82 N.J.L. 229 | N.J. | 1912
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was indicted for knowingly transporting by means of conveyance through this state, to wit, in and through the county of Essex, Helen Sedlak, a girl, for the purpose of prostitution. The indictment was found under section 7 of the act of 1910. Pamph. L., p. 24. The state proved that the defendant walked with the girl from a place in Newark to the railroad station and there procured tickets for New York and was immediately arrested. Upon these facts the court properly held that the defendant could not be convicted of the crime charged in the indictment, but that he could be convicted of an attempt to commit the crime under section 43 of the Criminal Procedure act. Comp. Stat., p. 1834. This section, it should be noted, differs from the act as it read at the time of the decision in Marley v. State, 29 Vroom 207. It is no longer required that the record should show an acquittal of the offence charged. The record in the present :case shows a’ conviction of attempt. The first point made for the defendant is,that there is no such crime as “attempt,” and it is therefore argued that the verdict did not
An attack is, however, made upon the forty-third section of the Criminal Procedure act (Comp. Stat., p. 1834), authorizing a conviction of an attempt where proof of the crime charged in the indictment fails, and it is argued that the effect of this section is to deprive the defendant of his constitutional right not to be held to answer for a criminal offence, unless upon the presentment or indictment of a grand jury. We think this question is concluded in this court by the authorities. In State v. Johnson, 1 Vroom 185, it was held that on an indictment for rape, the defendant might be convicted of an assault and found not- guilty of the rape. The principle which was established, with abundant citation of authority by Chief Justice Whelpley, was that the defendant might be con-vieted of the lesser offence if charged in the indictment, although only as an ingredient in the greater offence. Afterward, in Farrell v. State, 25 Id. 416, it was held that carnal abuse was necessarily attended with an assault, and that, therefore, the offence was accurately described by alleging that
The learned trial judge admitted in evidence, on behalf of the state, the testimony of several girls that the defendant had taken them from New Jersey to his house in Brooklyn for purposes of prostitution, and the objection is now pressed that it was improper to allow evidence of the commission of other crimes for the purpose of proving the particular crime charged. The question was dealt with by the Supreme Court in State v. Raymond, 21 Vroom, 260. Mr. Justice Dixon there recognized the exception to be made when the acts charged to be criminal might reasonably be innocent and are criminal only when performed with a certain intent, or with knowledge of a certain fact. “'In such case,” he said, “other acts of the defendant, though criminal, might be adduced to prove that he had such specific intent, or knowledge.” He referred to the utterance of counterfeits, the making of false pretences, the reception of stolen goods, the publication of libels, and occurrences claimed by the defendant to be accidental. He added, “and, in general, it may be said that, whenever the defendant’s
In the present case, one of the constituents of the offence is the transporting of girls for purposes of prostitution. It was therefore necessary to prove not only the acts of the defendant, but his mental state. The question is one of logic rather than of law. It can hardly be denied that where a course of conduct is established which indicates that the defendant is actually engaged in what is now called the “White Slave Traffic,” the probability, in any particular case in which he is proven to- have attempted to transport a girl, that he was transporting her for purposes of prostitution, is very much increased. 'The natural way of proving that a defendant is engaged in that- traffic is to call his victims as witnesses. That wás done in the present case, and we think it was proper. Since the question is one of logic involving probabilities, it often happens that judges disagree in their view as to the bearing of such evidence upon the case, and the line between instances that are near enough in time to the crime charged and those that are too remote to be evidential, is often a difficult line to draw. In the Raymond case occurrences happening several years before were held inadmissible; but the Raymond case, unlike the present, did not involve a course of business, and the trial judge, in the present ease, limited the evidence to transactions antedating by a few months only the acts proved against the defendant. We find no error, and the judg.ment is affirmed.