183 N.Y. 52 | NY | 1905
Though I am one of the minority who dissented from the affirmance of the judgment of conviction in this case, I am entirely clear that the present motion for reargument should be denied. The grounds for such an application are stated by Judge PECKHAM in Fosdick v. Town of Hempstead (
We have examined with care the elaborate brief filed by the appellant's counsel and find no objection discussed therein that was not considered by the court before it decided the appeal. In the opinions that were then written all of the questions raised that were deemed important were considered and discussed, and the opinions clearly expressed the views of the several members of the court thereon. It is true that in *54 the prevailing opinion some of the exceptions raised upon the trial of the case were not specifically alluded to or separately discussed, but they all appear in the dissenting opinions, and were, therefore, necessarily passed upon by the court before it announced its determination. There is, therefore, no valid reason for granting this motion.
It is urged, however, as a ground for the application that Judge GRAY, who wrote the prevailing opinion, is the father of a subordinate counsel in the office of the district attorney of New York, Mr. Henry G. Gray, who appeared with Mr. Garvin, another deputy assistant, in opposition to the motion made by the defendant for a new trial on newly-discovered evidence. It is conceded that this relationship constituted no legal disqualification of the judge, but it is contended that the fact rendered it improper for Judge GRAY to sit in the case. It would be a sufficient answer to this claim that of an objection of that character, impropriety as distinguished from legal disqualification, the judge himself is the sole arbiter. (Matterof Dodge Stevenson Mfg. Co.,
The motion for reargument should be denied.
GRAY, BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN and WERNER, JJ., concur; O'BRIEN, J., absent.
Motion denied.