Lead Opinion
Defendants, detectives in the metropolitan police department of the city of Detroit, were convicted of assault and battery. Defendant Jones has held the rank of detective for over 14 years, and *411 defendant Conaster has held a similar position for over 9 years. They arrested the prosecuting witness, Frank Eoberson, on the complaint of a woman who claimed that she had been defrauded of about $100 by a “pocketbook trick.” Defendants were assigned the invеstigation of her case. She identified the prosecuting witness as one of the men who had defrauded her from pictures of confidence men shown her at-pоlice headquarters. Defendants learned that Eoberson recently had tried to get Judge Skillman to perform a marriage ceremony, and they asked Judge Skillman’s сlerk for Eoberson’s address. The clerk showed them a letter Eoberson had written to Judge Skillman in which it was charged that the two detectives had attempted to extоrt $25 from him. Shortly thereafter Eoberson came into the courtroom and was arrested as he stepped into the hall. He claims that he was taken to an upstairs room at the Canfield avenue station, and that after he was charged with having made the accusation against the detectives, one of them struck him and knocked him down, and the other kicked him while he was on the floor. The proofs showed that he was taken to the Deceiving Hospital in Detroit where some sutures were usеd to repair the broken skin below an eye. One leg was slightly bruised below the knee. He was promptly released to the police and returned to the preсinct station. The woman who claimed to have been defrauded was given an opportunity to see Eoberson in person, and she • concluded that he was nоt one of the men who had defrauded her.
Defendants denied the assault. They and another officer who was present claimed that Eoberson, gesticulating excitedly, leaned back in his chair and fell over, and that he was injured when he struck his head against a sharp corner of the baseboard in the room. Defendants clаimed that the floor in the room was *412 highly polished and slippery, although Roberson insisted that it was not. Except as to the injury, the testimony was highly conflicting. When the jury returned the verdict of guilty, the trial judge stated:
‘ ‘ I am inclined to the belief that there was a serious miscarriage of justice in this case. I know of no similar case in which any person was convicted upon the uncorroborated testimony of a paranoiac who has been a borderline insane person for a number of years, in additiоn to which he has been an habitual criminal ever since his childhood, so much so that when they sought to release him from the asylum in Ionia, where he had been sent for observation after many conflicts with the officers in Jackson and in Marquette, that his own sister would not consent to receiving him at Atlanta, showing little faith in his claims of reformаtion.
‘ ‘ But a jury of this court has said these officers are guilty, and since it is a misdemeanor case, I can do nothing but accept the verdict, but in any event, the officеrs have been punished enough already, even if they were guilty, — which I don’t believe — and sentence is suspended.”
Although he concluded that the verdict was a miscarriаge of justice, he felt that he was unable to order a new trial because 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 16529 (Stat. Ann. § 27.3952), limited the consideration of motions for new trial in municipal courts оf record to the presiding judge or some judge designated by him other than the judge who sat in the trial of the cause. The presiding judge heard the motion for a new trial and, after an examination of the record of the proceedings, ruled that there was a question for the triers of the facts and that there were no errors to wаrrant his intervention. Defendants have raised no constitutional objection to the statute that denies *413 the judge who conducts the trial the right to set aside the verdict оf conviction when he is satisfied that the jury’s conclusion is palpably unjust. We do not pass upon this question.
For several reasons it is claimed that the trial was improрer. In the course of the testimony of defendant Jones, the following transpired:
“Q. Did anyone else ever complain to the judge relative to you and your partner?
“Mr. Chawhe: I object to that.
“Mr. Graham: Shaking down—
“Mr. Chawhe: I object to it as wholly immaterial.
“Mr. Graham: He has testified he wasn’t angry.
“The Court: I don’t follow you.
“Mr. Graham: I will withdraw the question.”
This question carried the intimation that defendants had committed acts of extortion. It will not do to say that there could be no harm because the question was withdrawn before it was answered. The innuendo cannot be withdrawn from the minds of the jurors. The rule of evidence which bars such questioning is so elementary that it would appeаr that the prosecution deliberately used this scheme of getting-before the triers of the facts a suggestion that could not otherwise lawfully be introduced. The objеct becomes clearer when we note that the prosecution completed the sentence before the trial judge could rule on the unfinished questiоn that already bore ample tokens of its incompetence. Fairness becomes a shibboleth if we permit such illegal attacks on the credibility of one who is obliged to take the stand to defend his liberty. See
People
v.
Kolowich,
Because the case is reversed and a new trial is
*414
granted, it is proper to pass on the admissibility in evidence of the letter written by Roberson to Judge Skillman, in which it was charged that defendants tried to extort money from Roberson. Defendants claim that the letter is objectionable as hearsay. The trial court admitted it on the theory that it tended to show a purpose or motive to commit an assault and battery, and that it was connected directly with the alleged wrongful acts. The trial cоurt was right. On the morning the complaining witness was arrested, Judge Skillman’s clerk showed the offensive letter to defendants; a few hours later the complaining witness was taken into custody, and it is claimed that the assault and battery occurred soon thereafter. Defendants ’ knowledge that such a letter had been written was a part of thе whole transaction that is the subject of the charge, and this bit of evidence adds color to the other facts and circumstances. In
People
v.
Potter,
‘ ‘Upon the trial of an indiсtment, the whole occurrence immediately preceding the commission of the act charged as criminal can be given in evidence, for the purpose of illustrating the act itself, by showing the influences which operated to produce the catastrophe, to establish malice, and to justify the act or mitigatе the crime.”
And in
Maher
v.
People,
“The circumstances which, in fact, led to the assault were a part of the res gestae, which the jury were , entitled to have before them, to show what was the real nature of the act, the quo animo, statе of mind and intention, with which it was done. The object of the trial should be to show the real nature of the *415 transaction, whether its tendency may he to establish guilt or innocence.”
The рrinciple thus enunciated is with us in its full vigor. See
People
v.
Palmer,
The conviction is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). The question asked defendant Jones as to whether anyone had complained to the judge relative to himself and defendant Conaster for engaging in ‘ ‘ shake-downs ’ ’ — mean *416 ing extortion — was so prejudicial to defendant’s right to a fair trial on the issue of whether he was guilty of assault and battery that the judgment of conviction must be reversed and a new trial ordered.
