31 A.2d 921 | Conn. | 1943
The defendant was informed against for the robbery with violence of Russell Rotko on October 25, 1941; Gustave Nemeth was informed against on three counts, one for the same robbery of Rotko, the other two for the robbery of Timothy Ahern and the theft of an automobile belonging to Harry Clements, both on October 18, 1941; Lawrence D. Howley was charged on three counts, with the robbery of Ahern, the theft of the Clements car, and the kidnapping of Wallace Allen on October 30, 1941; Bruno Lubas was charged with all the foregoing offenses. On January 6, 1942, the defendant Frank McCarthy, Nemeth and Howley, who were represented by the public defender, pleaded not guilty and elected a jury trial. Lubas, represented by private counsel, pleaded guilty. The defendant, Nemeth and Howley, later but seasonably, made motions for separate trials which were denied. They were all tried together and convicted, and the defendant has appealed, claiming in substance that he was entitled to a separate trial. *103
The defendant concedes that the English rule that persons separately indicted (informed against) cannot be tried together (Rex v. Crane, [1920] 3 K.B. 236; Rex v. Dennis, [1924] 1 K.B. 867) does not apply here and that joint indictments and separate indictments which can be consolidated should be treated alike. He claims, however, that the trial of Howley and Nemeth at the same time with him, although charged with different crimes, violated his basic right to a fair trial or was, at least, an abuse of discretion.
The general rule governing separate trials where there is a joint indictment or information is stated as follows in State v. Brauneis,
The state relied principally on the testimony of Lubas. His story of the commission of these different crimes was lurid. Only a small portion of that testimony connected the defendant with the crime charged against him. He sat through the trial with the codefendants, listening, with the jury, to the tale of their misdeeds and subject to such prejudice as this atmosphere would naturally create. People v. Hines,
The safer and fairer rule and one to which exception rarely, if ever, should be made is that persons charged with different, unconnected crimes should not be tried together. See McElroy v. United States,
It is true, as claimed by the state, that an abuse of discretion cannot be found if no information is furnished to the court as to the situation which the defendant claims will be prejudicial to him. State v. Castelli, supra, 63. Here, however, the full statement of the public defender when the motion was made, supported by the informations on file, was sufficient to disclose such a situation.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.