Judges: Sutherland
Filed Date: 3/15/1869
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
The evidence of Henry Real, a witness called and sworn on behalf of the piisoner, was certainly material. On his cross-examination he was asked by the district-attorney this question: “ Have you ever' been arrested in New York?” His answer was, “I have, sir.” He was then asked, “Do you remember what for?” This question was objected to by the counsel for the prisoner, and appears not to have been answered. The district-attorney then asked this question: “Have you ever been in' the penitentiary?” This question was objected to by the counsel1, for the prisoner. The court then told the witness that he need not answer the question if" he did not want to. The witness then answered : “I will tell the truth ; I was in the penitentiary.” The district-attorney asked: “How long there ?” The witness answered : “ Four months ; innocent of the crime, too.”
Asking the witness whether he had been in the penitentiary was substantially in effect asking him if he had been convicted of a criminal offense, and sentenced to the penitentiary. An answer to the question involved an admission or denial by the witness of such conviction and sentence. Newcomb v. Griswold (24 N. Y., 298), People v. Herrick (13 Johns., 82), King v. Inhabitants of Castle Careinion (8 East, 77), and other cases which might be referred to, tend to show tliat the prisoner had a right to insist that the conviction of the witness of the penitentiary offense, if proved at all, be proved by the record of conviction ; that the witness could not be asked whether he had been convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary, although he did not object; that even on the cross-examination of the witness the conviction of the witness of the crime could not be proved by way of impeachment, by his own admission and consent, if the prisoner objected to such proof.
I cannot say, therefore, that there are not reasonable
Again; considering the evidence of the witness, Real, on his direct examination, which tended to show, if credited, that there was a clinch and a struggle between the prisoner and the deceased, before any shot was fired or any report of a pistol heard, I cannot say that the court was so clearly right in overruling the offer of the prisoner’s counsel to show that the deceased had on several occasions, prior to the killing, beaten and bruised the prisoner to the peril of his life, and bad made threats of violence against him, and that those threats had come to the knowledge of the prisoner, that it is unreasonable that the prisoner should have the opportunity of presenting also the question as tó the admissibility of this evidence for the decision of the general term.
Without adverting to other points or grounds of error urged by the prisoner’s counsel, I think that it is my duty, under the circumstances, to allow the writ of error, and direct that the same shall operate as a stay of proceedings until the opinion and judgment of the general term can be had upon the case. I need not say that I have not come to this conclusion without a most careful examination of the bill of exceptions, and of the questions presented by it. But perhaps I should say that this conclusion Las not been arrived at without consulting with the learned judges who so kindly sat with me when the application was argued.
Writ allowed.
See Peck v. Yorks, 47 Barb., 131; Rathbun v. Ross, 46 Id., 127.