158 F.2d 458 | 2d Cir. | 1946
Lead Opinion
The offenses of which the appellants have been convicted were committed in connection with the bankruptcy of H. J. Licht, Inc., which was adjudicated upon an involuntary petition filed on November 25, 1941. This company was engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling fur coats; Bernard Licht was its president, his brother Herman was secretary-treasurer and their father, Harry Licht, occasionally helped in the business. On liquidation of the bankrupt’s estate only about $400 was realized; its debts were about $25,000. The shortage was explained by the appellants as the result of an alleged burglary on November 11, 1941, in which coats and skins of the value of some $26,000 were stolen from a store which Harry Licht had rented for the company at 337 West 17th Street in New York City. The Government contended that the alleged burglary was a fiction which the appellants had planned and executed as a means of secreting the “stolen” merchandise in contemplation of bankruptcy. The trial judge charged that unless the jury was convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that “a false burglary was staged” the defendants must be acquitted. The verdict resolved this issue adversely to the appellants and their main contention upon this, appeal is that the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict.
From the very nature of the case the Government had to make its proof by circumstantial evidence. In a charge of the utmost fairness, to which neither side took any exception, the trial judge reviewed the evidence and the respective contentions of the prosecution and the defense as to what it proved. We shall not again review it in detail but shall refer briefly to some of the suspicious circumstances which tend to support the jury’s inference. The accused explained that they had taken the store on West 17th Street, which was outside the fur district, because labor troubles interfered with business fit their regular factory and show-room at 307 Seventh Avenue; but the labor union had ceased picketing about one month after the store was rented and five months before the burglary. The store was divided into a front room and a back room and from the latter a door led into a toilet at the end of the hall. It had been the practice of the fur finisher Tassa, who occupied the store on the other side of the hall, to enter the back room through the door from the toilet. Shortly before the burglary, Tussa was told that he could no longer enter the back room because the door had to be kept locked on account of the accumulation of fur coats in the back room; but Tassa testified that in fact the door had previously been kept locked and was opened to him only when he knocked. The coats were said to be stored in cartons which was contrary to the trade practice of hanging coats from racks to preserve their shape. Expert testimony was introduced tending to prove that the door from the toilet through which the burglars were supposed to have
Error is assigned to the admission of the testimony of George A. Berly, called as an expert witness as to the condition of the door and lock, his first examination of which was not made until October 13, 1943. However, a proper foundation was laid for the admission of his testimony. Detective Grojean identified photographs as portraying the door and lock as he saw them immediately after the burglary and Berly identified .the same photographs as showing the door and lock he examined. Whether his testimony was inconsistent, as the appellants contend, and .how much weight to give it were matters for the jury.
Finally complaint is made regarding the prosecutor’s summation to the jury. He said with reference to Bernard Licht “I think he lied in putting in answers on his questionnaire * * *” When counsel objected that the court had excluded that, the judge said he had done so and instructed the jury to disregard the argument. While the court had excluded as immaterial evidence of falsification in the questionnaire as to Bernard’s physical condition, it had permitted cross-examination on the more vital issue as to whether Bernard had there falsely claimed that he was the sole support of his parents — more vital because of the Government’s claim that the father, Harry Licht, participated in the business. When the court stopped the prosecutor in his summation, it seems probable that the court had in mind the issue as to the physical condition only; if, however, the court did intend to rule more broadly, it was the court which was then in error because of faulty recollection of the testimony. The court’s earlier rulings on evidence were correct, for obviously testimony as to whether Bernard had lied as to his father’s status on the questionnaire was both relevant and highly important as to his credibility, as well as in connection with the issue of the father’s connection with the business. Again, to meet defense counsel’s appeal to the jury not to destroy all the male members of the Licht family by a verdict of guilt, the prosecutor said:
“A lot has gone on since December 1941. It is unfortunate to see a father and two sons on trial. I do not think you will waste any crocodile tears over the fact that in this particular case we have a father and two sons on trial. A lot more tragic and horrible things have happened-^-”
Thereupon counsel objected that the statement was improper, “dragging the war into this case.” The judge made no ruling on the objection but directed the prosecutor to “Go ahead and sum up.” The prosecutor’s remark was intended to counteract defense counsel’s emotional appeal, several times repeated, not to destroy the ac-cuseds’ family. As to other objections it is sufficient to say that incidental references to the war, just as to other facts of con
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
This case was tried in May 1945, while World War II was still in progress. It has often been held that, when a trial occurs during a war, it is highly prejudicial error for a prosecutor to make irrelevant references thereto.
The evidence of guilt in the instant case is far weaker than in Antonelli. For here the trial judge, in explaining why he granted bail said: “It was merely a circumstantial case. I rather thought the jury mould acquit. I think I expressed my idea at the time that it was not the strongest case in the world and I wouldn’t have been surprised had the jury acquitted,”
In the Antonelli case, the prosecutor mentioned the war only once. Here, five separate times at intervals during his summation, the prosecutor referred to it. Since my colleagues describe but two of those instances, I shall quote all of them:
(1) “I am talking about lies, prewar and postwar varieties, and with the Lichts, there is no change because of the war
(2) Referring to Bernard Licht, he said, “Although it has nothing to do with this case, I think he lied in putting in his answers on his questionnaire * * *” (i. e., his draft questionnaire).
(3) He referred to the two younger defendants as “the young boys, who in 1941 were 28 and 26 respectively * * * ” thus directing attention to the fact that they were within the draft age hut were exempted from military service.4
*462 (4) Referring to the “real burglars,” he said that “there is about as much chance of them showing up as the Japanese have of winning the war * * *”
(5) “A lot has gone on since December 1941.5 It is unfortunate to see a father and son on trial. I do not think you will waste any crocodile tears over the fact that in this particular case we have a father and two sons on trial. A lot more tragic and horrible things have happened * *
With respect to the fifth item, my colleagues say that this remark was perhaps justified because it was intended to counteract the appeal of defense counsel not to break up the family of the accused by sending all the male members of that family to jail. To that suggested justification there are, I think, two answers: (1) The trial judge himself, when he came to sentence the defendants, thought the appeal, not thus to break up the family, was entirely proper, for, noting the jury’s recommendation for leniency as to Harry Licht, he said, “I got the impression during the trial that Harry Licht did what the ordinary father would do, kept his boys in business and helped them along * * * What makes this situation more difficult is that all the members of one family are up for sentence * * * I don’t want to destroy a family more than necessary.” (2) In any event, in seeking to counteract the appeal of defense counsel not to put all the defendants in jail, the prosecutor, while he might properly have said that, if they were guilty, they deserved to be jailed, was not justified, I think, in referring to the irrelevant fact that the war had broken up families.
The government in its brief urges that defense counsel, in objecting to this remark on the ground that it “dragged in the war,” had himself “focussed the jury’s attention on the contrast between the lot of the defendants and that of families bereaved by the war.” But, as courts have frequently observed, when a prosecutor indulges in improper remarks, he puts a defendant’s lawyer in this dilemma: If the lawyer does not object, the remark may be exceedingly prejudicial; if he does object, he may make matters worse.
The court instructed the jury to disregard the second item above quoted. He did so on the sole ground that the evidence concerning Bernard Licht’s questionnaire had been excluded. Since, however,
My reasons for so thinking are stated at length in my dissenting opinion in the Antonelli case; those reasons I believe have been essentially confirmed by the subsequent Supreme Court decisions in Bihn v. United States, supra, and Kot-teakos v. United States, supra.
See, e.g., Viereck v. United States, 318 U.S. 236, 247-248, 63 S.Ct. 561, 87 L.Ed. 734; Hall v. United States, 4 Cir., 256 F. 748, 752; August v. United States, 8 Cir., 257 F. 388, 393; Elmer v. United States, 8 Cir., 260 F. 646, 649; People v. Esposito, 224 N.Y. 370, 373, 121 N.E. 344; People v. Levan, 295 N.Y. 26, 35, 64 N.E.2d 341.
Emphasis added.
This court was reversed in five oí the cases I have just cited; i.e., Kotteakos, Bihn, Bollenbach, Bruno and Berger.
In People v. Esposito, 1918, 224 N.Y. 370, 373, 374, 121 N.E. 344, 345, the district attorney on cross-examination attempted to show that the defendant had claimed exemption because he was a resident alien, “But it failed to elicit the information which the district attorney desired. * * * Nevertheless, in summing up he said: ‘Why did he not answer about the draft questions when he was on the stand, when shown papers in regard to the draft?’” The Court of Appeals .said, “There was no suggestion that the defendant attempted by unlawful means to secure exemption or that he acted otherwise than in accordance with the privilege conferred by law upon resident aliens to secure exemption from selective service. Nevertheless it very well might be that some jury
The date of the Pearl Harbor attack.
Cf. State v. Accardo, 129 La. 666, 56 So. 631, 632.
See note 4 supra.
Since defense counsel in his summation had suggested that there liad been suspicious delay, since 1941, in prosecuting the «ase, I disregard, as responsive to thoSe •comments, the following remarks of the prosecutor: “Since 1941, the F. B. I. have been busy with a lot of things besides bankruptcy cases * * * It is merely due to the war period, nothing more or less * * *”