119 N.Y.S. 788 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
No- question with respect to the sufficiency of the evidence'to warrant the conviction of the appellants-is presented by the appeal. A reversal is sought solely on the ground of -certain instructions given to- the jury by the trial court. The appellants and the defendant Martin were tried together and all testified in their own behalf. Martin was likewise convicted, but he accepted his sentence to the Elmira Reformatory and did not appeal. The court, in stating the claims of the respective parties on the evidence, said to the jury that the People claimed that the defendants are unworthy of belief and that their stories radically conflicted with the testimony of two police officers named, who were -called by the People, and that the testimony of one or the other of these sets of witnesses was untrue.The court then instructed the jury that it was their duty to weigh this conflicting testimony and to determine which witness or witnesses were telling the truth, and thereupon said : “ The defendants urge upon you that this case upon the part of the People is fabricated, that it originated in the hostility of the police. I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, as matters of law, that police officers are presumed to tell the truth, are -presumed to perform the duties which the law casts upon them, unless' the contrary has been established. That presumption stays with them until it is pushed out of the case by evidence that satisfied your reason and intelligence that it should be pushed out of the case.” The court should not have thus singled out the police officers upon whose testimony the People relied, and pointedly instructed the jury that as matter of law they were presumed to tell the truth, for whatever presumption of credibility there is, it attaches to all witnesses alike, and it was error to
The evidence clearly establishes the guilt of the appellants.
It follows, therefore, that the judgment should be affirmed.
Patterson, P. J.', Ingraham, McLaughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.