78 N.J.L. 208 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Richard Coyle and Louis Tapack were indicted by the grand jury of Passaic county jointly upon five counts; the first, for breaking and entering by night a certain silk mill named in the indictment; the second, for the samo by day; the third, for entry without breaking; the fourth, for grand larceny of seven hundred pounds of raw silk, and the fifth, for receiving stolen goods. Coyle turned state’s evidence and was the principal witness against Tapack, testifying that the latter had incited him to commit the crime in the mill where he was or had been employed, and that they two broke in and stole the silk, which Tapack subsequently took away to dispose of. The first count was withdrawn from the jury by the court, and the last one ignored, so that the general verdict of guilty which was rendered was predicated on the count for breaking and entering by da}', the count for entering and the count for grand larceny. The conviction is now before us on writ of error without any certificate of the judge returning the entire proceedings under section 136 of the Criminal Procedure act of 1898, but on strict bill of exceptions with a general exception to the charge of the court, as permitted by section 140 of the same act, and specific assignments of error thereunder to the portions of the charge claimed fo be erroneous, in accordance with the established practice. State, v. MacQueen, 40 Vroom 476, 522.
The defence was an alibi, and it was only in the portion of Hie charge bearing on this defence that we find any injurious error, but on this account there must be a reversal. The court charged on this point:
*210 “Tapaek undertakes to prove wliat in law is called an alibi. Now, gentlemen of the jury, what is the legal proposition in regard to an alibi? The courts say that an alibi must be viewed with scrutiny, with care, and I think the language of one of the decisions is that it must be viewed with Tigid scrutiny/ yet, of course, when it is made out it is quite sufficient to excuse and to acquit the defendant; but the courts say that you must look at it with care and caution, and the courts further say that the proof must reasonably exclude the possibility of the presence of the accused — reasonably exclude the possibility of his presence. So you see, gentlemen of the jury, it appears from this legal proposition as if the defendant should satisfy you as to time and place sufficiently in regard to this question of alibi whether or not he was there at the time when the robbery was committed.”
And again, after a comment on the testimony:
“Now, gentlemen of the jury, you heard a number of witnesses produced on the part of the defendant, and you have a right to ask yourselves the question whether their testimony comes up to the requirements of that legal proposition, that the proof of an alibi should reasonably exclude tire possibility of the defendant at the time and at the place.”
In Sherlock v. State, 31 Vroom 31, it was held by this court to be erroneous to charge the jury that the defendant must prove his alibi by preponderance of evidence, and that if the testimony created such a degree of uncertainty as to defendant’s whereabouts that the jury were not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt, he was entitled to an acquittal. This decision was approved and followed in the case already cited of State v. MacQueen, 40 Id. 522 (at p. 531). Brit the portions of the charge above quoted recognize .no such right on the part of the defendant. They went at least as far as to require proof by preponderance of evidence of his absence from the scene of the crime, and we think the requirement that the proof must “reasonably exclude the possibility” of his presence called for even a greater degree of certainty in the minds of the jury. In any event, the instruction was clearly erroneous in view of the decisions just cited.
The judgment of conviction will therefore be reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.