14 N.Y.S. 740 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The appellants were jointly indicted with one George W. Drown, composing the firm of Drown Bros. & Co., for having feloniously received certain brass car journals stolen from the Syracuse, Ontario & New York Railroad Company. The jury acquitted George W. Drown, but found the other two defendants guilty. The defendants have for several years been doing business in the city of Rochester as dealers in metals and junk. It is claimed on behalf of the people that Clarence Turner and William Campbell, ostensibly peddlers, but in reality thieves, and the former an inmate of state’s prison at the time of the trial, undertook to find, with the defendants, a market for the brass fittings and steel railroad journals which they intended to steal either from the above-mentioned railroad company or from some other. Turner testified that he had a talk with Newton Drown before the theft in question, in which he informed him of this felonious purpose. He swears that Drown told him there had been trouble about railroad brass, and that he did not want to handle any brass which was taken near Rochester; whereupon Turner assured him that he would not bother anything close to Rochester. He further testified that Newton Drown told him not to put too much in a barrel. Turner and Campbell reached Port Byron on the 7th day of January, 1887. They then walked to Weedsport, where they jacked up five cars, and took out brass journals, and broke into the car inspector’s building, and stole 800 pounds more of nevv brass journals. Turner testified that the next day these brass journals were barreled up, taken to Jordan on the New York Central Railroad, and shipped to Drown Bros. & Co., at Rochester, as old rubber, and as coming from Charles Thomas. It is further testified by Turner that on the night of the 9th, or early, in the morning of the 10th day of January, 1889, he and Campbell jacked up the axles of six cars of the Syracuse, Ontario & New York Railroad Company, and stole about 400 pounds of brass journals. These were also, he says, put in a barrel, headed up, and taken by Turner and Campbell to the New York Central station at De Witt, and by them shipped to Drown Bros. & Co., at Rochester, as T-lead, and as coming from George Smith. On or about the 18th of January, 1889, the defendant Newton Drown received these two packages, one marked “T-Lead,” and the other “Old Rubber,” and duly receipted for the same.
The defendants claim that the story told by Turner and the witness Boas, also a felon, is entirely untrue; that they made no arrangements with Turner and Campbell, or either of them, for the shipment of railroad brasses or other railroad property, but that they received these-two consignments believing that the one contained old rubber and the other T-lead. They deny emphatically i hat there were, in the barrels received by them, any brasses whatever. . There
Under the circumstances, good character was an element in the case important to the defendants, environed as they were by the testimony of the confessed thieves, with scarcely a circumstance pointing to guilt except as it had been created by one or another of those felons. The accused had a right to an instruction to the jury by the court that their good character afforded a presumption against the charge made against them. The court, in Cancemi v. People, 16 N. Y. 506, say: “This presumption arises from the improbability, as a general rule, that a person who has uniformly pursued an honest and upright course of conduct will depart from it, and do an act so inconsistent with it. * * * But in cases when the other evidence is nearly balanced, but slightly preponderating against the defendant, the presumption from proof of good character is entitled to great weight, and will often be sufficient to turn the scale, and produce an acquittal. ” The language of the court last above given is such as to lead to the conclusion that the request to charge as hereinbefore stated was correct, and that the exception to the refusal of the court so to charge was an error. See, also, to the same effect, the' case of Remsen v. People, 43 N. Y. 8. The learned judge also, after pointing out to the jury the presumption of innocence of parties accused of crime, said: “And before they can be called upon either to defend themselves or to deny the fact of their guilt, they must be proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; that is to say, in the first instance, it is sufficient for the people to prové such a case as that, without any explanation on the part of the defendant, there would be no doubt left in the minds of the jury as to his guilt; but when the whole evidence is in, then the burden is so far shifted that, from all the evidence that the people and the defendants give, there shall be left no doubt as to the guilt or innocence of the accused.” Again, he says, seven pages thereafter: “So, gentlemen, you will carefully consider all the facts and all the circumstances and all the testimony given here on behalf of the people, to the end that you may ascertain whether, taken as a whole, it completes such a chain of evidence that there is no reasonable doubt in your mind as to the guilt or innocence of these defendants.” If by these two portions of the charge, occurring so widely separated, the learned judge intended to instruct the jury that the burden of proof was, in a criminal trial, ever shifted from the people and thrown upon the defendant, or that, if the jury had any reasonable doubt of the innocence of the accused upon the whole evidence in the case, they could render a verdict of gviilty, no one would be swifter than himself to correct any such impression, and to restore the case as he bad elsewhere clearly stated it,—that it was the people alone, and not the accused, who must maintain their contention beyond a reasonable doubt. Judgment and conviction appealed from should be reversed, and new trial granted.
Dwight, P. J., concurs in result, on the ground of error of the court in the charge to the jury.