221 A.D. 331 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The defendant has been sentenced to imprisonment for the indeterminate sentence of from twenty to forty years upon a verdict finding him guilty of the crime of robbery in the first degree. He was indicted jointly with Anthony Ricchetti and John P. Brennan; and upon a former trial of the three defendants, Ricchetti and Brennan were convicted, but the jury disagreed as to the present defendant. In so far as the present record is concerned, there is no dispute regarding the facts of the robbery.
John E. Donovan, engaged in business as a contractor at Port Richmond, S. L, on the morning of September 11, 1926, drew from a bank approximately $4,500 in cash for payroll purposes, and brought the same to his office where he left it in charge of others shortly after ten o’clock in the forenoon. The defendant, with whose father and some other members of his family Mr. Donovan was acquainted, lived about four blocks from Donovan’s office.
Dorothy Simmons was Mr. Donovan’s stenographer and in the office on the morning in question. About ten-thirty o’clock Brennan, one of the codefendants, came into the office accompanied by another man. Brennan aimed a revolver at the witness “ and told me to put ’em up.” The robbery was then accomplished by the stealing of the cash which Mr. Donovan had drawn from the bank. There is no question of the occurrence of the robbery. As the men left with their loot, Miss Simmons saw them enter a motor car which at the same moment she saw “ driving up to the curb,” and she thereupon looked at and noted the license number of the car and the letter “ H ” on its front. There is no dispute but that this “H” represented the make of car known as “ Hupmobile.”
It was the theory of the prosecution that the defendant now before us drove the car. Further, that the two men who went into Donovan’s office and did the robbing were the two codefendants, Brennan and Ricchetti. As connecting the defendant with the commission of the crime it was proved through a police officer, that the defendant told him that he was the one who drove the car; that he had put court plaster on Ms face so as to prevent identification; that he did not go into Mr. Donovan’s office, but remained in the automobile. These admissions of the defendant to
The defendant was a witness in his own behalf. It is admitted that he had not been previously convicted; hence, the indeterminate sentence. He emphatically denied driving the car in question either with or without the codefendants, and denied any connection with the crime. There was also proof, in the nature of an alibi, that the defendant could not have been engaged in this offense.
The question as to the defendant’s guilt or innocence was clearly one of fact for the jury; and their verdict finding him guilty should ordinarily be upheld were it not for errors of a substantial and prejudicial character committed on the trial.
1. After the prosecution had established the robbery and an identification of Brennan, the People called Brennan and Ricchetti as witnesses. The district attorney urges that he had a right to call these two men as witnesses, and that right he certainly was entitled to. He attempted to prove by Brennan his residence address in Philadelphia, with the proper object of showing that at or about and at some time preceding the robbery, the defendant had called up on the telephone from his home on Staten Island the telephone number at the address at which Brennan lived in Philadelphia. By Ricchetti no such proof was attempted, but it would have been proper had it been sought to do so. The effort of the district attorney to prove association and acquaintanceship between the defendant and Brennan and Ricchetti was competent. But the district attorney went much further and interrogated Brennan regarding his conviction of this very crime and that he was at the time of trial a prisoner under that conviction. Moreover he proved through the witness that his attorney on the trial on which he was convicted was the attorney then appearing on the retrial of this defendant. By Ricchetti he established that he, too, was convicted for this robbery. It was improper for the district attorney to establish, or to seek to establish, that the two codefendants had been convicted of this robbery. They were not under cross-examination but were called by the district attorney himself, and while it was quite competent to prove by them or either of them a
Thus we have it emphasized by the learned trial court that the one objectionable thing about it all was the district attorney’s reference to counsel’s “ ingenuity ” by means of which this defendant succeeded on the trial at which Brennan and Ricchetti were convicted in obtaining a disagreement of the jury in his own behalf. The learned district attorney points out no authority which justifies him in establishing these convictions for the purpose which he clearly indicated he intended it for, namely, that he wanted the jury to know that he was not trying the defendant alone for this robbery, but had performed his duty in obtaining the conviction of the two codefendants. And, indeed, in so far as the question has been presented to the courts, it has been held that where two persons have been jointly indicted for the same offense, but separately tried, a judgment of conviction against one of them is not competent on the trial of the other, inasmuch as his conviction is no evidence either of joint action or of the guilt of the accused. (See 12 Cyc. 445, and cases there cited.)
2. The defendant called a public officer who knew him for ten or
In my opinion this was error. It is needless to reiterate the rulings of the courts as to the value to a defendant on trial on a criminal charge of character evidence, and his right, indeed, to have the court charge that such evidence may create a reasonable doubt where without it no such doubt would exist. It is apparent from the above excerpt that the witness, who had already testified that the defendant whom he knew for at least ten or twelve years, who lived across the street from him, whose reputation he had heard discussed and “ never knew anything wrong with him ” and further that, in the witness’ opinion, the defendant’s reputation is good, was brought to a confused state of mind by the attitude of the court and the district attorney. In my opinion, there was no material qualification upon the part of the witness of knowledge of the defendant’s reputation in the community in his statement that he based this reputation “ upon my own opinion.” This is made clear at the end of the excerpt when, in response to the court’s inquiry as to whether he was basing his opinion “ solely upon what you [the witness] knew,” the witness responded in the affirmative. Character evidence in a criminal trial is not hedged round with excessive strictness, nor is it regarded as lying within a narrow and undeviating groove. In People v. Colantone (243 N. Y. 134) it was held error to exclude testimony in a homicide case sought to be given by a fellow-soldier and other comrades in other branches
It is to be moreover observed that a fair reading of the witness’ testimony shows him as testifying that the defendant’s neighbors “ spoke good of him,” and that upon what he had heard was formed such personal opinion as he had, a quite natural conclusion for a layman to come to. I do not think it can be said that in this testimony the witness can be charged with having vouchsafed an opinion of the defendant’s character in no wise based upon fact.
3. The point is raised that the summation by the learned district attorney went beyond the bounds of reasonable and fair comment. For instance this: “ Try him on the evidence in this case and allow all feeling of sympathy to be thrown to the four winds of heaven, for if Mrs. Donovan had been a hysterical character, this man would be here chargeable with murder in the first degree. Mr. Innes: I object to that, if the Court please, as improper argument. The Court: Overruled. Mr. Innes: Exception. Mr. Fach: It is very fortunate for Mr. Donovan that he had a wife possessed of nerve and ordinary degree of composure. Had she manifested or exhibited the slightest amount of resistance, perhaps she would, and that delightfully conscientious young lady, Miss Simmons also, might not be here to tell the tale. He is to be congratulated on
Mrs. Donovan and Miss Simmons were in the Donovan office when the robbery occurred. To say that they would have been shot and that a murder would have been committed if they had been hysterical people or persons of less composure and nerve was not a fair statement for the prosecutor to make. Nor was there any evidence in the record to justify the statement that defendant had traveled for a year or a year and a half with other gunmen and men that robbed and to “ have gotten away with it as long as he did.”
Again, the district attorney said: “ I am trying to give the People of this county the best that is in me, and I am not here today or any other day trying to prosecute men concermng whom I have the slightest doubt as to their innocence. * * * Gentlemen, if there were an acquittal in tMs case, if there were anytMng less than robbery in the first degree in tMs case, I say to you and I do it with the utmost solemnity, with a perfect realization that tMs declaration is almost the equivalent to one being made in the presence, of the everliving God under oath, if you do not convict of robbery in the first degree, you are going to be part and parcel to a recurrence of similar acts of criminality, and possibly murder, on the part of tMs defendant.”
As to that part of the district attorney’s summation in wMch he declared, in effect, that he would not prosecute men concerning whom he had the slightest doubt as to their innocence, it is apt to quote from what we said in People v. De Martine (205 App. Div. 80, 84), viz.: “ The proper attitude of the court would have been .to instruct the jury that the opimon of the assistant district attorney as to the guilt of the defendant should be disregarded and that, if in the course of Ms summing up he had asserted Ms personal opinion, it was the duty of the jury to disregard that opimon entirely, and that it was MgMy improper for the assistant district attorney to make any statement to the jury in relation thereto.” The other portions of the summation from wMch the quotations are made seem to me to call for condemnation by declaring them to be erroneous in law. Of course, the district attorney is entitled to and we are ever inclined to allow him reasonable and fair latitude, but tMs seems to me to have been transgressed in the declarations quoted.
4. The court’s charge, in part, is made the subject of criticism and assigned error. Police Officer Ruggles, in detailing the defendant’s admissions made to him, also testified that the defendant informed Mm that after the robbery he and Ms codefendants went
It might be that the jury could have found that the defendant drove Ms codefendants away from the scene of the robbery without knowing of their nefarious purpose. TMs charge permitted that finding. What was then charged, that if he afterwards ascertained from Ms codefendants the facts of the robbery and concealed tMs knowledge from the authorities and took a share of the proceeds, he was guilty of robbery as much so as the robbers themselves who with pointed pistol stole, was not, in my opimon, a correct statement of the law. Whether Ms concealment of Ms after-learned knowledge and Ms taMng of a share of the fruits of the robbery constituted him an accessory after the fact, need not be decided, nor are we called upon to say that the defendant’s crime in the circumstances stated by the court constituted the criminal receipt of stolen property, for of that crime he was not indicted nor tried. To tMs charge an exception was taken.
The learned district attorney suggests that we apply to tMs case section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure wMch provides that “After hearing the appeal, the court must give judgment, without regard to techmcal errors or defects or to exceptions wMch do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.” That statute has often properly and successfully been invoked by the People on appeal. But there is not only difficulty but injustice in a harsh application of it. Whenever the court is satisfied that error may have tended to affect the substantial rights of a defendant, judgment of reversal of a conviction must follow. Indeed, tMs has been the rule even in cases where guilt was more pronounced than here, but where it was determined that a fair trial withrn the ordinary acceptation of the term was not accorded. In the case at bar the jury could have rendered a verdict of acquittal without the result suffering the characterization of a miscarriage of justice. At the same time, it should be said that it was equally witMn the province of the jury here to find the defendant guilty. Two recent cases in the Court of Appeals point out striking limitations of the scope of section 542. In People v. Purtell (243 N. Y. 273, 275) Judge
In People v. Sobieslcoda (235 N. Y. 411, 420) Judge Pound said: “ It is the duty of this court to give iudgment, without regard to technical errors or defects or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights.’ (Code Crim. Pro. § 542.) The district attorney urges that defendant’s guilt is so clearly established that his substantial rights were not affected by these errors. But the question of substantial right is not the abstract question of guilt or innocence. A guilty man is entitled to a fair trial and a trial is not fair if the verdict may be related to errors in the judge’s charge. Error is substantial when we can say that it tended to influence the verdict. Nor should we ' sustain a conviction erroneously secured on one theory on the conjecture that it would have followed just the same if the correct theory had been applied.’ (Hiscock, Ch. J., in People v. Smith, 232 N. Y. 239, 244.) ”
For the errors above pointed out, I think the judgment of conviction of the County Court of Richmond county should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Kelly, P. J., Young, Lazansky and Hagarty, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction of the County Court of Richmond county reversed upon the law, and a new trial ordered.