85 N.Y.S. 627 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The People showed and the defendant, a witness in his own behalf, admitted that on the 2d day of April, 1902, shortly after one o’clock in the afternoon, the defendant shot and killed Patrick J. Malone with a pistol in front of the Army Building at the corner of Moore and Pearl streets, in the city of Hew York. The defendant claimed that he did the shooting in self-defense. He was employed by the Protestant Episcopal Church Missionary Society as a “ runner ” to solicit boarders and lodgers for the Hew Seamen’s Home, 52 Market street, Hew York city. The decedent was employed as a runner by M. H. Murphy, who kept a sailors’ boarding house. There was evidence tending to show an unfriendly feeling on the part of proprietors of sailors’ boarding houses and their runners toward the Hew Seamen’s Home and its employees engaged in soliciting patronage for it. The defendant testified that he had been in the employ of the missionary society for about a month; that on several occasions he had met the decedent and other runners for and some proprietors of sailors’ boarding houses; that they had frequently threatened to “ blow the Missionary Society’s Home to hell, and the employees connected with it,” and had threatened" “to do me up” on several occasions; that at about ten o’clock on the morning of the homicide he met the decedent and three others who
We are of opinion that the defendant was entitled to have the-billy received in evidence and that the jury should have been instructed that if they found that' it was the identical club that was in the possession of the decedent, as they might well have found upon the evidence, that then they could not disregard it and that it became important evidence in connection with defendant’s testimony that he felt it in decedent’s pocket and that decedent was endeavoring to get hold of it with the apparent object of using it upon the defendant, and that, fearing that it was a revolver or deadly weapon of some kind and that his life was in peril, he.shot the decedent in self-defense. According to the witnesses for the People the defendant was the aggressor and first assaulted decedent with his fist, and then, without their clinching and with nothing to prevent defendant’s firing from in front, he closed in on decedent and fired from behind the latter’s head, the ball entering about an inch back of the left ear and passing forward and upward, lodging near the skull on a line -with the right ear. As has been seen, the rights of the defendant were not protected by any reference in the charge either to this billy or to the club that was in decedent’s pocket if it be not the same. It is manifest from the questions asked by the jury that they regarded it as of considerable importance ; and it is also evident, I think, that they believed, and the evidence justified a finding, that it was the identical club or billy that was in the possession of the decedent. The refusal of the court to admit it in evidence generally, and the failure of the court to instruct them properly upon its bearing as evidence, could scarcely fail in these circumstances to prejudice the defendant.
The court was also requested to instruct the jury that “ they, may take into consideration the fact that the defendant remained at the scene of the homicide and did not run away.” This was a significant fact, and the jury, had their attention been drawn to it, might have considered that it tended to show that the shooting was done
Defendant showed previous good character by the testimony of several reputable witnesses. Counsel for the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury “ that the character of the accused may be such as to create a doubt in the minds of the jury and lead them to believe, in view of the improbability of a person of such character being guilty, that the other evidence is false.” This was declined and defendant excepted. As has been seen, there was a . conflict of evidence with reference to the circumstances under which the shooting occurred. The evidence on the part of the People tended to show not only that the defendant was the aggressor, but also that the circumstances under which he provoked the quarrel indicated that he had armed himself, not for the purpose of using the weapons in self-defense, but for the purpose of murdering decedent. This evidence, however, was not of a conclusive character. In the main, it depended upon the credibility of the testimony of friends of decedent and rivals of the defendant. In these circumstances, he was entitled to have the jury fully and clearly instructed as to the effect that might be given to the evidence of previous good character. In People v. Elliott (163 N. Y. 14) the Court of Appeals reversed a conviction.of rape for a failure to charge a request in the identical language of the request refused in the case at bar. It follows that the proposition contained in the request is sound. It contains one element, at least, that was not covered by the charge. The main charge as to the effect of character evidence was clearly insufficient. The court said: “ Evidence as to character has been given here — evidence as to the bad reputation of the deceased for peace and quiet has been given to you, and evidence of his good reputation for peace and quiet has been given to you. Evidence of the good reputation of the defendant for peace and quiet has been given, and evidence of his bad reputation for peace and quiet has been given. You are the judges of the value of this testimony. You can attach to it whatever importance you think proper. You may take the
The court in the main charge had failed to instruct the jury upon the law relating to the different degrees of manslaughter. The jury were subsequently brought báck into court and instructed on this subject, and thereupon the court further charged on the question of character evidence,. as follows: “ While I have charged you on the question of character in, as I thought, an exhausted way, sufficient for this case, I will now recall to your attention that question. You have heard the testimony for and against the character of this defendant. You can take it all into consideration. You can give to the whole testimony, or to any part of it, such credence ás yon think proper. The whole question is one for your consideration. You may take into consideration all the facts and circumstances in the case. G-ood character of itself may sometimes create a reason-, able doubt where otherwise it would not exist; but whether it does here is a question for you to determine. The whole question of fact is for your determination.”
It will be observed that in these instructions the court did not inform the jury that the evidence of good character might be considered in determining the truthfulness of the testimony indicating the defendant’s guilt. That is its only importance, and yet the average juryman might not so understand it. Courts have had some difficulty in comprehending and applying character evidence in these cases with the result that many convictions have been reversed. The jury have not the pardoning power nor do they impose the sentence. The ordinary layman, if he reflected, would know that; but he might think, as many judges have thought, that evidence of good character was only valuable in doubtful'cases, and he might not understand that he was at liberty to disbelieve the testimony of the People’s witnesses on account of the fact that the defendant’s character and reputation were such that it was improbable that he would commit the crime charged. If the jury had been so instructed they would have been better able to understand the value of the evidence of previous good character. The Court of Appeals in Remsen v. People (43 N. Y. 8) said: “ There is no case
It was, we think, error to refuse this request. The errors already pointed out require that" the defendant should have a new trial. . It is, therefore, unnecessary to decide whether any of the other alleged errors urged upon the appeal, or the conduct of the court, of which the defendant complains, was so prejudicial to' his right as to require a reversal.
The judgment and order, should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted.