177 N.E. 306 | NY | 1931
The evidence amply sustains the verdict that the defendant shot and killed Gladys Blaich with a deliberate and premeditated design to cause her death.
An opinion would not be necessary if it were not for erroneous rulings of the trial judge which in this case were harmless, but which if repeated in other cases, where guilt is not so clearly proved, might cause justice to be thwarted.
(1) The defendant's mother, Mary Miller, gave testimony as to the defendant's life history and his relations to the murdered woman. On cross-examination, she was questioned by the District Attorney as to her statements on the same subject when examined by the grand jury. At the stage of redirect examination, counsel for the *57 defendant made demand upon the District Attorney that he be permitted to inspect the copy of the minutes of the grand jury from which the District Attorney had been examining in so far as they included the testimony of the witness then upon the stand. The demand was refused, and upon the protest of counsel the court upheld the refusal.
We think the minutes to the extent demanded should have been offered for inspection. The People invoke the rule whereby the secrecy of the proceedings before the grand jury must be preserved inviolate (Code Crim. Pro. § 265). It is a rule not without exceptions, some of them declared by statute (Code Crim. Pro. § 266), others implied by courts when essential to the ends of justice (People ex rel. Hirschberg v. Bd. of Supervisors,
The error, for such it was, was not so substantial in its bearing on the fate of the defendant as to call for a reversal of the judgment of conviction (Code Crim. Pro. § 542). What was said by Mrs. Miller before the grand jury, though left unqualified by anything else that she may have said at the same time, was too trivial in its significance, too fully in accord with the testimony on her direct examination by counsel for the defendant, to have counted as a material factor in the choice of innocence or guilt. There is no reasonable possibility that the qualifying statements, if any such there were, could have changed the verdict of the jury if the defendant had been allowed to prove them.
What is true of the testimony of the witness Mary *58 Miller, is true, and for like reasons, of the testimony of other witnesses, Shapiro and Keville. Their testimony before the grand jury as brought out by counsel for the People was not at variance, in any substantial measure, with their testimony at the trial as brought out by the defense. There is no suggestion in the record that the complete minutes, if produced, would have shown any testimony qualifying or retracting what had been quoted by the People. Even if they would, there is no reasonable possibility that a different verdict would have followed.
(2) The defendant complains also of the refusal of the court to allow him to inspect letters marked for identification. Manning, a state trooper, testified for the People that he had visited the home of Gladys Blaich, and in her room had found letters, from which he had gathered ten that appeared to be in the same handwriting. These letters were marked for identification. They were never offered in evidence. There is nothing to show who wrote them. They were produced as a batch of papers found in a stated place, and there the matter rested.
The defendant did not attempt to cross-examine about the contents of these writings while Manning was on the stand. After the close of the People's case, however, he asked permission to inspect them. The refusal of the judge to direct the counsel for the People to comply with his request is now assigned as error.
When documents present in court are of such a nature that if called for by a subpoena they would be subject to inspection by the adverse party, the duty of the judge is to direct the holder of the documents to produce and exhibit them (Boynton v.Boynton, 16 Abb. Pr. 87; affd.,
We think the ruling of the court, amounting as it did to a refusal to direct the inspection of the letters at any stage of the trial, was error whereby the defendant would be aggrieved if there were a reasonable possibility that it had an effect upon the jury. The letters were not the private memoranda of the prosecuting officer (People ex rel. Lemon v. Supreme Court,
(3) The defendant complains of an order of the trial judge whereby visitors were excluded from the courtroom, with a resulting denial, it is said, of the privilege of a public trial assured by the statute to one accused of crime (Code Crim. Pro. § 8; Judiciary Law; Cons. Laws, ch. 30, § 4). The trial was not secret. Not only all the witnesses, but also representatives of the public and in particular, so it is said, representatives of the press, were permitted to be present. The purpose of the trial judge in the exclusion of the public generally was to promote sanitary conditions by keeping the air pure and fresh in what would have been otherwise a crowded courtroom. The trial was a protracted one, lasting three weeks, and there was need, or so the judge believed, to safeguard the health of the jurors and of others whose duty was to be there. Whether the ruling would be upheld if there had been *61
timely protest by the defendant, there is no occasion to consider (cf. People v. Hall,
(4) The judge instructed the jury that they were to approach the consideration of the evidence with a presumption that Gladys Blaich had committed suicide and had not come to her death at the hands of the defendant. This ruling is not complained of by the defendant. It is a ruling in his favor. It has support in the decision of this court in People v. Creasy (
The judgment of conviction should be affirmed.
POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction affirmed. *62