36 N.Y.S. 493 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The defendant was charged with stealing §275 from one Frederick Ohallacomb. It appeared upon the trial that the complainant answered an advertisement which appeared in the New York World, stating that he was looking for a place of business to go in of the kind referred to in the advertisement, and that he had §300 which he was willing to put up with an honest man. On the 20th of February the defendant called upon the complainant at his house in Elizabethport, N. J., introducing himself as the writer of the advertisement, and explaining that he had called in answer to the complainant’s letter. The defendant told the complainant that he was in the produce business, and that he was making from §25 to §50 a week, and that he wanted an honest man for a partner, who would put up §300; that he wanted a working man, who was not afraid of work. After talking the matter over, and learning that the complainant had the necessary amount in the bank, it was arranged that the complainant should meet the defendant at the foot of Liberty street the following morning at half past 9 o’clock, and the defendant told complainant to have his bank book with him, in case they should find a place suited to them, so that they would have the necessary funds to go on with the business. They met as agreed, and at the defendant’s suggestion they went to look at stores. After looking at places in the neighborhood of G-ansevoort Market, which the de
The principal ground of the appeal seems to be that the evidence did not justify the conviction of the defendant of larceny at common law, although he might have been convicted of obtaining money by false pretenses, which, under our statute, has been made larceny, but which requires a special count in order to sustain a conviction. It has been held, and the rule undoubtedly obtains, that if the owner of property, by trick or device, has been induced to part with the possession thereof, intending to transfer an interest therein or the title thereto, then a criminal appropriation of such property will not be a common-law larceny, but the crime of obtaining goods by false pretenses. People v. Dumar, 106 N. Y. 502, 13 N. E. 325. It is also equally well settled that to constitute a common-law larceny it is not necessary that the prop
It is further urged that error was committed in admitting evidence in regard to similar frauds which had been perpetrated upon other persons whom he had succeeded in making his victims. This evidence seems to have been entirely competent upon the question of intent, which was a necessary ingredient of the crime with which he had been charged.
Various criticisms are also passed upon the charge of the learned judge who presided at the trial, most of which were not brought to the attention of the court in any respect at the trial. It is undoubtedly true that the court, in the interests of justice, even where no exception is taken, has the right to reverse for errors in the conduct of the trial. But the court will not encourage the practice of counsel not calling the attention of the trial court to alleged errors committed during the progress of the trial when
The judgment should be affirmed.