the fire would make him an accessory before the fact; but after acts of his might be circumstances, according to the nature of them, to show guilty knowledge of purpose and inducement thereto before the fire.
Fourth. There was a request and refusal to charge that there was "no direct evidence * * * that the prisoner had in his possession evidence" of who set the fire. It must be conceded that this was not a clear proposition, in view of the facts of the case as they appeared when it was made to the court. The phrase "in his possession" indicates physical rather than mental control; and yet as there was nothing in the case to show that there existed evidence of the physical fact of that kind, it might have served to perplex the court. The court might well have hesitated to declare that there *336 was not or that there was such evidence. It did well to leave the matter to the jury, to determine from their memory of what had been testified to. If the prisoner was not satisfied with that disposition of it, there should have been some explanation of the request, and a more explicit call upon the court for a ruling.
Fifth. The prisoner asked the court to direct the jury to acquit of the charge in the first count of the indictment, viz.: of being an accessory before the fact. This the court could not do, if there was evidence that would sustain a verdict of guilty thereof. So that the point made, that the refusal of the court so to do was error, finds an answer in our conclusion that the verdict was not against the weight of evidence, which is the subject of another point, and is afterwards considered herein.
Sixth. It was not error to refuse to charge that there was no evidence in the case that the keys used by the principals were those of the prisoner. There was no direct evidence, such as identification of them as the same would have been. There was room for inference that they were the same, from the fact that they fitted the locks on the prisoner's rooms, that there was no evidence that the prisoner had his own in his possession on that night, or that the principals had made attempt or had opportunity to fit false keys to those locks, from the fact that they were used with no hesitation, but with a boldness that did not look for hindrance from the tenant of the rooms, and from all the facts of the prisoner's connection with the men that had them and used them for such a purpose.
Seventh. The prisoner asks this court, in this case, to use the power given it by the act of 1855 (chap. 337, Laws of that year, p. 613) as amended by the act of 1858: (Laws of 1858, chap. 330, p. 556.) By that act, this court, in cases coming from the General Sessions in New York, "may order a new trial if it shall be satisfied that the verdict against the prisoner was against the weight of evidence, or against law, or that justice requires a new trial, whether any *337
exception shall have been taken or not in the court below." InWilke v. The People (
So we might go over all of the incidents in the case. They all point to the prior criminal knowledge of the prisoner of the guilty intention of the principals and to his concurrence therein. It is sufficient to say that a careful reading of the testimony satisfies us that there is the clear weight in the evidence that sustains the verdict of guilty
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.