98 N.Y.S. 713 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1906
The defendant stands convicted, by the verdict of a jury, of the crime or crimes defined by subdivisions 1, 3, and 6, of section 168 of the Penal Code, and of section 148 of the Penal Code; and he asks for a certificate of reasonable doubt as to the lawfulness of his conviction, under the provisions of section 527 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The purpose of this certificate is to stay the execution of the judgment of conviction, pending an appeal, where it shall be made to appear to a Justice of the Supreme Court that “ there is reasonable doubt whether the judgment should stand, hut not otherwise; ” arid it is clearly the policy of the state to save convicted persons from incarceration, so long as there is any such reasonable doubt of the lawfulness of their conviction. Our system of jurisprudence contemplates, not only a trial of the accused by a jury of his peers, after an indictment by a grand jury, but a fair and impartial trial. People v. McLaughlin, 150 N. Y. 365, 379; People v. Mull, 167 id. 247, 253, and authority there cited. It demands that, before any man shall be deprived of his liberty, he shall have had a trial by jury, and that the trial shall be free from errors prejudicial to the rights of the defendant; and to this end the provision of the Code of Criminal Procedure permits a Justice of the Supreme Court, in the exercise of a judicial discretion, to postpone the execution of judgment while questions of fact or law, going to the merits of
Viewed from this standpoint, and without assuming to say that the questions raised are such as to compel reversal on the part of an appellate court, I am of the opinion that there are at least two questions of law which are deserving of consideration, and that they present that reasonable doubt which the statute contemplates. Under the provisions of section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, a “ conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” The principal question in dispute upon the trial was whether the testimony of Dodge, a confessed perjurer and accomplice, if the crime charged was in fact committed, was corroborated by “ such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” Without going into an analysis of the evidence, or undertaking to pass upon that question, it seems to me that the learned justice presiding at the trial came dangerously ne&r to usurping one of the prerogatives of the jury, when in his charge he declared: “ Mow, as a matter
Practically the charge directed the jury that, if they believed the testimony produced on the part of the People, and alleged to be in corroboration of Dodge, they were to find that there was such corroboration, or at least that they might find such corroboration; thus, in effect, limiting the province of the jury to determining, not the weight and sufficiency of the corroboration, but the truth of the testimony offered in that behalf. In considering a somewhat similar charge, the Court of Appeals say: “ Their attention is thus directed to the evidence of inculpation merely; its weight is stated to them as sufficient in law to sustain a conviction for the graver offense; so that the question of fact to which their minds are turned relates to the credibility of certain witnesses, and not to the weight or measure of their testimony, or the existence of the intent. How far that testimony was modified or neutralized by that produced by the defendant, or what inferences should be drawn from any of it, is virtually excluded from their inquiry. If 'you believe certain witnesses, say the court, the verdict follows. This was overstepping the province of the judge. * * * It is true the question was not taken absolutely from the jury by the court; this was beyond its power (People v. Howell, 5 Hun, 620; affirmed, 69 N. Y. 607); but the opinion of the judge, considered as an opinion on the weight of evidence, was stated much stronger that it ought to have been, and was calculated to make an erroneous impression upon the minds of the jurors, and with that impression, carrying into the jury room the weight of the opinion, it cannot be said that the prisoner had, at the outset of their deliberations, an even chance that the conclusion of the jury would be unbiased.”
Where is the distinction in principle between these eases 1 To charge, as a matter of law, that there was evidence to corroborate Dodge, leaving the jury to determine merely the
It seems to me that there is a reasonable doubt whether the learned trial justice did not take from the jury a very essential question of fact, to the substantial prejudice of the rights of the defendant; and I do not think the error, if it be error, was corrected by the charge as finally made to the jury. The defendant was entitled to have the law clearly and concisely stated.
I am equally persuaded that the defendant has a right to a review of the ruling of the learned court upon the question of the witnesses Kaffenburgh and Cohen. These witnesses were called by the People and refused to answer certain questions on the ground that they would tend to incriminate them. They were intimately connected with the defendant, having been clerks or employees in his office, and the court was asked to charge: “ The fact that the witnesses Kaffenburgh and Cohen declined to testify upon the ground that their answers might tend to incriminate them creates no presumption against them and in particular none against the defendant.” The learned district attorney, in his summing up to the jury, commented upon the fact that the defendant
If the People call witnesses who demand their privilege, can it be that the defendant is to be prejudiced by this fact? It is the duty of the People in a criminal charge to establish all the facts going to make the crime and to fasten it upon the defendant, and the fact that a witness refuses to answer questions because they are likely to criminate him is hardly evidence that some one else has committed a crime. The de
Various other questions have been raised and urged before me, but I do not feel that there is occasion for discussing them. The questions will no doubt be presented on appeal, and the Appellate Division has the power to grant any relief to which the defendant may be entitled. On this application I am only called upon to determine whether there is a reasonable doubt as to whether the judgment should stand, and I am convinced that there is such a doubt.
The application for a certificate of reasonable doubt will be granted.
Application granted.