Cox v. . the People

80 N.Y. 500, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 119
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 80 N.Y. 500 (Cox v. . the People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. . the People, 80 N.Y. 500, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 119 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

This is a writ of error, brought to review the conviction of the plaintiff in error, in the Court of General Sessions of the city and county of Yew York, of the crime of murder in the first degree, in killing one Jane De Forrest Hull, on the 11th day of June, 1879.

' The general facts are that the prisoner, during the nighttime, burglariously entered the house of the deceased, and while engaged in stealing jewelry and other property in her bedroom awakened the deceased, and thereupon the prisoner went to the bed where the deceased was lying, and a struggle ensued between them. The next morning the deceased was found lying upon the bed dead. Her limbs and arms were tied; there were bandages about her eyes and over the mouth, aud a dress was wound around her neck. Her face and hands were discolored, and there was an appearance as of foam having issued from her mouth. The trunk of the *509 deceased which was in the room where she slept had been opened and many of the articles which she was accustomed to keep in it lay scattered about the floor. A watch and chain and several articles of jewelry belonging to the deceased were missing. The prisoner was arrested in Boston a few days after the homicide, and the watch and some of the articles of jewelry were found upon his person, and with trifling exceptions all the-missing jewelry was traced to his. possession. Various questions were raised and exceptions taken by the prisoner’s counsel on the trial, and we shall proceed to state the conclusions we have reached upon the points to which the prisoner’s counsel has called our attention.

First. The prisoner’s counsel, at the commencement of the-trial interposed a challenge in writing signed by the prisoner but not verified, to the array of jurors, which recited the various steps and proceedings prescribed by statute to be taken by the commissioner of jurors and other officers in the city of New York, in the preparation of jury lists and the selection and drawing of jurors for the courts in that city and it then proceeded to negative seriatim the performance by the officers of the various acts and duties imposed upon them by the jury law. The district-attorney demurred orally to the challenge, on the grounds among others, of informality of the statement of the matters alleged in the challenge, and the omission of the prisoner to verify the same. The court sustained the demurrer and overruled the challenge, and the prisoner excepted. The jurors were then called, and all who-answered to their names were either excused or peremptorily challenged except three who took their seats in the jury box, but were not at this time sworn as jurors. The original panel having been exhausted, a second panel w:as drawn, and all the jurors who appeared except four were in like manner excused or peremptorily challenged and the four not excused or challenged likewise took their seats in the jury box unsworn. At this stage of the proceedings the court adjourned for the day. On the fol *510 lowing morning at the opening of the court, the judge announced to the prisoner’s counsel that, on more mature ■consideration he had concluded to allow the counsel to renew the challenge and to accept it without a verification, -and, upon its traverse by the district-attorney the court would proceed to try the issues raised thereby and further stated that if necessary the case could be commenced over again, and that the court would let the seven jurors in the box who had not been swprn stand aside. The district- . attorney thereupon offered to traverse the facts alleged in the challenge if renewed, and to consent that the seven jurors • might stand aside. The prisoner’s counsel insisted that it was too late to remedy the error if any had been committed, and in answer to a question whether he objected to accepting the offer of the court, and insisted upon going on with the trial, replied that he did. The challenge not being renewed, the - drawing of the jury was completed, and two of the jurors who sat in the case were selected from the panel to which the challenge was interposed, and the remainder from an extra panel' to which the prisoner made no objection.

The challenge was not a plea to the indictment, and was not within the statute (2 R. S., 731, § 1), which declares ' that no plea in abatement or other dilatory plea to an indictment shall be received by any court unless the party offering such plea shall prove the truth thereof by affidavit -or other evidence. We are not aware of any rule of law which requires the verification of a challenge to the array before it shall be received and if any such rule exists, a ■demurrer which admits the facts alleged, would'not seem to be a proper way to raise the objection, of want of verification.

It is strenuously insisted by the counsel for the People that the demurrer was well taken for the reason that the challenge while it negatives the doing of the various acts and things required by the jury law to bo done by the various officials .at the precise time, or in the exact mode pointed out by the *511 statute, nevertheless does not exclude the inference that they were in fact done, although not in strict conformity with the statutory directions. It is well settled that mere irregularities in the drawing of grand and petit jurors, is not a ground for reversing a conviction, unless it appears that they operated to the injury or prejudice of the prisoner. (Friery v. The People, 2 Keyes, 425; Ferris v. The People, 35 N. Y., 125; Dolan v. The People, 64 id., 485.) We deem it unnecessary to examine critically the averments in the challenge to the array to determine whether they are obnoxious to the objection suggested, or were consistent with the fact of a substantial compliance with the directions of the statute, or whether the averments disclose such a departure therefrom in fundamental and essential particulars, as to deprive the array of the character of a legal panel. We deem the decision of this question unnecessary for the reason that we are of opinion that assuming the facts alleged constitute in law a good ground of challenge to the array, and that the demurrer was erroneously sustained, yet the prisoner by declining to avail himself of the offer of the court to re-open the question, and by insisting that the trial should proceed, precluded himself from insisting upon the exception to the ruling of the court sustaining the demurrer, and must be regarded as having abandoned the challenge. The prisoner, if he had accepted the offer would have been placed in the same position as he was ■ at the time the challenge was interposed. It is not analogous to the case where illegal' evidence has been admitted on the trial, and the error is sought to be remedied by the court withdrawing it from the consideration of the juiy. The illegal evidence having been receivéd its injurious influence upon the jury may not be removed although it is formally Avithdrawn from their consideration. But neither a party in a criminal or civil case has a vested right on appeal to the benefit of an exception to an erroneous ruling, when the court on the trial corrects or offers to correct the error, and the party against whom it is made refuses to consent to the correction or to avail himself of *512

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.Y. 500, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-the-people-ny-1880.