94 N.Y.S. 225 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The defendant was indicted for an attempt to commit robbery in the first degree. By sections 224 and 228 of the Penal Code that crime is defined to be the unlawful taking of personal property from the person, or in the presence of another against his will, by means of force or violence, or fear of injury, by a person being armed with a dangerous weapon, or being aided by an accomplice actually present, or when the offender inflicts grievous bodily harm or injury upon the person from whose possession, or in whose presence, the property is taken. Section 34 of the Penal Code provides that “ an act done with intent to commit a crime, and tending but failing to effect its commission, is an attempt to commit that crime.” Section 29 of the Penal Code provides that “ a person concerned in the commission of a crime, whether he directly commits the act constituting the offense or aids and abets in its commission, and whether present or absent, and a person who directly or indirectly counsels, commands, induces or procures another to commit a crime, is a principal.”
The learned counsel for the appellant relies upon but one exception taken upon the trial. That is a refusal to charge a request which the learned counsel himself pronounces unintelligible. He then calls attention to an objection to a question asked the defendant upon cross-examination ; hut to the ruling upon that objection no exception was taken. An exception would have been quite unavailing if it had been taken, as overruling such an objection to a question asked the defendant upon cross-examination was not error. The learned counsel for the defendant, however, earnestly insists that the evidence was not sufficient to justify a conviction,
To determine this question a careful examination of the whole record was required, and I have carefully considered it all, with the result that I am quite satisfied that the story told by the witnesses for the People was substantially true and that the defendant’s explanation of the conceded facts is most improbable. It is quite true that ranch evidence was admitted which would probably have been excluded if objection had been made by the defendant. Just why it was not objected to is not apparent; but, it having been admitted without objection, I do not think we should be justified in reversing the judgment, unless it appeared that without that testimony there would have been a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt; and the more I have studied this testimony the more I am satisfied that such a doubt does not exist.
It is quite unnecessary to make a detailed statement of the facts appearing in this record and which have led me to this conclusion, and I shall not attempt it. The learned counsel for the appellant, however, insists that the defendant is not guilty of any crime, because his accomplices in the perpetration of the robbery were acting under instructions from the district attorney’s office, and that as under the conditions that existed no mime could have been committed, the defendant could not have been guilty of an attempt to commit a crime. To consider this question, a brief statement of the story told by the witnesses for the prosecution will suffice. The defendant was employed in a detective agency in the city of New York and some time prior to October, 1903, one Nelson had been in the habit of frequenting that office in the hope of obtaining a position there. Nelson was very poor and was extremely anxious to obtain some position, which was known to the defendant. Between the 21st and 23d of October, 1903, the defendant asked Nelson if he would take a chance, to which Nelson said that he would take a chance at almost anything, and the defendant on several successive days asked him the same question. On the twenty-eighth day of October the defendant explained to Nelson what this chance was. He said: “My girl works down in 117 & 119 Mercer street, and she
It is upon this evidence that the defendant was convicted of an attempt at robbery in the first degree. If this story is true ■—■ and the jury were justified in believing it — I think there is no doubt that the defendant was guilty of the crime charged. Lewis, who was to be robbed, was where he was expected to be at the time the attempt was to be made. He had upon his person the property of which the defendant expected to despoil him. The defendant had proposed to Nelson to rob him; had furnished Nelson with a weapon with which he was to be rendered unconscious while Nelson robbed him; had engaged with Nelson’s confederate to assist in the attempt, and the defendant was to receive from them the proceeds of the robbery. There was nothing to prevent the scheme from being carried out, and Lewis seriously, if not fatally, injured and then robbed, except the fact that unknown to the defendant the public authorities had been apprised of his purpose
In People v. Moran (123 H. Y. 254) the defendant was indicted for an attempt to commit the crime of grand larceny in the second degree by attempting to steal, from the person of an unknown woman in the daytime, in the city and county of Hew York, certain goods, chattels and personal property of the value of ten dollars. The evidence showed that the defendant, accompanied by two associates, was passing through a crowd of people in a market in the city of Hew York, and was seen to thrust his hand into the pocket of a woman, and to withdraw it therefrom empty. The defendant was seen by a police officer and arrested, but the woman was lost in the crowd and not discovered; and the only question was whether upon this evidence the defendant was guilty of an attempt to commit the crime of grand larceny within section 34 of the Penal Code. It was held that the defendant was properly convicted. Chief Judge Huger, delivering the opinion of the court, •there says: “ The language of the statute seems to us too plain to admit of doubt, and was intended to reach cases where an intent to commit a crime and an effort to perpetrate it, although ineffectual, coexisted. Whenever the animo fur andi exists, followed by acts i apparently affording a prospect of success, and tending to render -i the commission of the crime effectual, the accused brings himself i within the letter and intent of the statute. To constitute the crime j charged there must be a person from whom the property may be
The other question is wdiether the defendant did an act with the intent to commit the crime and tending but failing to effect its commission. He procured and gave to Nelson the weapon which was to be used, and this weapon was certainly a dangerous weapon, within section 228 of the Penal Code. The case of People v. Bush (4 Hill, 133) was an indictment for an attempt to commit arson. It was proved that the defendant requested one Kinney to set fire to Sheldon’s barn, offering him a reward ; that afterwards, understanding and believing that Kinney *ould set fire to the barn, the defendant gave him a match for that purpose, not meaning to be present himself at the doing of the act. It ajipeared that Kinney never intended to commit the crime. The defendant was convicted, and, upon appeal, that conviction was affirmed. It was held* that the course taken to commit the arson by the hand of Kinney was the same thing in legal effect as if Bush had intended to set the fire personally, and had taken steps preparatory to that end; that an attempt maybe immediate, but it very commonly means a remote effort, or indirect measure taken with intent to effect an object; that the solicitation was followed by furnishing the instrument of mischief (See, also, McDermott v. People, 5 Park. Cr. Rep. 102; Mackesey v. People, 6 id. 116), and these cases have been cited with approval in People v. Moran (supra). In People v. Gardner (144 N. Y. 124) the defendant was indicted for an attempt to commit extortion from one Amos, who was a keeper of a house of prostitution. At the time Amos was acting under instructions of the police, trying to induce the defendant to receive money from her under such circumstances as would render him guilty of a crime and enable the police to arrest and convict him. The court below held that as this woman paid the money voluntarily, and -was not
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed.
O’Brien, McLaughlin and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.