215 A.D. 270 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
The record and the points submitted on this appeal do not comply with the Rules of Practice and if this appeal were from a judgment in a civil action we would be obliged to return the papers to counsel for correction. The statements of defendants before sentence (Code Grim. Proc. § 485-a) are not printed. It is stated in the points of both counsel that a certificate of reasonable doubt was granted, but the certificate is not printed in the points nor is it stated whether an opinion was filed by the justice who granted the certificate with a copy of such opinion, as required by rule 19 of this department. The orders appealed from are not printed in the record.
The indictment contains four counts in which defendants are charged with the commission of crime at Poughkeepsie on April 22, 1923. The first count charges them with the crime of robbery in the first degree (Penal Law, § 2124) with a dangerous weapon. The second count with the same crime with force and violence. The third count charges them with the crime of grand larceny "in the first degree (Penal Law, § 1294), at the same time and place. The fourth count charges them with the crime of criminally receiving stolen property in the first degree (Penal Law, § 1308), at the time and place aforesaid. The record shows that they were indicted on June 5, 1923, that they were brought to trial on February 14, 1924, in the County Court of Dutchess county, that the trial proceeded on February 14 and 15, 1924, and that the jury found the defendants guilty as charged. Sentence was postponed several times and they were finally sentenced on March 4, 1924. The notice of appeal is dated March 6, 1924. It is stated in the points that a certificate of reasonable doubt was granted on April
The two complaining witnesses testified on the trial that about half-past ten o’clock on Sunday night, April 22, 1923, three men armed with revolvers entered the store of one of the said witnesses in Poughkeepsie, assaulted the witnesses, and by force and arms and threats took from one of them sixty dollars in bills and from the other a watch chain. At the trial the complaining witnesses identified the two defendants as two of the men who robbed them. The three robbers backed out of the store with their revolvers pointed at the witnesses, and it was the claim of the prosecution that they went away in a waiting automobile. The complaining witnesses notified the police by telephone, and about twelve o’clock the same night the two defendants were arrested by the State Police at Fishkill while traveling south in an automobile on the Albany Post Road. With the two defendants in the automobile were two other men. The four men were brought back to Poughkeepsie and turned over to the city police. As already stated, the complaining witnesses testified that the defendants were two of the three men who entered their store and robbed them.
But the prosecution was not satisfied with that evidence, and in answer to questions asked by the district attorney, one witness related his conversation with the Poughkeepsie police. He said he described the men to the police over the telephone and told them that his assailants had gone south towards Wappingers Falls, Fishkill and New York, although there was nothing in his direct story to show that he knew where they went. And the witness was questioned further by the district attorney and testified that later the same night or about two o’clock the next morning, he went to the police station in Poughkeepsie and saw the three men in the custody of the police. He was asked how he identified the men in the police station, and he related that “ there was a group of people in the station beside these four men standing, two were present and the other in jail and the other one that was in the car, the driver of the car; at first I sized them up for á few seconds to be sure before I commit myself and as soon as I ascertained the fact that they were the men, I picked them out; first one and the second one was the driver, I excluded him and the third one was again one of the -men and the other fellow, before I said he was the one, I had a special notice of his gold crown and I took notice when he hit my brother, he grinned and he showed that, and to be more sure of that, I opened his mouth for more verification, and I said he is the man that struck my brother, and
This evidence was introduced by the district attorney without objection to its competency by the learned counsel for the defendants other than that above set forth, and it is also true that on cross-examination the counsel for defendants asked the witness to state in detail what description of his assailants he gave to the police. He also cross-examined the witness as to the happenings at the police station and as to the details of a subsequent identification when the defendants were arraigned in the City Court concerning which the district attorney had asked no questions. The same procedure was followed on the examination of the second witness for the prosecution. Having positively identified the two defendants as two of the men who entered the store and robbed him — this second witness testified that after the three men left the store he watched them and saw them get into an automobile which started “ straight down Lincoln avenue until I didn’t see them.” The district attorney also interrogated this second witness, without objection by the defendants, as to the identification of the defendants at the police station by his brother, the complainant,- and by himself, and again the witness was cross-examined as to the identification at the police station and at the City Court: And on redirect the district attorney asked him if there was any doubt in his mind as to the identification of the defendants in the police station and the witness answered, “ No doubt, I am positive.” The police officer who apprehended the defendants, called as a witness for the prosecution, was asked by the district attorney
The Court of Appeals has decided that wMle there is nothing' wrong in an identification at the police station for the preliminary purpose of determimng whether a defendant should be held, “ It was quite another thing, however, to prove de novo, on the trial-under review, that the witnesses who here testified to the defendant’s identity had given similar testimony in the police station.. This was, in effect, but a corroboration of these witnesses by their own previous declarations or acts. * * * It was notMng more nor less than a bolstering of the present testimony of these witnesses by showing that on a prior occasion they said or did the same tMng. Stated thus broadly, this was obviously a self-serving performance of no probative value, and yet strongly calculated to influence a jury of laymen not versed in the rules of evidence.” (People v. Jung Hing, 212 N. Y. 393. To the same effect People v. Seppi, 221 N. Y. 62; People v. Marendi, 213 id. 600; People v. De Marlini, Id. 203.)
The learned district attorney in discussing the appellants’ argument that tMs evidence was improper and prejudicial, says in his points: “ Whether or not error was committed in admitting evidence as to the identification by the complainant and Ms brother of the defendants in the police station and the City Court, rests largely upon whether or not the rule set forth in the case of People v. Jung Hing (212 N. Y. 393), and other cases following it, is the established law in this State upon tMs question, for if such be the. case, there can be no question but that error was committed both by the introduction of this evidence and in the subsequent charge; to the jury by the court.”
He says that the Jung Hing case was a capital case and that; in such cases the courts are extremely solicitous to see that the rights of convicted defendants are protected, and that while the-same rule has been followed in cases other than capital cases; (People v. Visiconti, 182 App. Div. 894; People v. Cunneen, 184 id. 575; People v. Frasco, 187 id. 299; People v. Ragazinsky, 195 id. 743; People v. Russell, 197 id. 239), they were all cases where
It is impossible to read this charge, otherwise not subject to criticism, without being impressed with the fact that the subsequent identification of these two defendants by the two witnesses was stressed so as to make it, as the judge said, the turning point of the case. It is provided that after hearing the appeal the court must give judgment without regard to technical errors or defects or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties. (Code Crim. Proc. § 542.) In the case at bar the attention of the learned county judge was not called to the incompetency of the evidence by proper objection on behalf of the defendants and no exception was taken to its admission. But we are not relieved from the necessity of considering the argument of the appellants now presented to us by the absence of objection or exception. (People v. Kathan, 136 App. Div. 303, 311.) We express no opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendants. They called witnesses in support of their alibi and also character witnesses. The jury found them guilty as charged in the indictment. There is nothing to show that either of the defendants has ever been previously convicted of crime. On their statements made prior to sentence (omitted from the printed record but which have been submitted to the court) each of the defendants makes oath that he has never been previously convicted of crime. We cannot say how far this incompetent evidence influenced the jury in reaching their, verdict of guilty, resulting in the sentence of the defendants to imprisonment for at least six years in the State prison. It was no casual incident in the trial; it was spread out before the jury, accentuated in the cross-examination, and referred to by the learned judge in the charge. As was said in the Jung Hing Case (supra), it was “ strongly calculated to influence a jury of laymen not versed in the rules of evidence.”
The judgment of conviction of the County Court of Dutchess county should be reversed upon the law, and a new trial ordered. The judgment being reversed, we do not pass upon the separate appeals from the order denying a motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence, and from the order denying a motion for a new trial because of alleged errors committed during the triaL
Rich, Jay cox, Manning and Young, JJ., concur.