20 N.Y.S. 455 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The charge made against the defendant and one John Minon, who was jointly indicted with him, was, under subdivision 5 of section 218 of the Penal Code, that at the city of Corning they assaulted one Bessie Thomas, a colored woman, with intent, by force and violence, and without her consent, to ravish her. Minon was acquitted by the jury. The evidence of the people consists mainly of the testimony given by. Bessie Thomas herself, which was briefly to the effect that while on her way from the city of Corning to her home in the town of Corning she was caught, at the corner of Bridge and Pultney streets, in that part of the city of Corning known as “Knoxville,” by the defendant and another man, and was dragged a distance of one block, shown to be 429 feet, and on another street a distance of about 550 feet, to a schoolhouse, where one of the men threw her down, whereupon she screamed, and in answer to the scream a person with a lantern came to the place, and then the man let her loose and ran away. The complainant was accompanied by a girl by the name of Kittie Thompson, who, upon her direct examination, testified that she met Bessie Thomas on the corner of Bridge and Pultney streets, in Knoxville, and that two men took hold of her, and grabbed her by the arm, whereupon she broke away and ran. Her testimony, as a whole, was designed to leave the impression that Bessie Thomas, the complainant, was at or near the corner of Bridge and Pultney streets when accosted by the men. But the evidence in behalf of the defendant shows with- much conclusiveness, as well as much testimony given in behalf of the people, that whatever assault was committed by the defendant upon Bessie Thomas was made upon the steps or near the steps of the schoolhouse. If this be so, there is not any evidence which would justify the jury in the verdict rendered. There is evidence given in behalf of the defendant to the effect that on the evening in question, which was April 12, 1890, these two women had made an appointment with John Cogan and Martin Miles for a meeting on the Knoxville bridge. Soon thereafter it is claimed Cogan told this defendant of such appointment; that Cogan and Miles met the women according to appointment, and passed down Bridge street with them to Jennings street, to the schoolhouse, when Miles and Bessie Thomas turned in, and sat on the step of the schoolhouse, and Cogan and
If the relation of facts as given in behalf of the defendant is true, it is quite plain that the defendant did not commit the crime charged against him. And it is somewhat difficult to account for the verdict, except upon the ground that the jury’s minds must have been unduly influenced, as is claimed by the learned counsel for t-he appellant, by the charge of the learned county judge. The judge began his charge by telling the jury that the defendants had been indicted by the “diligent eiforts” of the grand jury, but that such indictment was “not conclusive evidence of guilt, but it is a charge by which they say by their indictment should be investigated and tried by a trial jury, as you are.” After calling their attention to the rule that before an indicted person can be convicted the jury must be satisfied of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the learned judge instructed the jury that- “it is for you to say what shall be a reasonable doubt; whether it exists in this case. A reasonable doubt must rest upon some reason. A juror must not say, ‘I have got it,’ unless he has got some reason to doubt the evidence, or the whole evidence in the case. * * * So that, gentlemen, you will discover that you are—to use a common expression—you are to a great extent master of the situation. The responsibility of this matter is with you, and, while the defendants have a right to expect fair treatment and fair consideration, the public, society, and the people are looking out to see that the public are protected, and not violated. * * * The prosecution places their evidence upon the evidence of two witnesses. Bessie Thomas, who is the complainant, is a woman, a married lady, pursuing a legitimate and worthy enter-’ prise, her husband being a barber working at Painted Post, her home being up in that direction, and she a hairdresser, and working for sneh customers as employ her, and the two having the care and bringing up of their little children. She comes upon the stand, and tells you in a plain and earnest manner,” etc. He further instructed the jury that there was nothingto contradict the statement of Kittie Thompson that she ran when the men came and grabbed Mrs. Thomas. He further said in respect to these two witnesses: “They told their story, and adhered to it. They answered all the questions; no hesitation; no disposition to excuse or shirk the answers. They told their stories, and then submitted to the cross-examination,” etc. In speaking of the defendants and the other men who were with them, the court said: “They range from the age of twenty-one to thirty-four years. It does not appear that any have families, although at the age when you might naturally expect in the natural course of human events that they would be men of families. If they are not, then they were at liberty, as far as the family was concerned,—as far as domestic relations were concerned,— to seek out their own line of conduct. If they are men of families, then it is to their shame that they engaged in any such enterprise as they went over into Knoxville for. They tell a story upon which all concur; and they are all friends, all confidants, or they would not attempt to engage with each other in such an undertaking as they undertook that night. It is not the way good men or good citizens conduct themselves.' What business had they over there, any of them ? The two claim they made this engagement with these two women. Another one tells Blute of it,—and he felt safe in trusting
After the delivery of this charge, the defendant’s counsel, among other requests to the court to charge, submitted the following: “That there is no evidence in this case that lawlessness and crime go unpunished in Corning, us stated by the district attorney in his address to the jury. Court. I will leave that with the jury to say.” Exception was taken by the counsel to •certain portions of the charge as delivered. While it is true that the precise remarks made to the jury by the district attorney are not given in the case, yet it was assumed upon the trial that in his address he had used the language attributed to him, because there was no denial thereof. But this extrinsic fact, whether lawlessness and crime went unpunished in Corning, was submitted to the jury. The counsel also asked the court to instruct the jury as follows: “ I ask your honor to charge that the fact that the defendants were indicted by the grand jury is no proof, presumptive or otherwise, of their guilt. Court. I have so charged.” The case, as printed, does not contain such instructions. But assuming that the learned court intended by its remark last given so to charge, we are still of the opinion that the effect of the charge, as a whole, was calculated to, and doubtless did, influence the minds of the jury in a manner prejudicial to the rights of the defendant. Moreover, there was an actual error in the charge respecting the motive of Bessie Thomas, the prosecutor. The jury were positively instructed that she had no motive in giving her testimony touching the time and place of the assault. But it appears to us, however, that there might have existed a bad motive on her part, and that was to shield herself from the effect of the testimony given by the witnesses as to the appointment which she and the young woman had made, and particularly had she the strongest motive to¡shieId herself from the embarrassment of being with a strange man on the steps of a schoolhouse, a
Judgment and conviction reversed, and new trial granted, and the case remitted to the court of sessions of Steuben county, with instructions to proceed therein. All concur.