181 A.D. 840 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
Lead Opinion
On July 25, 1916, Alexander Della Rosa, a native of Italy, was deliberately murdered upon Thompson street, in the city of New York. This defendant has been charged by a grand jury with having committed the crime, and has been convicted by a trial jury. His trial was fairly conducted by the learned trial judge, and to his charge to the jury the defendant’s counsel stated in open court' that he took no exception. By the verdict of the jury he was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and he has appealed to this court for a new trial, alleging that his guilt was not proven and that he was not tried according to law.
His first challenge to the judgment is that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. Upon careful review of the evidence, I am of opinion that the record contains abundant evidence to sustain the conviction. In the first place, he is charged with the commission of the crime by two eye-witnesses. One Menichino, sixty-five years of age, saw the defendant fire the fatal shots. One of the shots, without intention, hit this witness. He knew the man and identified him positively. His evidence is undoubtedly weakened to an extent by some apparent contradictions and by testimony that upon the night of the murder he was confronted by defendant in the presence of two policemen, and then said that he did not know who fired the shots. But this conversation was through an interpreter (not sworn) and when the man was dazed by his own wound, and his apparent hesitancy in answering the questions then asked indicate either that he did not understand or that he was for some reason unwilling at that time to charge defendant. At the trial, however, he was positive in his charge, and the jury might well have believed his evidence then given. The son of the deceased also swore that he saw defendant commit the murder. His testimony is also to an extent weakened by the fact that bis testimony differs in some particulars from some other testimony in the case. Whether these discrepancies arose from the use of the interpreter or arose from a confused recollection of the event, he swore positively at the trial to the defendant’s crime, and I am not prepared to say that the jury may not have believed that in the main facts his evidence was wholly reliable.. I
Again, the defendant was immediately before the shooting with his friend De Vito. He came out of the restaurant with him. The murder was committed directly in front of the restaurant. He swears that he turned one way and his friend the other. Almost immediately the shooting took place. De Vito saw the whole affair. He could have cleared his friend if innocent. Why was he not called? The defendant’s failure to.call his friend, who .could have cleared him if he had not fired the shots, was most suspicious, and the jury might have so considered it.
Again, the defendant’s conduct when arrested proved his guilt. He ran from the scene. When arrested and asked why, he said, “ I heard some shooting.” “ I am kind of nervous.” “ Wouldn’t you run if you heard shots? ” “ I
did not want to be mixed up in it.” Was this the conduct or excuse of an innocent man? But go a step further. When the second policeman came up and asked him why he shot the man he said, “ I didn’t shoot him; he is a friend of mine.” So it now appears that he did not simply “ hear some shooting.” He had seen his friend murdered in cold blood before his eyes and had run away because “ he did not want to be mixed up” in the matter. So much for his declarations. He swore upon the stand that although only a few feet from the place of the murder when he heard the first shot fired he did not look back but immediately ran away, and did not know who was shot, and yet, according to two witnesses, the two policemen, he said when asked why he shot him, that the murdered man “ is a friend of mine.” Notice, too, that this was to be his defense. When confronted by his dying victim at the drug store, he himself swears he said, “ He is my friend.” Is it to be wondered that the jury rejected his •story?
The dividing line between substantial error which calls for the reversal of a conviction and such error as may be disregarded, depends largely upon the conviction in the minds of the reviewing judges of the defendant’s guilt. If his guilt clearly appears, a failure to adhere strictly to legal rules will not vitiate a trial. It is the duty of courts to see that no innocent man shall suffer. No less imperative is the
What, then, are the errors claimed to be sufficient to reverse this judgment?
It is said that the court erred in not allowing the defendant’s counsel to ask the boy Luigi why he had not told the policemen at the time of the arrest that the defendant was the man who had shot his father. This question was proper, but in view of the age of the boy, of his shock in just having witnessed his father’s murder, of the natural fear in the minds of young children of the officers of the law, his failure to so state to the policemen becomes so immaterial as to be negligible.
It is said that the prosecuting attorney exceeded his rights, by stating in his opening, matter as proof of a motive in' defendant to commit the crime which he could not prove, and' also in cross-examination of defendant on side issues to an undue extent and on some issues which were entirely irrelevant to the issue of defendant’s guilt. As a criticism, the claim is good. It is most unfortunate for prosecuting officers to attempt to secure convictions by insisting upon procedure known by them to be irregular. Such a course should bé restrained and rebuked by the trial court. As a ground of substantial error, however, Ihe claim of appellant is not good. The object of the evidence was to show motive. The trial court instructed the jury that no motive for the crime had been proven, and in view of this charge, I think the acts of the prosecuting attorney were not so prejudicial as to justify a reversal of the judgment.
Again, it is claimed that substantial error was committed by the admission of evidence of the remark of a bystander that “ He ran over Houston street.” The policeman was after a man who was running away. That man was identified by that remark, and not the man who committed the murder. But the evidence was admissible as part of the res gestee. The crime and the immediate flight are necessarily linked together. The excitement attending a murder and the escape of the murderer are so intense that the remark was spontaneous or impulsive and unreflecting. It was done before there was
The judgment should be affirmed.
Clarke, P. J., and Scott, J., concurred; Page and Shearn, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree. The homicide occurred on July 25, 1916, at about seven-fifteen p. m. in front of a coffee house on the west side of Thompson street, No. 169, eighty feet north of the curb of West Houston street, which crosses Thompson street at right angles and runs generally east and west. Sullivan street runs parallel with Thompson street and is a short block to the west. Police Officer Harson, patroling the east side of Thompson street, about seventy-five feet south of West Houston street, heard several shots, ran north and, as the shots appeared to come from the west side of the street, crossed Thompson street diagonally on the run. In crossing the street there was a wagon going north on Thompson street which blocked his view. Harson crossed behind the wagon and came out on the west side of Thompson street about ten feet north of the northwest corner of West Houston and Thompson streets. At that point, as the sidewalk is seventeen feet wide from the curb to the corner grocery, Harson had a view up Thompson street and west on West Houston street. Someone in the crowd called out, “ He ran over Houston street.” Harson immediately turned, looked west on West Houston street and saw the defendant about thirty feet ahead of him, running in the street. Harson started in pursuit and when he had ran about twenty-five
The People, however, did not rest with this proof but produced two alleged eye-witnesses of the shooting. One was Luigi Della Rosa, the thirteen-year-old son of the murdered man. The boy testified that he saw his father in front of the coffee cafe talking with the old man Menichino when the defendant and one Genaro Aveto came out of the coffee house with two other men; that Aveto went back into the coffee house and, while standing in the doorway, made a sign to the defendant by winking his eye; and that thereupon the'
Wholly disregarding the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses that the boy was not in West Houston street at the time of the arrest but came up afterwards and inquired who had shot his father, and overlooking the contradiction between the boy’s testimony as to defendant’s running with both hqnds behind him and Officer Schachne’s testimony that
The People further called the old man MenicMno, who testified that wMle he was walking in the middle of Thompson street he felt sometMng strike Ms arm and turned around and saw the defendant with a pistol in Ms hand shooting and then saw the defendant run to the corner of West Houston street and up toward Sullivan street. As already noted, MenicMno, when questioned by the police officers in the drug store through an interpreter immediately after the shooting, failed to identify the defendant.
Of course the credibility of these two alleged eye-witnesses was for the jury, but, it seems quite plain, the case for the People, as above outlined, was not very strong. The defendant took the stand in his own behalf and denied any connection with the shooting and the only manner in wMch the People’s case was strengthened by the defense was the defendant’s resort m some instances to what appears to be falsehood and evasion.
The case has been thus outlined in substance, so far as the prosecution is concerned, not with the notion that it is the function of an appellate court to substitute its judgment upon the probabilities of the°case and the credibility of the witnesses for that of the jury, but because of the nature of the errors assigned by the defendant in Ms appeal. As was said by Werner, J., in People v. Hinksman (192 N. Y. 421, 428): “ Thus the most conspicuous fact in the case is that the evidence against the defendant, taken as a whole, was not strong, and yet we cannot say that it was so weak as not to support the verdict of the jury. We emphasize that circumstance because material and substantial errors in rulings can never be overlooked in cases where, as in the case at bar, the chain of evidence may be technically unbroken, and yet be so weak as to yield to the attack of very slight opposing facts or circumstances. Errors committed in such
It is earnestly contended on behalf of the appellant that he did not have a fair trial. In support of this, the appellant assigns as error the extent to which the assistant district attorney was permittéd to go in cross-examination of the defendant, which, coupled with an opening and damaging statement of motive, as to which there was an utter failure of proof, suggestive questions carrying harmful inferences which were not and could not be established as facts, and a persistent effort to convict the defendant out of his own mouth of a shameful offense in no manner related to the crime charged, was inevitably calculated to create an atmosphere unfavorable to the defendant and to render it easier for the jury to find the defendant guilty.
In opening the case to the jury the assistant district attorney said: “ It seems that De Simone for about eight years prior to that time, had been living with a woman named Rosa Vitosa, Rosa having come to him when she was about fifteen years old.” Here the defendant’s counsel objected with, “ The relations of the defendant with this woman, not his wife, some years ago,” were incompetent and improper. The court in overruling the objection said: “ I think it may be shown as bearing on any possible question of motive.” The assistant district attorney continued with his narrative, and a little further on said: “ It seems that through some information which the dead man, Della Rosa, obtained he went to the defendant De Simone with the statement that Rosa, his common-law wife, was untrue to him, that Rosa had gone with this De Vito, owner of the cafe, to a place in 27th Street, where she had been known, and where she had had illicit relations with De Yito,
“ Rosa, by the way, so far as we can discover, is not only the common-law wife, but is also the breadwinner of the. family.”
Defendant’s counsel interposed an objection that the statement was highly improper and that the prosecutor knew that he could not offer such evidence as part of the case in chief. The prosecutor responded; “ That is part of the motive, it
It was of course entirely proper to emphasize the fact, freely admitted by defendant as a part of his direct examination, that he was living with a woman to whom he was not married, but that was vastly different from the charge that the defendant was living with a prostitute, and the infinitely viler charge that he was living on the wages of prostitution. Without a shred of evidence to support either accusation, and knowing that unless the defendant admitted the charge no proof in support of it could be offered on the defendant’s trial for murder, the prosecutor not only injected this unwarranted and damaging accusation into his opening but returned to it again and again, suggesting it in so many ways and so persistently that the jury might well have wondered which charge he was being tried for. It was extremely improper to plant the poisonous seed of this infamous charge in the minds of the jury in an opening statement, but if that had been the end of the matter it might possibly be assumed that an intelligent jury would disregard the statement. When, however, it was persisted in throughout the case by a responsible public official, and being of such an extremely damaging nature, it cannot be safely assumed in a case where the evidence of defendant’s guilt is of the character previously outlined, that the jury disregarded the accusation and the suggestive questions as mere evidence of excessive zeal on the part of the prosecutor. The trial under such circumstances cannot be said to be fair. Important as is the swift and sure conviction of criminals, of transcending importance is it that every accused person should be afforded a genuinely fair trial. As the Court of Appeals said in People v. Wolf (183 N. Y. 464): “Why should court and counsel violate the law in order to enforce it? What a pernicious example is presented when such officers, intrusted with the most important duties, in attempting to punish the guilty,
Again, as said very recently by the Court of Appeals in People v. Richardson (222 N. Y. 103), dealing with an improper impeaching cross-examination of a witness for a defendant in a criminal trial, holding the evidence inadmissible and reversing the judgment of conviction: “ The reasons for the established rules, which I have stated, forbid the rule urged upon us by the argument of the district attorney. Those reasons are that the evidence which they bar would have a tendency to withdraw and mislead the attention of the jury from the real issue under inquiry and would subject the accused to charges unconnected with that issue and against which he had no reason to prepare. (People v. Thompson, 212 N. Y. 249.) In People v. Sharp (107 N. Y. 427, 461) Judge Danforth said: ‘ Such evidence is uniformly condemned as tending to draw away the minds of the jurors from the real point on which their verdict is sought and to excite prejudice and mislead them.’ ” The accusation and the repeated suggestion that the defendant was living on the proceeds of prostitution certainly had a “ tendency to withdraw and mislead the attention of the jury from the real issue under inquiry ” and “ subject the accused to charges unconnected with that issue and against which he had no reason to prepare.” (See, also, People V. Saitta, 170 App. Div. 665; People v. Freeman, 203 N. Y. 267; People v. Fielding, 158 id. 542.)
The defendant’s complaint of the over-zealous conduct of
Furthermore, the court erred in admitting hearsay evidence.
Over the objection of the defendant, Officer Harson was permitted to testify that when he reached the northwest corner of West Houston and Thompson streets, as he ran to the scene of the shooting, “ Somebody in the crowd hollered ' He ran over Houston street.’ I immediately turned and looked over Houston street, and I saw the defendant about thirty feet ahead of me running.” This remark of a bystander was received upon the theory that it was a part of the res gestee. The district attorney seeks to justify the ruling upon the ground that the bystander’s statement was receivable as an introductory matter, which explained why Harson acted as he did (citing People v. Taylor, 3 N. Y. Crim. 297, 299; affd., 101 N. Y. 608). The difficulty with this contention is that while the remark might have served such a purpose, it was fairly susceptible of an entirely different significance, fraught with very serious consequences to the defendant, namely, the identification of the defendant as the man who did the shooting. The obvious purpose of the remark was to direct the attention of the officer to the whereabouts of some person whom the officer was seeking. The remark followed' so closely upon the shooting that, coming from one in the immediate vicinity of the crime, the plain inference is that the bystander understood that the person whom the officer was seeking was the man who had fired the shots. Under the circumstances, when the bystander said to the policeman, “ He ran over Houston street,” the statement was equivalent to saying, “ The murderer ran over Houston street.” At any rate, the statement is fairly susceptible of that meaning, and might have been so interpreted, and, as it seems to me, would have been so interpreted by the jury. Therefore, the admissibility of the statement must be determined as though the bystander had in effect said, " The murderer ran over Houston street.” There are numerous cases in other jurisdictions dealing with the admissibility of declarations of third persons identifying the defendant as the person who committed the crime, but no case closely in point is found in this State. The cases are collated by Wigmore in his work on
The utterance must have been before there has been time to Contrive and misrepresent. * * * The utterance must
The judgment of conviction should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Page, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.