Colt v. People

1 Park. Cr. 611
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Park. Cr. 611 (Colt 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
Colt v. People, 1 Park. Cr. 611 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

The Chancellor. —

This is an application on the part of John C. Colt, who has been convicted of the crime of murder, [616]*616for the allowance of a writ of error to the court of Oyer and Terminer of the city and county of New York, to remove the record into the Supreme Court, and for a certificate that there is probable cause to stay the proceedings upon the judgment, which has been pronounced against the prisoner.

The questions arising upon the writ of error have already-been before the Supreme Court, and were decided against the prisoner there; and the avowed object of his counsel is to carry his case ultimately to the court for the Correction of Errors. But they suppose that as the court of Oyer and Ter-miner stayed its judgment upon the verdict of the jury, and permitted the case to be carried before the Supreme Court before sentence, there is now no other way to get the case before the court of dernier resort, but by carrying it again before the Supreme Court by a writ of error; and after that court shall have affirmed the judgment, which has been given pursuant to the former direction of that court, to sue out a second writ of error, from the court of dernier resort, directed to the Supreme Court.

Provided the prisoner’s counsel are right in supposing they can not now go directly to the Court of Errors, which I am inclined to think is .the fact, and if a writ, of error from the Supreme Court to the court of Oyer and Terminer will lie, in such a case, the prisoner’s execution must necessarily be suspended until these forms of law are gone through with, in case of the allowance of this writ; should the governor think proper to suspend the execution of the sentence for that reason alone. But necessary delay, which the forms of law require, is no ground for refusing the writ, in a proper case. It only shows that the legislation which allowed criminal cases to be carried before the Supreme Court before judgment, was highly inexpedient; or that the court in which the prisoner is tried should not permit counsel to try experiments of that kind, by a delay of the sentence, except in cases of great doubt and difficulty.

Indeed, even in capital cases, it can seldom be necessary thus to delay the sentence; for the governor is authorized to [617]*617take the opinion of the attorney general, and of all the high judicial officers of the state, in such cases, before he permits the execution of the sentence. And it would be almost a matter of course for him to suspend the execution of a sentence until the case could be brought before the Supreme Court, and decided upon a writ of error, if he or any of those officers entertained a doubt as to the legality of the conviction. And in cases not capital, the judges of the court who try the prisoner certainly ought not to stay the sentence, and burthen the county with the expense of supporting the convict until the case can be carried to the Supreme Court, when they have no doubt as to the correctness of the conviction, as the statute provides for a stay of proceedings after sentence, by the order of a justice of the Supreme Court or circuit judge.

Writs of error, in cases not capital, issue of course; but they do not stay the execution of the sentence, without an express order to that effect,- from a circuit judge or a judge of the Supreme Court. In capital cases, however, the law has provided that no writ of error shall be issued unless allowed by the chancellor, or one of the justices of the Supreme Court, or a circuit judge; upon notice given to the attorney general, or to the district attorney of the county where the conviction wms had. This provision of the statute necessarily implies a duty, on the part of the officer to whom the application for the allowance of the writ is made, to disallow the same if he has no reason to doubt the legality of the conviction of the prisoner.

All the justices of the Supreme Court having declined to allow a writ of error in this case, and the application having now been renewed before me, and counsel having been heard at length thereon, I have carefully examined the whole testimony in the case, as well as the particular questions referred to by counsel on the argument as grounds of error, to see if there was any thing therein which could justify me in interfering, by the allowance of this writ.

The first error relied upon relates to the organization of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, before which the prisoner was [618]*618tried, convicted and sentenced; the questions arising upon which point I shall consider after examining the objections to the decisions of the court upon the trial, which the counsel for the. prisoner have thought of sufficient importance to call my attention to on the argument.

The first objection raised at the trial was to the refusal of the court to delay the trial two or three days, after the initiatory proceedings had commenced, by calling the jurors as directed by law, to enable the prisoner’s counsel to examine the new list of additional jurors summoned under the statute. This was a matter of discretion in the court, if the court was authorized to postpone the trial at all, after the commencement of the initiatory proceedings, by an attempt to get a jury in court for the trial of this particular case. And I am satisfied that discretion was not improperly exercised. The summoning so large a number of additional jurors was a matter of sound discretion, to be exercised by the court with a view to get a sufficient number who were qualified and competent to discharge the duty, from which a full jury could be obtained.

Such discretion must of course be exercised upon the knowledge which the court possessed out of the case, of the probable effects which a report of the facts in the public papers and otherwise might have had in biasing the minds of jurors so as to disqualify them from serving on the trial. And although the particular circumstances which operated upon the minds of the judges to induce them to order so large a number to be summoned can not appear upon the record, the result which does appear conclusively shows that the number ordered to be summoned was not unnecessarily large. For out of the nineteen jurors who answered to their names when the attempt to em-pannel the jury first commenced, and the additional three hundred summoned by the sheriff, but two hundred and twenty-five attended. Of these, twenty-seven were excused from serving, for legal causes, one hundred and sixty-nine were challenged for cause and were found to have made up their opinions upon the case, and eighteen more challenged pen nptorily by the prisoner. So that but eleven jurors were obtained from the [619]*619whole list, and it was still found necessary to award a tales to complete the jury.

The objection that the prisoner was not permitted to introduce testimony to sustain the character for truth and veracity of his own witness, Caroline Henshaw, who was not attempted to be impeached, is clearly untenable. The case of People v. Rector, (19 Wend. 569,) which is relied upon to sustain this objection, although it went farther than I before supposed the principle had ever been carried, is a very different one from this. Here the prisoner himself is compelled to call a witness and show that she is living with him as his mistress and not his wife, to render her competent, and to enable him to prove facts which he wished to get before the jury, and which could only be known to her from lodging with him.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Park. Cr. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colt-v-people-nysupct-1842.