87 A.D. 474 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The appellant was convicted of the crime of murder in the second ■degree and was. sentenced to State prison for the term of his natural life. He was tried in the Court of General Sessions of the Peace for the county of Hew York, the recorder presiding, upon an indictment charging him with murder in the first degree. Intending to appeal from the judgment of conviction, his attorney prepared and served upon the district attorney of the county of Hew York a proposed case on appeal, to which amendments were served by the district attorney. The case and amendments were presented to the recorder for settlement and he allowed such amendments. Thereupon the appellant’s attorney served a notice of motion for a .resettlement of the case. That motion was entertained, by the recorder, who, after deliberation, denied it, and from the order of ■denial this appeal is taken.
In the proposed case, as originally prepared and served by the appellant’s attorney, appeared a ruling of the court upon a question .asked of certain talesmen, namely, whether if it appeared as a fact ■during the tibial that the defendant had a pistol in his possession at the time the homicide was committed, that fact of itself would prejudice them against the defendant. It was proven and not ■denied that the killing which was the subject of the indictment was
In the proposed case, as submitted, much- of the fecord consists of the examination of- witnesses as it was recorded by question and answer. The amendments required that the testimony be reduced to narrative form and the recorder held that the record should be made up in that form. It is now argued by the appellant that to-have the case presented properly on appeal, it should stand in the form in which it was originally prepared because many of the questions were asked by the court and not by counsel. In the case as proposed, it is "made to appear that the court asked a great many questions on the examination of the prisoner which related to the-procurement by him of a pistol and the purpose with which he bought it, as indicating deliberation and preparation to commit the homicide." As the case was prepared, a long series of questions upon this subject is attributed to the court, whereas, according to-the contention of the district attorney and the certification of the recorder, he asked but one question of that series. As that is a. matter within the personal knowledge of the recorder, his ruling is-conclusive.
There were many other questions asked by the recorder, "and the-appellant insists that they and the answers to them should appear in the record by a literal transcription from the stenographer’s minutes and not in the narrative form; that the questions as put-affected the minds of the jury adversely to the prisoner. Whether,,
The counsel for the prisoner took certain exceptions to the charge of the recorder. They were taken and inserted in the record in their proper places, as the appellant’s attorney admits. In preparing his case, he restated them in another portion of the record and it was entirely within the province of the recorder to strike the reiteration from the record.
The appellant also claims that there should appear in the record certain remarks made by the recorder in imposing Sentence. Those remarks had nothing whatever to do with the trial and form no part of the record which should come to this court.
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed.