Balbo v. People

26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 424
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 424 (Balbo v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balbo v. People, 26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 424 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.:

Three grounds of error are alleged on the part of the prisoner :

First. That his challenge of Edward H. Betts, one of the jurors, was improperly overruled.

Second. That the exception to the admission of the confessions of the prisoner should have been sustained ; and

Thirdly. That the evidence failed to show the premeditation and deliberation required by the statute to constitute murder in the first degree.

The juror Betts, when called was first challenged by the prisoner’s counsel for principal cause, on the ground that he had formed an opinion prejudicial to the prisoner. He was sworn as a witness on that challenge, and testified after learning the nature of the case on trial that at the time of the occurrence he read of it in a newspaper, and had formed an opinion at the time ; that he supposed he had that opinion still; that he knew nothing about the case, and did not suppose he had any impression on his mind which would prevent his acting fairly and impartially in the case. He was then asked: “ Have you any doubt that you can give a verdict upon the evidence that shall come from the witnesses ? ” He answered : “ Certainly, I can do that. Q. Without being influenced or biased by any opinion ? A. I think so.”

Upon this evidence the court overruled the principal challenge. He was then challenged to the favor, and the prisoner’s counsel requested that the examination of the juror already taken be made applicable to the challenge to the favoi\ The request was granted. On further examination, he testified in substance that he had some business with the Italians; that they were a race he was “not particularly fond of, and did not think much of judging from [426]*426those we have here; ” that his opinion, in regard to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, was still in his mind, and it was a positive and clearly marked opinion at the time, and he thought it. was still; that he had not talked the matter over with any other-person, but probably had read it to his family at the time in the-morning paper ; that he thought he indistinctly remembered that-the statements he read in the paper were the evidence taken before the coroner’s inquest, and he thought it was from those statements that he formed his opinion ; that he read about it just as he read other items in the newspaper ; that he had no particular interest in the case, and had no knowledge of the circumstances of the case, except so far as he had read them in the papera ; that, if the statement which he saw in the papers was. contradicted in the next day’s paper, he would believe the contradiction ; that his impression was based upon the assumption that there probably is some truth in any report he saw in the papers ; that he made a distinction between an opinion and an impression ; that he should call it an impression as to the truth or falsity of what he saw in the newspapers, if he just read it casually and it slipped out of his mind and was then afterwards, revived ; that he did not know that he had anything more than that in his mind about this case; that he knew nothing about, what the prisoner’s defence was ; that all he remembered about it was that a man killed his wife in Rose street; that it would require strong evidence to remove the opinion that ho now entertained in regard to the case. To the court he answered that he. did not mean to say anything different from what he had said before, that while he might have these views in his mind, he did not suppose it would bias or influence or prejudice him in any maimer in the consideration of the evidence in the case ; that he believed it would not; that he believed he could give full weight and effect to the evidence, the same as though he had no opinion.

Upon this evidence and as the case states “from observation of the appearance of the juror, his age, intelligence, his manner-on the stand, and his answers to the questions,” the court found that he was fair and impartial and unprejudiced, and held the challenge not true, to which the prisoner then and there excepted.

It is very clear, within all the cases since the enactment of [427]*427chapter 475 of the Laws of 1872 (Laws of 1872, p. 1133), that the challenge for principal cause was properly overruled. Indeed, no exception was taken to the decision of the court on that challenge on behalf of the prisoner. At the request of the prisoner’s, counsel, all the evidence taken to that challenge was regarded as taken also upon the challenge to ihe favor.

The Court of Appeals, in Greenfield v. People (74 N. Y., 277), construed chapter 427 of the Laws of 1873 (Laws of 1873, p. 681), as providing that both challenges, for principal cause and-to the favor, can be reviewed by an appellate court on questions, of law and questions of fact. But this liberal construction of that statute does not change the duty of the court, in reviewing questions of fact, to consider that the trial court passes primarily upon-the questions with great advantage of circumstances that cannot possibly appear in the return of the written evidence. That' court has, as formerly triors always had, where the challenged' juror was made the witness of the challenger, the opportunity of' observing his appearance, demeanor and manner of testifying, and of being governed in some degree by those material circumstances. In this case, the bill of exceptions shows that the court passed upon the challenge as well “from observation of the appearance, of the juror, his age, intelligence, manner on the stand and his. answers to questions,” as from the evidence offered on the challenge, and from these several things found as matter of fact that the challenge was not true. We have no doubt that this was a. correct mode of discharging the duty of the court in passing upon the challenge to the favor; and, although some of the phrases off the several statements of the witness might, if detached and considered by themselves, bring the case within Greenfield v. The People, above cited, yet, considered as a whole in the light of the circumstances above mentioned, we are of opinion that the court properly held that they failed to establish that the juror was not legally competent, within the provisions of chapter 475 of the-Laws of 1872, above cited.

The juror seemed to be conscientious and intelligent, and, although some of his answers seem to conflict with others, yet they are all easily reconciled to the general idea that his reading-of the circumstances of the killing had produced an impression [428]*428on his mind to the effect that the prisoner had killed his wife, and that that impression, on the circumstances being again recalled, was revived, and would remain until shown to be without foundation, but that it would not affeet his ability to pass upon the evidence offered in the case, and determine the question of the guilt or innocence of the prisoner without being influenced or affected by his impression or opinion.

It cannot be doubted but that the Legislature intended that the rule, which in terms is applied to challenges for principal cause, should be extended by the courts to challenges to the favor, and that where the court was able to find from the evidence on the latter challenge that the juror is indifferent, within the rule provided by the act of 1872, he should be accepted. Any other construction makes the act a mere delusion, to embarrass and hinder the administration of justice. We consider the facts of this case clearly within the case of Pender v. The People (18 Hun, 560), and

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Related

The People v. . Rogers
18 N.Y. 9 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
The People v. . Wentz
37 N.Y. 303 (New York Court of Appeals, 1867)
Greenfield v. . People
74 N.Y. 277 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balbo-v-people-nysupct-1879.