118 Misc. 825 | New York County Courts | 1914
This is a motion made by the defendant for an order directing the district attorney to serve the defendant with a bill of particulars setting forth the following information: “(a) The particular date when it is claimed that the alleged offense was committed, (b) The particular place, giving street and number and locality, where the alleged offense was claimed to have been committed, and if in a dwelling, in what part of the dwelling such offense is claimed to have been committed, (c) The day, month and year when the prosecutrix was born, also the city, town and state where she was born, or, if in a foreign country, the name of such country, province, city or town or other locality.” The demand of the defendant herein follows his indictment, which was handed down on or about February 11, 1914, of the crime of rape in its second degree, wherein it is charged that he committed the rape upon the prosecutrix, between the 6th and 13th days of October, 1913, in the county of Bronx. I have examined this question with considerable care and find that the general rule with reference to particularity in indictments seems to be that the indictment is required to contain such a specification of acts and descriptive circumstances as will on its face fix and determine the identity of the offense with a sufficiently specific degree to apprise the defendant of the charge he will be required to meet on the trial. In Abbott’s Trial Brief of Criminal Causes (2d ed. p. 86), under the heading of “ Bill of Particulars,” the following statement occurs: “ If the charge against the accused is so general or indefinite that he cannot properly prepare his defense, the court
Ordered accordingly.