191 A.D. 875 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The defendant, a woman 44 years old, was tried upon an indictment for murder in the first degree for shooting Silver-berg to death on April 7, 1919, and was convicted of manslaughter. Her plea was self-defense. She testified that as she went to the bathroom common to the house where she and Silverberg lived, Silverberg attempted to force her to an act of sexual intercourse, she resisted, and in the struggle she fired the fatal shot from a revolving pistol which she carried on her person. The People called Gussie Tonjes as a witness in rebuttal. She testified that on or about April 5, 1919, she talked with Silverberg, the deceased, in her shop in the borough of The Bronx, but the defendant was not present. “ Q'.
I think that the admission of this testimony of the statements of the deceased was error.
1. The statements were not evidence. They were hearsay and were not within any of the exceptions to the rule against hearsay. Of course, the statements were not a dying declaration, because they were made two days before the homicide. The statements were not the declarations of a party. “ The person injured,— or the acting prosecutor, is not a party, therefore his utterances out of court are hearsay. He may be called as a witness, whereon, if his testimony differs from his declarations in pais, they may be shown to discredit him. If he is dead, the evidence is lost, the same as when any other witness dies.” (2 Bishop New Grim. Proc. [2d ed.] 928.) The principle of res gestee did not apply. The character of the deceased was no part of the res gestee. (3 Greenl. Ev. [15th ed.] § 27.) Further, the words neither explained nor accompanied any act which was related to the defendant. (1 Greenl. Ev. [15th ed.] § 108.) In the note to this section it is said: “ It follows that if there is no act with which the declarations can be connected, they are not admissible.” (See, too, Tilson v. Terwilliger, 56 N. Y. 273, 277.) In Underbill on Criminal Evidence (§ 330) it is said: “But déelarations prior to the crime forming no part of the res gestee of a relevant act and not communicated to the accused, or if known to him not
2. Even if the testimony as to these declarations was evidence, the evidence was not admissible in this case. It was offered and received in rebuttal. When the plea is self-defense, and the defendant has been permitted to offer evidence as to the character of the alleged aggressor for violence or the traits of violence natural to the aggression, under the rule of People v. Bodawald (177 N. Y. 408, 423), then the prosecution may offer like evidence in rebuttal. But the defendant had not made an issue as to the character or reputation of the deceased, either because she had testified to the violent act which she resisted or by the offer of any evidence as to the reputation or character of the deceased. Hence there was no issue that made the evidence in question admissible as rebuttal, and it was not admissible as part of the People’s case. (See Wigm. Ev. §§ 890, 891, 925, 59; Kelly v. People, 229 Ill. 81-83 et seq., 86; Ben v. State, 37 Ala. 103; Pound v. State, 43 Ga. 88; Thomas v. People, 67 N. Y. 223, 224; People v. Carlton, 57 Cal. 85; State v. Eddon, 8 Wash. 292; People v. Powell, 87 Cal. 362; State v. Chaffin, 56 S. C. 434. See, too, People v. Webster, 139 N. Y. 81, 82.) This principle is not departed from in People v. Gallagher (75 App. Div. 39; affd., 174 N. Y. 505), but is recognized. For the court in that case, although saying that the defense had not offered evidence of the general reputation of the deceased, did say that by various kinds of evidence the defense had sought to show that the deceased was of “ a quarrelsome, morose, irritable, vindictive disposition, and subject to violent outbursts of temper, and the making of threats against the defendant.”
3. I think that Burke v. People (4 Hun, 481) is authority.
Burke was on trial for mayhem committed upon McLaughlin in a grog shop. The complainant, from some fancied danger from the defendant, had tried to borrow a pistol and an icepick. The district attorney asked the bartender of the grog shop: “ Do you remember what McLaughlin said about Burke’s coming into the store? and he answered, Yes, sir; he told me, when I wanted him to go and sit down and go to sleep, that he was afraid Burke would come in and beat him.” The court (Davis, P. J., Daniels and Brady, JJ.) said, per Brady, J.: “ Upon the exceptions thus stated the appeal in this matter depends. In reference to the first, it may be said that the statement of the complainant before the occurrence, when the prisoner was not .present, was not admissible. It is not necessary to cite authorities for a rule so well established by the law of evidence. * * * The statement was injurious to the defense of the prisoner, because he claimed to have acted in self-protection; and the effect of it was to make the prisoner the aggressor, and to put the complainant in fear of bodily harm, thus justifying his resort to the poker when he could get neither pistol nor ice-pick, when, on his own testimony, there was nothing from which he was authorized to draw the conclusion that the prisoner meant to assail him in such way as to put him in any jeopardy.”
4. Such declarations could not be regarded as evidence as to the character of the defendant. (Weyrich v. People, 89 Ill. 97.) By talcing the witness stand the defendant subjected herself to attack upon her credibility, but did not put her general character in issue, nor had she done so by testifying to the act of violence incidental to the fatality. (Authorities supra.) Therefore, even evidence against the character of defendant was not admissible on the part of the prosecution. (See People v. Lingley, 207 N. Y. 406; People v. Richardson, 222 id. 103, 107.)
The danger of recognition of such naked self-serving declarations is obvious. Fabrication of “ evidence ” of this kind presents little difficulty. I cannot think that the admission of this testimony was negligible. The instance is not isolated,
It seems to me that the error was capital (People v. Richardson, supra, 107), and that we should reverse the judgment and grant a new trial.
Mills, Rich, Putnam and Blackmar, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction reversed and new trial granted.