4 N.Y.S. 119 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
1. Upon the evidence given upon the trial, the trial judge was warranted in holding as a matter of law that the building alleged to have been burned by the defendant, and described in the indictment as well as in the evidence, was embraced within the statute against arson. Although he submitted comments to the jury upon that subject, and allowed them to find that the building was within the provisions of the statute, no error was committed which the defendant can successfully complain of. A judgment will not be reversed merely because the judge submitted to the jury a question which he ought to determine himself, where it is clear he ought to have decided it in the same way the jury have found. Miller v. Insurance Co., 2 E. D. Smith, 268; Cumpston v. McNair, 1 Wend. 457; Pangburn v. Bull, Id. 345, 352; Hall v. Suydam, 6 Barb. 83, 88; Thompson v. Roberts, 24 How. 233, 240.
2. After the fire, which occurred on the 14th of February, a compromise adjustment of the loss sustained by reason of the fire was had with several insurance companies. Defendant took part in that adjustment, and executed an affidavit, in conjunction with one Conger, who was treasurer of the Spring-ville company, in consummation of formal proofs against the several companies. In that affidavit, sworn to on the 22d of February, 1884, reference was had to a schedule of the policies existing at the time of the fire upon the property destroyed, showing the amount of insurance to be $20,750, and that a compromise was fixed upon at $10,000; and it was also stated in that affidavit, viz.: “That the fire originated, cause unknown to these deponents, but in our opinion of incendiary origin. ” That affidavit was signed and sworn to by the defendant, and was received in evidence against his objection and exception. A receipt executed by the defendant to one of the insurance companies for its proportion of the compromise adjustment, was received in evidence, against the defendant’s objection and exception. We think this evidence was properly received. It tended to elucidate the situation of the property at the time of the fire, and the extent of the insurance thereon, and the relations of the defendant thereto, and bore upon the question of the defendant’s motive or want of motive in respect to the fire charged to have been caused by his act. The circumstance that the affidavit was verified by Conger as well as O’Neil, and the circumstance that the receipt was signed by Conger as well as O’Neil, did not render the evidence inadmissible. It appeared that O’Neil, the defendant, was president of the O’Neil Wagon Company, Limited, and Conger was treasurer of that company. The acts and declarations of O’Neil, in conjunction with the insurance and the adjustment and the receipt of moneys upon the insurance policies after the fire, were not rendered incompetent because they were in conjunction with Conger. We therefore think the exceptions taken to that class of evidence are unavailing to the defendant.
3. Nor do we think it was error to receive evidence of the number of shares of stock owned by the defendant in the wagon company organized at Spring-ville, as that fact tended to indicate the extent of his interest in that company, and to develop his relations to the insurance existing upon the property at the time of the fire. Nor was it error to receive the evidence tending to show how much property had been shipped to the Springville Company, or the arrangement existing with that company in respect to the property and the insurance thereon. If the books which have been kept in respect to the property relating to the defendant’s account had not been mutilated,and had been produced, that would have furnished some evidence of the extent of the defendant’s interest in the property remaining in the building at the time of the fire. If the leaves
4. When the witness O’Connor, book-keeper, was upon the stand, he detailed the incidents relating to the books, and facts and circumstances relating to the fire, and the direction received from the defendant in respect to the several items in the accounts, and conversations had with the defendant preceding the fire and shortly thereafter, and narrated some of the preparation made by the defendant to meet the adjusters and ascertain the extent of the loss, and that he burned certain invoices in the stove in the blacksmith shop under the direction of the defendant, and that the defendant told him he had “made up an inventory to settle with the insurance companies, ” and that the inventory made at the Messenger House “showed a loss of $20,000. He said if he could get $20,000 of the insurance men he would let the Springville men go to hell; he would not go to Springville.” After this evidence was given, the witness was permitted, against the objection and exception of the defendant, to state that the defendant “was drinking some. He had a bottle here with him. Well, Conger carried a bottle, and every once and a while Mr. O’Neil would take a slug. The bottle was carried in Mr. Conger’s overcoat pocket. I saw O’Neil drinking from that bottle at different times. He told me during the time he was making his adjustment that he had showed the loss by his inventory of something over $20,000.” In Linsday v. People, 63 N. Y. 154, Judge Allen says: “The acts and declarations of a party are evidence against him, and w’hether they tend to fix a crime upon him is for the jury.” In Greenfield v. People, 85 N. Y. 85, Judge Miller says: “The acts and conduct of a party at or about the time when he is charged to have committed a crime are always received as evidence of a guilty mind; and while, in weighing such evidence, ordinary caution is required, such inferences are to be drawn from them as experience indicates is warranted. And the demeanor of a prisoner at the time of his arrest, or soon after the commission of the crime, or upon being charged with the offense, is a proper subject of consideration in determining the question of guilt. Such indications, however, are by no means conclusive, and must depend greatly upon the mental characteristics of the individual. ” In Levy v. People, 80 N. Y. 335, it was said that the conduct of the prisoner after the fire was admissible. In speaking thereof Judge Tolger says: “It was an act in the prisoner’s life, at the time of the occurrence with guilty participation in which he was charged, and it was competent to be shown to the jury. * * * But after-acts of bis might be circumstances, according to the nature of them, to show guilty knowledge of purpose and inducement thereto before the fire.” We are therefore of the opinion that the verdict ought not to be disturbed because the witness O’Con-nor testified that at the time of the occurrence of the acts of the defendant which he had detailed the witness was permitted to state that the defendant “was drinking some.”
5. Much criticism and complaint are made by the defendant of the charge delivered by the trial judge to the jury. In the third sentence in the charge we find the following language: “ Upon you, as jurors, the chief weight rests, because you are the exclusive judges and final judges of all questions of fact.” In substance and in spirit the same language was used during the delivery of the charge several times by the trial judge. After commenting upon the sur
At the close of the charge very numerous requests were preferred by the defendant, and several exceptions were taken to expressions used by the court in delivering the body of the charge. In response, the court several times remarked: “I do say to the jury that I will leave that entirely with them to say what inference would be properly drawn,—what weight to give it.” In response to an exception “to that portion of the charge where the jury are told that- the proof and circujnstances, as detailed by Fitzgeralds and Duffy and O’Connor, are terribly damaging to the defendant,” the court replied: “The jury may so find; they have the right to.” And when the defendant’s counsel asked the court to charge “that a conviction for crime cannot be had upon motive alone, ” the court promptly replied: “ Certainly not. I so charge. ” And when the defendant’s counsel followed that by a statement: “That motives only strengthen the circumstances which point to the guilt of the defendant,” the court again replied: “I have intended to so charge, and I repeat it.” And when the defendant’s counsel asked the court to “call the attention of the jury to the further testimony of Smith, that he saw O’Neil loading crating on a hand car, ” the court promptly replied: “He did so testify,—loading crating sticks on a hand car. I don’t claim to have alluded to many of the circumstances and surroundings, but such as seemed most prominent to the court to call their attention to, leaving it to your common sense, as it were, to call to mind any and all circumstances, whether it addresses itself to your judgment in forming a conclusion.” In Jackson v.