Judges: Giegerich
Filed Date: 7/19/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The defendant was convicted under an indictment which charged that she procured and placed in the custody of one George A. Miller two women for immoral purposes, to wit, to enter and become inmates of a certain house of prostitution in the city of Seattle, in the state of Washington, and to live a life of prostitution in such house, and knowingly received a sum of money for and on account of her procuring and placing such women in Miller’s charge for such immoral purposes.
Section 3460, subd. 4, of the Penal Law (chapter 40 of Consol. Laws) provides as follows:
“Every person who shall knowingly receive any money or other valuable thing for or on account of procuring and placing in the custody of another person for immoral purposes any woman, with or without her consent, is punishable by imprisonment not exceeding five years and a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars.”
A careful examination of the record has satisfied me that the relief asked for should be granted. All the evidence in the case showed that Miller, in whose custody the women in question were claimed to have been placed, had no intention of making use of them in a house of prostitution in Seattle or elsewhere, or of making any immoral use of them; but, on the contrary, that he was a person employed by the district attorney to procure evidence upon which convictions under the statute mentioned could be secured; and that the women in
I also entertain grave doubt whether there was not error in permitting the people to ask upon cross-examination of Alice Milton, one of the two women claimed to have been procured by the defendant and placed in the custody of Miller, whether she (Alice Milton) had not stated on a former occasion that she went to the defendant’s apartment because one Sadie Isaacs had told her that the defendant would introduce her to a man who had a house in Seattle. The prejudicial effect of this testimony is apparent from the fact that the witness Milton had previously testified that she and the other woman (Belle Woods) claimed to have been procured had a conversation with Miller at the house of prostitution of which they were inmates, and at which conversation the defendant was not present, and at which Miller asked them to go to Seattle and made arrangements with them to go, and that they had told him they would go. Substantially the same testimony on this point was given by the witness Belle Woods when she was called upon to testify. As the matter stood, therefore, the evidence on behalf of the people was that the defendant procured the two women for Miller; whereas, the evidence of these women themselves was that Miller himself procured their consent to accompany him. The question as to the witness’ former statement to Sadie Isaacs was asked ostensibly to contradict the testimony that the wit'ness gave upon the stand; but it went further than this, and improperly brought before the jury a statement made by Sadie Isaacs, who was in no wise connected with the defendant, concerning a purpose of the defendant, and may easily have been the controlling circumstance which determined the finding of the jury on the point.
“The defendant comes to the bar with the presumption of innocence.”
A request was made for a further charge that “the presumption of the defendant’s innocence exists from the beginning to the end of the' trial, and is her property throughout the trial,” which was declined. The Code of Criminal Procedure provides (section 389) that “a defendant is presumed to be innocent until the contrary is proven.” In Abbott’s Trial Brief, Criminal Cases (2d Ed.) p. 658, it is said that the presumption of innocence accompanies an accused person throughout the trial. In People v. Ray, 36 App. Div. 389, it is said, at page 394, 55 N. Y. Supp. 410, that a person indicted for an offense is entitled to the benefit of this presumption until the case is submitted to the jury, and that, although the evidence may be such as to call upon the defendant to explain, nevertheless the presumption of his innocence continues throughout the trial, and the burden of proof remains on the prosecution at the close of the evidence just as it did at the opening, citing Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Siefke, 144 N. Y. 354, 39 N. E. 358.
Other grounds are urged in support of the application, But it is not necessary to discuss all of them.
For the reasons above stated, I am satisfied that the certificate should be allowed.
Motion granted. Give notice of settlement.