102 Misc. 437 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
The-defendant was convicted of the crime of attempt to commit robbery in the first degree. When arraigned for sentence he interposed a motion in arrest of judgment based on two grounds. “ First, that in the Court of General Sessions he was tried on an indictment charging the same offense and was acquitted thereof, and, second, that the facts determined in his favor on the former trial are identical with those submitted to the jury on this the second trial and being therefore res judicata are in law conclusive evidence of his innocence.” At the trial the defendant was allowed to amend his plea of not guilty by adding to it the plea of former jeopardy. On this plea and on the' contentions of the motion under consideration the only evidence before the court was contained in an agreed state of facts which in form contained verbal non-essentials, but which in substance and essentials stated that on the 19th of February, 1917, two indictments were found against the defendant charging him with two crimes. Indictment No. 114108 charged that in the night-time of January 27, 1917, he committed the crime of robbery in the first degree by taking certain personal property from one Alexander Gelber, and indictment No. 114109 charged that on the same day he committed the crime of attempt to commit robbery in the first degree by attempting to take property from the person of Samuel Gelber. The indictment charging robbery in the first degree was tried in the. Court of General Sessions and the defendant was found not guilty.
The plea of former jeopardy was overruled at the trial, and the motion on that ground is now denied. That leaves only for consideration the second ground of the motion, and on that ground it is urged that ‘ ‘ all matters of fact which necessarily must have been determined in his favor by the jury that acquitted him are res judicata and as such they constitute' conclusive evidence of his innocence.” At the threshold of inquiry it should be borne in mind that the verdict of the jury was not acquittal of the crime; it was that the evidence before the jury was insufficient to prove defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This was the fact necessarily determined in defendant’s favor and no other fact. The two indictments did not charge the same crime. The indictment tried in the Court of General Sessions on which defendant was found not guilty charged the crime of robbery from the person of Alexander Gelber, while the indictment tried in this court, on which defendant was found guilty, charged an attempt to commit the crime of robbery from the person of Samuel Gelber. Each indictment was an accusation of a separate and substantive crime (Penal Law, §§ 2120, 260-261) for which separate and distinct punishment is prescribed (Id. § 2125, subd. 2; § 261) and which was not interdependent upon the same testimony. In order to convict of robbery in first degree, proof of two essentials. was required: (1) That the defendant, by the use of force or fear, unlawfully took personal property from the person of
A confusion of terms in defendant’s reasoning leads irresistibly to a confounding of identity of issue with identity of person, whereas they are distinct and separate. One is inclusive of all things necessary to a conviction; the other is exclusive of all things but personality. The proposition advanced is that because defendant was found not guilty on the trial of an indictment charging him with robbery from Alexander Gelber he cannot be found guilty of an attempt to commit robbery from Samuel Gelber at the same time and place. Here were two distinct crimes charged to have been respectively committed upon two individuals, and the mere fact that the robbery was alleged and the attempt to commit robbery was proved to have occurred at the same time and place did not merge the two crimes, but each maintained its distinctive character and requirements of proof of guilt. There was
In Black on Judgments the learned author states that: “A judgment is conclusive by way of estoppel only as to facts without the existence and proof or admission of which it could not have been rendered. In other words, it is conclusive evidence of whatever it was necessary for the jury to have found in order to warrant the verdict in the former action, and no further.” 2 Black Judg. § 615.
In Rudd v. Cornell, 171 N. Y. 114, it was held that “ a judgment is conclusive in a second action only when the same question was at issue in a former suit * * * and that the conclusive character of a judgment extends only to the precise issues which were tried in the former action * * * and the party seeking to avail himself of a former judgment must show aErmatively that the question involved in the second action was material and actually determined in the former, as a former judgment will not operate as an estoppel as to immaterial or unessential facts, even though put in issue and directly decided.” This case is the controlling authority in this state and harmonizes in principle with Burlen v. Shannon, 99 Mass. 200, which is regarded as the leading case on the subject. As interesting as it is dangerous is the brief of the learned counsel for the defendant — dangerous in that if the premise that the defense of alibi was an essential issue, and was therefore passed upon by the jury be conceded, the conclusion that it is res judicata is irresistible, but as it has already been pointed out
On the facts and the law applicable thereto I rule on the first ground of motion that the defendant was not in the Court of General Sessions tried and acquitted on an indictment charging the same offense as that tried in the Supreme Court, and on the second ground that the facts determined in his favor on that trial were not identical with the facts on which he was convicted on this trial, and therefore were not res judicata. Motion in arrest of judgment denied.
Motion denied.