50 N.Y.S. 771 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The complainant, Thompson, and the defendant Baker, at the time of the commission of the offense charged upon the defendant, were farmers in the town of Cambria, Niagara county, occupying adjoining premises, and their houses being about 150 rods apart. The complainant’s and the defendant’s orchards upon their respective farms were separated by a line fence. In the fore part of the month of November, 1896, Thompson’s barn was entered in the night, his granary broken open, and about 180 bushels of oats taken therefrom, of the value of from twenty to twenty-one cents per bushel. The principal witnesses for the people were Christopher Grershmeir and Edward E. Blimm, who were employed at the time of the transaction as laborers by the defendant, and who were living at his house. They testified, in effect, that on the night of the burglary, at the instigation of the defendant, they, in company with the defendant and O’Connell, went to Thompson’s barn, broke into the granary, put the oats into bags that had been obtained at defendant’s, carried the bags through Thompson’s orchard to the line fence between the two orchards, put the bags over the fence, put them in a wagon, and carried them to the defendant’s barn; that there were two wagon loads ; that they commenced this work in the evening; after supper, and finished it at 4 o’clock in the morning; that, during the transaction, the defendant said he had lost his hat; they looked for it, but did not find it; that
The principal point urged by the appellant’s counsel upon this appeal is that there was not sufficient corroboration of the two accomplices of the defendant in the crimes to justify the trial court in submitting the case to the jury.
We are of the opinion that the confessions of the defendant as to the circumstances under which he saw these accomplices, as we have detailed, together with the evidence as to the hat, and as to the tracing of the oats and wagon, formed sufficient evidence to justify the trial court.in submitting the question to the jury. The rule in such cases is clearly stated in People v. Elliott (106 N. Y. 292) where Judge Eabl, after commenting upon certain circumstances developed in that case, says: “Each circumstance, taken by itself, is quite inconclusive, but when considered together they certainly furnish some corroborative evidence. It is not necessary that the corroborative evidence of itself should be sufficient to show the commission of the crime or to connect the defendant with it. It is sufficient if it tends to connect the defendant with the .commission of the crime. Nor need the corroborative evidence be wholly inconsistent with the theory of the defendant’s innocence. The court before it should submit the case to the jury should be satisfied that there is some corroborative evidence fairly tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime; and when there is, then it is for the jury to determine whether the corroboration is sufficient, to satisfy them of the defendant’s guilt. As we said in People v. Everhardt (104 N. Y. 591) ‘ the law is complied with if there is some evidence fairly tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime so that the conviction will not rest, entirely upon ’the evidence of the accomplice.’ ” (People v. Terwilliger, 26 N. Y. Supp. 677.)
Numerous exceptions were taken upon the trial by the defendant, upon the court’s rulings as to the admissibility of evi
Upon the cross-examination of Mr. Thompson, the complainant, he was asked if he had any ill-feeling toward the defendant, and if he had expressed it. The witness said that he had some deal with the defendant and that the defendant owed him something; that he had mistrusted, and still mistrusted, that Baker was the man that took his oats; that he had never Bad any ill-feeling toward Baker until a little while, “ until I had my opinion of the family.'
On the redirect examination he was asked by the district attorney if he had had claims against the defendant at different times and the witness answerd: “I never had much feeling about the transactions. There was something about a note. I can tell you the circumstances. Q. Well, what was it ? [This was objected to by defendant’s counsel as incompetent] The Court: You went into it, go on. [Overruled.] * * * A. Well, I had two or three notes against both at different times. I had a note against him and his mother signed it; and she told ine she never put her name to it, and never authorized him to do it. * * * The Court: The evidence, so far as what Mrs. Baker said, may be stricken out. Mr. Brong : I wish to have my protest noted in behalf of the defendant that the striking of it out does not cure the error. The Court: Well, the court will order it stricken out.”
The statement of the witness in regard to what the mother had said was not strictly responsive to the question put to the witness, and the defendant’s counsel to have raised the question should have moved the court to have the evidence stricken out, and as he did not do so, and when the court of his own motion ordered it stricken out, the counsel for the defendant answerd in the Language stated. Had the counsel desired the striking out of this evidence to have been more emphatic, or had he desired the court, in addition to stricking out the evidence, to charge the jury to disregard it, he should have made that request to the court; and had the court refused that request, then the proper
Upon the motion for a new trial the counsel for the defendant read several affidavits to the effect that during the evening of the 5th of November, 1896, and up to about one o’clock on the morning of the sixth, that defendant was at a little village called Pekin, about two miles from the defendant’s residence, spending the most of his time at a hotel kept by one Eichard McCarthy ; that the defendant and his friends who made the affidavits were having a jollification over the result of the election which had occurred on the third day of November, two days before. The affiants generally fix the time as being two days after this election, and state that that was the reason why they remembered the date. One of the affiants, Joseph H. Parker, was the father-in-law of the defendant, who lived at Pekin and kept' a store there, and he states that on that evening the defendant purchased an article at the store which was charged on Parker’s books to the defendant; that at that time the defendant had not married his daughter, but had called to see her in the evening.
The defendant claims that a new trial should be granted upon these affidavits because he was misled as to the time when the People charged the commission of the burglary, the indictment stating that it was on or about the thirteenth of November, and that, until it was disclosed upon the trial by the evidence of the two accomplices that the burglary was committed on the night of the fifth and the morning of the sixth of November, he had no notice that that was the time the offense was charged as having been committed, and, therefore, was not prepared to show his alibi at that time.
The accomplices did state that the burglary was committed on Thursday of the first week in November, bnt they gave no facts showing why they should have remembered the date as they were at this house for several days before and after the fifth of November. They state that it took the four men from some time after supper until four o’clock the next morning to go that short distance, bag 180 bushels of oats and take them to the defendant’s barn.
As we have said, the trial lasted three days. The father-in-law attended the trial as did ¡Richard McCarthy, the hotelkeeper. Immediately upon the People fixing the fifth of ¡November as the time, it is remarkable that neither the defendant nor these two affiants, the father-in-law and McCarthy, should have remembered the jollification on that night or recalled any of the circumstances attending the alibi which is embraced in these affidavits. They had two days before the expiration of the trial to find out where the defendant was that night and called the witnesses to the transaction.
The same rule which applies to civil cases in regard to new trials, upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence, prevails in criminal cases, and that rule is well stated by O’Brien, J., in Dillingham v. Flack (17 N. Y. Supp. 868) quoting from Raphaelsky v. Lynch, 34 N. Y. Super. Ct. 31: “ The following principles are settled in regard to granting new trials on the ground of newly-discovered evidence: The testimony upon which the motion is based must have been discovered since the former trial; it must have been such as could have been obtained with reasonable care before ; it must be material to the issue ; it must go to the merits of the case and not to impeach the character of former witnesses, it must not be cumulative The facts must be strong and the party averring them free from laches.”
The defendant himself was a very prominent actor at this jollification according to his affidavit, and if true the circumstances must have been impressed upon his memory so that he could have recalled it with a slight effort. There was
The learned trial judge tried the case fairly and impartially. He knew the witnesses and he was in a better situation to judge than we can be, from the surroundings and atmosphere of the trial, of the strength and bona fides of the motion for a new trial. The granting or refusing of it was very largely in his discretion, and we cannot say that that discretion was abused ; and in this case as in all others the motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence is not governed by an well-defined rule, but is addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and whether it should be granted or refused involves the inquiry whether substantial justice has been done, the court having in view, solely, the attainment of that end. (Barrett v. Third Avenue R. R. Co., 45 N. Y. 632.)
We have reached the conclusion that in denying the motion for a new trial the substantial rights of the defendant were not violated, and that the affidavits of newly-discovered evidence do not present a case for a new trial.
The judgment and order appealed, from should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Conviction, judgment and order affirmed, and judgment to be entered pursuant to section 547 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and when so entered it is to be certified and proceedings remitted to the county court of Niagara county with directions to proceed.