13 Wend. 592 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1835
By the Court,
The plea is clearly bad. The record of acquittal of Jane Hart, if evidence at. all for the defendant,was not conclusive ; it was at most but prima facie evidence, and liable to be rebutted. It could not, therefore, be pleaded in bar. The general rule is, that verdicts and records bind only parties and privies; that they are not admissible in evidence against a stranger, who was no.party to the former proceedings, who had no opportunity to examine witnesses or to appeal against the judgment. They must also be mutual. No person can use a verdict or judgment, for his advantage, against whom it could not. have been evidence, had it gone the other way, 1 Phil. Ev. 245, 247, 250; and if it would have been only prima facie evidence,if against him it cannot be conclusive when in his favor. Rep. temp. Holt, 134Bull.N. P. 233. Gilb. Ev. 232 ; Peake’s Ev.38. Dutchess of Kingston’s case,11 State Trials, 198. Case v. Reeve and others,14 Johns. R.79. 4 Cowen, 458. There are many exceptions to this general rule, relating however principally to matters of public right, such as a right to toll, a customary right of common, or a public right of way, &c. 1 Phil. Ex. 253.1 East, 357. 5 T. R. 413.1 East, 355. Peake’s N. P. C. 219, 156. 1 Dougl. 222. On such questions, a verdict between A. and B. is evidence of the point directly involved in it, and determined by it, in an action between other parties, where the same precise point is the matter in issue ; but in such a case the verdict and judgment are not conclusive, but mere matter of evidence. Biddulph v. Ather, 2 Wils. 23,4. Cowper, 111.
Upon an indictment against an an accessary,a record of conviction for felony against the principal is admissible evidence
But I am inclined to think that,under the circumstances of this case, the acquittal was not competent evidence at all for the defendant. The third count of the indictment alleges that the defendant exacted and received $25 as a reward for withholding evidence of the offence so committed by the said Jane Hart,and that he did and hithertoffiath witheld such evidence. For the purposes of this case,the truth of this allegation is admitted. The defendant then seeks to avail himself of an acquittal which was or may have been produced by his own criminal act,in order to protect himself against a criminal prosecution for such offence. It faffs within the principle,that
Judgment affirmed.