Citation Numbers: 36 N.Y.S. 595, 11 N.Y. Crim. 80, 71 N.Y. St. Rep. 649, 98 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 613, 91 Hun 613
Judges: Follett, Parker
Filed Date: 12/30/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The indictment under which the defendant was convicted charged him with having, on the 16th day of December, 1891, at the city and county of New York, while a captain of police, and in charge of the Fifth police precinct of said city, asked, received, and agreed to receive from one Martin N. Edwards, a produce merchant carrying on business in said precinct, four baskets of peaches as a bribe, upon an agreement and understanding that, in
“When I first went Into the station house the captain was not in his room. I inquired for his captain. They said he would be there in a few moments. In a few moments I saw him come out of a back room, and he said, Y am Capt. Stephenson,’ and took me to his private office, unlocked the door, or opened the door, and invited me in. I said to him: ‘Capt. Stephenson, here is a notice that 1 have got of a fine for obstructing the sidewalk. This is the second notice I have received. The first one I paid. I thought it was a mistake, probably, and paid it. Here is the second one I received. What is there about this ? I thought I had an understanding with you that you would take care of my sidewalk.’ He said, ‘That is evidently a mistake. You leave it with me, and I will attend to it for you.’ 1 left the notice with him.”
Notwithstanding this interview, judgment was rendered against him on October 19th, for $5 and costs. As soon as Edwards received notice of this second judgment, he went again to Capt. Stephenson, and in response to the question, “State what happened,” Edwards testified as follows:
“A. I said to him: ‘Capt. Stephenson, here is a notice of judgment against me. I brought the notice around to you some time ago, and you agreed to take care of that. You asked me to leave that notice with you, and you would take care of it. It is evident you haven’t done it. Here is a notice of judgment.’ He says: ‘Damn it, I told so and so to go and attend to that, but he evidently hasn’t done it. You leave this notice of judgment with me, and I will take care of it for you.’ I left it with him. By the Court: Q. Anything else said? A. Yes, sir. Q. Go on. A. I said to him: ‘You sent a man to me to say that you would take fruit from us for taking care of us on the sidewalk. We have sent you the fruit, as you have ordered it from time to time, and how is it you haven’t attended to this notice for us?’ Q. That you have taken fruit? A. We have sent him fruit. Q. For doing what? A. For taking care of us on the walk. Q. What did he say? A. ‘Inasmuch as you have sent.m'e the fruit, I will take care of this notice for you.’ Q. He said that? A. Yes, sir. Q. Anything else? A. He said: ‘It is not customary for me to do this kind of business. I never lay myself liable to these people down town.’ Q. What else? A. ‘Any arrangement that Mr. Kelly sees fit to make with you, or any favors that he wants to extend to you, will be all right, and I will abide by it.’ ”
Edwards testified, also, that about the 10th of November Kelly again came to him and said, “The captain wants $50.” Edwards replied “that he had fulfilled his agreement by furnishing him with fruit.” Kelly answered “that the captain was not satisfied with that, but wanted money,—$50.” Edwards protested that he could not afford to pay the captain the $50, and asked Kelly to see if he
The first question pressed upon our attention is the ruling of the court admitting the evidence of the conversation between Edwards and Policeman Thorne against the objection of the defendant. There is no evidence whatever in this case connecting Thorne with this defendant. There is no evidence tending to show that he was ever defendant’s “private man.” On the contrary, there is evidence that he never was. In the respondent’s brief it is said that Edwards’ testimony is to the effect that defendant admitted that he had sent Thorne to him for the purpose of making an arrangement to have fruit sent to him from time to time. There is no direct evidence to that effect, nor is there any evidence from which such an inference can properly be drawn. The only evidence which it is even pretended tends in that direction has been quoted in full by us. The captain is alleged to have said, “Any arrangement that Mr. Kelly sees fit to make with you, or any favors he wants to extend to you, will be all right, and I will abide by it.” Nothing is said about Thorne. His name is not mentioned. He is not in any way referred to. Indeed, the language used expressly excludes the claim that the captain referred to anything that Thorne had done. He expressly refers to Kelly, and to Kelly only. He is the acknowledged representative, and no one else. The interview occurred almost immediately after the sending of the peaches to the captain at Kelly’s request, and the expression regarding the sending of the fruit, assuming, as we must, that it was made, necessarily refers to Kelly, who was directly and solely named by the defendant in that connection. What Thorne had done occurred six months before. In civil actions ratification would never be predicated upon such evidence. How much less can it be relied upon to establish a criminal act. And yet Edwards was permitted to testify that Thorne came to him and said:
“ T am the captain’s private man. The captain uses considerable fruit, and if you have no objections, he will take fruit from you in place of money for protecting you on the sidewalk.’ I said it was immaterial to us. We would as leave he would take fruit as the money. We would give him fruit. I*600 asked Mm if he had the order for the fruit now. He said, ‘No’; he would come the next day with it.”
Edwards said that he did come the next day with an order for a barrel of apples for the captain, but it does not appear that it was ever delivered to him.
When it is considered that the charge against this defendant was that he agreed, in violation of his duty as a public officer, to accept a bribe as a consideration for protecting Edwards in disobeying the law, the conclusion is inevitable that this evidence must have had great weight with the jury. Indeed, the record is not without direct evidence that the jury attached importance to it, for we learn from it that, after the jury had been charged by the court, and had retired, they returned with a request that the evidence of one of the witnesses be read, after which a juror asked this question:
“Would I be at liberty to ask where this Thorne is? Is he out of the reach of the court?”
The assertion that this evidence was prejudicial to the defendant, and ought not to have been considered by the jury, is so clearly well founded as to be beyond the reach of reasonable controversy. The question is whether this defendant, by proper objection and exception, is in a position to make the point on this appeal. His objection to its admission was seasonably and properly made, and the court, at once appreciating its forcefulness, inquired of the district attorney whether he intended “to connect the defendant with the interview between the witness and officer Thorne.” This inquiry being answered in the affirmative, the court overruled the objection, and in giving the reasons for it said:
“As I understand the district attorney, he says that he will connect this interview with the direct crime for which the defendant is now on trial, and because this interview relates to the receipt of the peaches, I overrule the objection, cautioning the jury again that it is not to try him for the apples, nor is he to be found guilty on this indictment because he sent the apples, but it is to be connected by the district attorney with the crime with which he is charged. If not, I will strike it out.”
The district attorney did not connect it, and the evidence was not stricken out.
It is said that, while the defendant’s objection was in time, it is nevertheless not available to him, because he did not move to strike nut the testimony before the close of the case. There are civil cases in which the courts have indulged in expressions to that effect. Bayliss v. Cockcroft, 81 N. Y. 363. We cannot discover any good reasons for such a rule even in civil actions, and certainly it ought not to obtain in criminal cases, in view of the policy of the law, carefully to guard a. defendant from the possibility of harm from evidence calculated to prejudice a jury rather than to prove the offense charged; nor have we found a criminal case in which the existence of such a rule has been asserted. Such a rule would place a premium upon the recklessness of prosecuting counsel. By a promise to connect, he could deprive a defendant of an exception which, but for it, would be well taken. To assert that a defendant may be deprived of the protection of the law simply upon the asser
The prosecution were permitted, against the objection and exception of the defendant, to prove in detail all of the property, real and personal, owned by the defendant, as well as that possessed by his wife. The learned counsel for the prosecution conducted the examination on this subject in a manner calculated to produce a decided effect upon the minds of the jury. He first showed by the defendant that, when he became a member of the police force, all of his property did not exceed in value $500 or $600. This was followed by proof of the date of his appointment as patrolman; the amount of his salary during the several periods when he was patrolman, sergeant, and captain; the date of his marriage; number of his children; the location of his residence; the fact that he had not inherited any property, except about $1,500; and specifically and in detail he was inquired of as to the sums paid by him for property from time to time,—the result being that it was made to appear that he was worth between $9,000 and $10,000 at the time of the trial. Without any warning or chance for preparation, the defendant was called upon to make such an accounting of his business affairs, covering 17 years of active life, as should satisfy the jury that the property which he or his wife owned was not the fruit of various acts of bribery. The object which the counsel for the prosecution had in mind in offering this evidence is apparent. The defendant was indicted for receiving, as a bribe, four baskets of peaches. In making out the case for the people, the request by Thorne for a barrel of apples, under circumstances already adverted to, was shown. It was made to appear that Kelly told Edwards to send the captain a box of oranges, which was not done, that Edwards expressed four baskets of peaches to the captain, and the Kelly tried to collect of Edwards $50, which he said was for the captain. But as each of the charges was positively denied by the defendant, and his wife had denied that the peaches ever came to the house, the prosecution sought to strengthen its position before the jury by the introduction of evidence from which they should draw the inference that the defendant’s property was not obtained honestly, but was the outcome of á system of bribery, of
It is not pretended, in support of the judgment, that if the people had offered independent evidence of the defendant’s poverty before becoming a policeman, and that the value of his property at the time of the trial was $10,000, such evidence would have been admissible, It is urged, however, that, the defendant having elected to become a witness, the limitations of his cross-examination were within the discretion of the court. This is not a correct statement of the rule. The principle that an accused person who becomes a witness in his own behalf thereby places himself in the attitude of any other witness, in respect to the right of cross-examination, has been announced in many cases. Brandon v. People, 42 N. Y. 265; Connors v. People, 50 N. Y. 240; Stover v. People, 56 N. Y. 315; People v. Casey, 72 N. Y. 394. But the general scope of such a cross-examination is well defined, and the courts will not allow any transgression of the well-understood limitations. In People v. Tice, 131 N. Y. 651, 30 N. E. 494, the leading case cited by the people, the boundaries of a cross-examination of a defendant in a criminal action are held to be that he may be required to answer questions affecting his credibility, or as to matters relative to the issue, although having no relation to his testimony on the direct examination. The opinion also refers to the discretion to be exercised by the trial court on such a cross-examination, and concedes that it may properly restrict it, but denies that it may extend it beyond relevant matters or matters affecting credibility. The rule, and the reason for it, found expression in People v. Brown, 72 N. Y. 571, the court, through Chief Judge Church, saying:
“.I am of the opinion that the cross-examination of .persons who are witnesses in their own behalf, when on trial for criminal offenses, should, in general, be limited to matters pertinent to the issue, or such as may be proved by other witnesses. I believe such a rule necessary to prevent a conviction for one offense by proof that the accused may have been guilty of others. Such a result can only be avoided, practically, by the observance of this rule.”
In People v. Crapo, 76 N. Y. 288, the defendant, who was on trial for burglary, was asked, on cross-examination, if he had been arrested on a charge of bigamy. The court, in holding the question inadmissible, stated .the true rule to be that the disparaging questions must either be relevant to the issue, or such as clearly go to impeach the moral character and credibility of the witness. In People v. Court of Oyer and Terminer, 83 N. Y. 460, the court held that the range and extent of a cross-examination of a defendant in a criminal case is within the discretion of the trial judge, subject, however, to the limitation that it must relate to matters pertinent to the issue, or to specific facts which tend to discredit the witness or impeach his moral character. Other
From these cases we understand the rule of cross-examination of a defendant in a criminal case to be, that he may be inquired of in relation to the facts brought out on his direct examination, as well as of all other facts pertinent to the issue, whether the subject of direct examination or not, and that facts tending to discredit him as a witness, or impeach his moral character, may also be elicited; that while the trial court may, in the exercise of its discretion,, still further restrict the cross-examination, it cannot extend it beyond the limits of such rule. The defendant’s counsel, on his direct examination of the defendant, did not open the door for the cross-examination we are considering. It is not pretended that it was pertinent to the issue before the court, and it need not be argued, we take it, that proof that a witness accu mulated between $9,000 and $10,000 in 17 years, does not tend to discredit him, or impeach his moral character.
It follows that, if the views expressed be sound, the judgment of conviction must be reversed, and a new trial granted.
VAN BRUNT, P. J., concurs.
I cannot concur in the conclusion reached in the prevailing opinion, that the testimony of Edwards and Whispell. detailing the conversation had between themselves and Policeman Augustus J. Thorne, in March, 1891, was irrelevant or incompetent.
Edwards testified:
“He [Thorne] said: T am the captain’s private man. The captain uses considerable fruit, and, if you have no objections, will take fruit from you in place of money for protecting you on the sidewalk.’ ”
Whispell testified:
“Thome said we had a new captain, and he was the captain’s man, and that he was looking after the sidewalk business,—something to that effect,—and suggested fruit in payment for the use or protection of the sidewalk.”
Both Edwards and Whispell testified that on the next day Thorne called, and left the defendant’s card, on which was his address, and that a barrel of apples was sent to him on the same day by the American Express. They testified that in April or May Policeman James Kelly called, and informed them the captain would like to have a box of Florida oranges sent to his house, and they replied they had none. They further testified that, September 15, 1891, pursuant to Kelly’s request, they sent four boxes of peaches to defendant’s house. In September the firm was fined for incumbering the sidewalk, and Edwards testified that he called on the defendant and inquired why he had not been protected, and said to him:
“You sent a man to me to say that you would take fruit from us for taking care of us on the sidewalk. We have sent you the fruit, as you have ordered it, from time to time, and how is it you haven’t attended to this notice for us?"
The defendant replied:
“Inasmuch as you have sent me the fruit, I will take care of this notice for you.”
From May 5,1877, to December 23,1884, the defendant served as a patrolman and roundsman, at an annual salary of $1,200. During this period his pay amounted to $8,050. From January 23, 1884, to December 23, 1887, he served as sergeant, at an annual salary of $1,600. During this period his pay amounted to $6,066. From December 23, 1887, to September 6, 1894, he served as captain, at an annual salary of $2,750. During this period his pay amounted to •over $18,600. During his service of 17 years and 4 months he received in salary more than $32,700; worth when appointed, $500; received from his wife’s estate, $1,500,—$34,700. By his cross-examination it was shown that he had the following property: A mortgage for $3,000; a farm, for which he paid $4,100; a city lot, in the name of his wife, for which he paid $2,000; an interest'in a house, above the mortgages, $2,100,—$11,200. His interest in the house was subject to mortgages amounting to $18,900. On his redirect examination he testified that he was not worth to exceed $10,000. His testimony did not tend to show ill-gotten gains. On the contrary, the inference to be drawn therefrom was that he had not acquired property by blackmail or by bribery. The subjects on which a witness may be cross-examined for the purpose of determining his credibility, as well as the extent of such cross-examination, are largely in the discretion of the trial court, and dependent upon the facts of each case, and when it appears that the credibility of a witness wad strengthened rather than impaired by a cross-examination, even on immaterial subjects, it is not a legal error for which a new trial will be granted. The court, in its instruction to the jury, made no allusion to these facts, and it is not asserted that the prosecuting officer did, and these facts might and may have been urged with great force by the defendant’s counsel to show that the .defendant had not been the recipient of bribes or of blackmail, I am unable to see how the defendant could have been injured by this cross-examination.
It is charged in the indictment that, September 15, 1891, the defendant received from Edwards four baskets of peaches as a bribe for not performing his duty in respect to the sidewalk in front of Edwards’ store. Whether he received the peaches was the crucial issue of fact. Edwards and Whispell swore that he did, and that they were delivered through the American Express Company. The defendant denied it. His wife denied it. A waybill, of which the following is a copy, was introduced in evidence:
The fact that defendant’s name in the waybill was misspelled “Stevenson,” and that No. 2082, instead of 2074, Washington avenue was erroneously inserted by Herger in the delivery sheet, are matters of slight importance, and not sufficient to discredit the documentary evidence and the testimony of three witnesses. Under the circumstances of this case, it is impossible to believe that Edwards, Whispell, and the employés of the express company, in September, 1891, more than three years before this indictment was found, entered into a conspiracy to manufacture these documents. They had no motive. The defendant and his wife testified that the peaches were not received. The wife swore that the signature in the delivery sheet was not hers. The defendant swore that the signature did not resemble the handwriting of his wife, and also that it might look a little like it. Upon this conflicting evidence, the conflicting testimony of the defendant and Edwards in respect to their interview at the station house, and evidence in regard to the prosecution of Edwards for violating the ordinance relating to sidewalks, and the discontinuance of some of those prosecutions after the last interview at the station house, and other evidence which need not be referred to, this case was submitted to the jury, under instructions which were eminently fair, and not unfavorable to the defendant, and he was convicted. I am unable to find any error calling for a reversal of the judgment.
Code Or. Proc. § 542. “After hearing the appeal the court must give judgment, without regard to technical errors or defects or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”
The judgment should be affirmed.