141 N.Y.S. 855 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
On December 2, 1910, the defendant was indicted for the crime of carrying concealed weapons committed on November 21, 1910. The -first count charges that he knowingly and secretly . concealed upon his person á certain instrument and weapon of the kind known as a dangerous knife, with intent to use the same against some person or persons unknown. The second count is for the crime of possession of a concealed weapon in that he willfully and furtively possessed a certain instrument and weapon of the kind known as a dangerous knife with the intent then and there feloniously to use the same against some person or persons unknown. He was tried on December 9, 1912, convicted and sentenced, and now appeals.
The alleged weapon is a razor, with a nicked or serrated edge. The court charged the jury that “ the law is, that a person who * * * with intent to use the same, unlawfully against another, carries or possesses a dagger, dirk, dangerous knife, razor, stiletto, or any other instrument or deadly weapon, is guilty of a felony.” Of course, the jury had the right to assume that such was the law applicable- to the case. But the law as it read at the time of the alleged commission of the offense did not specify a razor, but only “ a dagger, dirk or dangerous.knife.” The words “unlawfully” and “razor, stiletto, or any other dangerous or deadly instrument or weapon ”
It is true that a razor is defined generally as knife. (See Stormonth’s, Webster’s, the Standard and the Century Dictionaries.) But “ knife ” is the generic term. In the earlier statute the Legislature did not employ the term “knife,” but the term “ dangerous knife,” and associated that term with dagger and dirk. A razor is further defined as a knife used for shaving, and so ordinarily its use is not akin to that of a dagger or a dirk. I think that the qualification “ dangerous ” does not mean a knife which could be put or rather perverted to a use dangerous to one attacked, but to that kind of knife which, like a dirk or dagger, is primarily designed as a weapon. And the subsequent specification of ‘c razor, ” in addition to the term “dangerous knife,” is indication that there was not the legislative intent that the expression “dangerous knife ” should include a razor. Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes says (§ 366): “Earlier Cognate Acts.— Where it is gathered from a later Act, that the Legislature attached a certain meaning to an earlier cognate one, this would be taken as a legislative declaration of its meaning there.”
The court, after an instruction as to the intent, further charged as follows: “Aside from determining that, you must determine, of course, whether it is a dangerous knife or a razor, or a dangerous deadly instrument or weapon.” Under this instruction the jury might determine that the instrument found on the defendant was a dangerous knife, or a razor, or a dangerous deadly instrument or weapon, and thus find an element of guilt. And it cannot be assumed that the jury determined that this instrument, though once a razor, was a' dangerous weapon or a dangerous knife, because under the instruction of the court such determination was not necessary for a conviction — it was sufficient that the instrument was a razor.
Aside from the physical appearance of the instrument itself there is no evidence that it had been diverted from its normal use and prepared for. use as a weapon, and there is no proof of the practice of transforming razors into weapons. There was
Thomas, Carr, Rich and Stapleton, JJ., concurred.
Judgment of conviction of the County Court of Kings county reversed, and new trial ordered pursuant to the provisions of section 527 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.