Citation Numbers: 253 A.D. 137, 2 N.Y.S.2d 433, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5127
Judges: Edgcomb, Lewis
Filed Date: 12/23/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/28/2024
In the determination of this appeal, which involves the review of a record upon which the defendant has been found guilty of attempted rape in the first degree, no useful purpose will be served by recounting the sordid details of proof which have led to his conviction. It is enough to say that upon the evidence before us the question of defendant’s guilt of the particular crime for which he has been convicted is close. So close it is, in fact, that the jury’s verdict may well have been influenced by prejudicial questions addressed by the district attorney to the defendant upon recross-examination, the impropriety of which we cannot disregard under section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The defendant, as a witness in his own behalf, had been subjected to a searching cross-examination by the district attorney. Thereafter, at the close of all the evidence, he was recalled by Ms counsel to answer two questions following rebuttal proof by the People. Then followed defendant’s recross-examination by the district attorney wMch was in part as follows: “ Q. Are you the man who sent her employer at the Gas Company, what purported to be a memorandum receipt that she paid a doctor for an abortion? Did you send that to her? A. No, sir. Q. Are you the fellow when she was up at the Hotel Niagara with another boy to a dance, that tucked under the windshield wiper of Ms car, a little envelope saying, ‘ For Mary,’ with a couple of c- [contraceptive appliances] in it? A. No, sir. Q. Are you the fellow who did that? A. No, sir. Q. Are you the fellow who, the mght before last, appeared on her father’s lawn and left a couple of c-[contraceptive appliances] on Ms lawn? * * * A. No, sir.”
The mere recital of these questions — contaimng as they do the implication that the defendant was guilty of the despicable conduct wMch they suggest — when considered with the fact that there is not a word of proof in the record to support the implication, is sufficient to condemn them as MgMy prejudicial to defendant’s rights.
In the prosecution of a crime a verdict of guilt is not the sole objective. Justice requires that proof of the offender’s guilt should be made by those means only wMch are fair to the accused and Ms rights under the law. It has been recently said: “ ‘ We must give to any defendant the right to be tried for the crime with wMch he is charged, and upon evidence proving or tending to prove that crime, umnflueneed by irrelevant facts and circumstances wMch tend to prejudice or mislead the jury. Issues must be left clear, not smothered or in a haze.’ ” ' (People v. Robinson, 273 N. Y. 438, 446; People v. Posner, Id. 184, 190.) “ Persistent repetition of improper questions tending to cast prejudice on a party defendant * * * discredit any verdict.” (Pedersen v. Union Ry. Co., 181 App. Div. 885.)
Clearly the questions we are now considering were calculated to cast prejudice upon the defendant. And being addressed to him as the case closed the jury may well have entered upon their deliberations with the suggestion fresh in mind that the defendant had been guilty of behavior of a nature and quality which would at once arouse an unwarranted, hostile reaction against him — unwarranted because the implication which arose from the questions was wholly unsupported by proof.
The fact that the recross-examination which we now condemn was not challenged upon the trial by objection by defendant’s counsel does not prevent us at this time from correcting what we believe to have been “manifest injustice.” (People v. Burgess, 153 N. Y. 561, 575; People v. Viscio, 241 App. Div. 499, 503; People v. Stiglin, 238 id. 407,420; Code Crim. Proc. § 527.)
The judgment of conviction should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur, except Edgcomb, J., who dissents and votes for affirmance in a separate memorandum. Present — Sears, P. J., Edgcomb, Crosby, Lewis and Cunningham, JJ.