Duffy v. State

135 A. 189, 151 Md. 456, 1926 Md. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 135 A. 189 (Duffy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffy v. State, 135 A. 189, 151 Md. 456, 1926 Md. LEXIS 122 (Md. 1926).

Opinions

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

At half past ten o’clock at night on August 28th, 1925, four men were gathered in a near beer saloon conducted by Harry Adams at 116 East Pratt Street in Baltimore City. It had two rooms, a bar-room and a back room adjacent to it. The bar room was dimly lighted by a single gas j et, the back room was lighted by a “big globe,” and customers entered the saloon by a side door, the front door having been kept closed for about two years. One of the three men in the bar-room, Thomas Geraghty, had a glass of whiskey on the bar before him, Dougherty, the bartender, was behind the bar, and Morris Finn, the third man, was at the bar but not drinking. [459]*459They were discussing the not wholly unseasonable topic of revenue officers and th'eir ways, and speculating upon the probability of a visit from them, when suddenly two men 'entered the room with drawn pistols. The newcomers brought the fourth man, Coady, from the back room, and lined the four men up against the wall in the bar-room, robbed them of their cash and valuables, and escaped. As soon as they had gone the four men at once went out to notify the police, and fortunately found two policemen “standing right outside on the corner.” They vrere taken to detective headquarters and shown a number of pictures. Dougherty and Finn identified a picture of James Cleary as one of the robbers, and subsequently, on October 2nd, 1925, the Philadelphia police, at the request of the Baltimore authorities, arrested him in Philadelphia. At the time of his arrest Cleary wras in an automobile with Joseph Duffy, the appellant, and an Italian boy, John Caput, who were also arrested at the same time, not on any charge then made against them, but because they were with Cleary, and the three were held for the Baltimore police. Subsequently Cleary and Duffy were brought to Baltimore, where they were jointly indicted in four several cases for the robbery of the four men to whom we have referred. On those indictments they were tried and convicted, and upon their conviction Cleary was sentenced to ten years in the Maryland penitentiary in each case, and Duffy to eight years in each case, the sentences of each defendant to run concurrently. From these judgments Duffy appealed. After the sentence Duffy filed in each case a motion to strike out the verdict, sentence and judgment therein, which was overruled, and he also took an appeal in each case from the order overruling such motion. These are the eight appeals brought up by the record in this case.

The legal questions raised by the appeal are presented by eleven exceptions dealing with questions of evidence, and by the order of the court passed in each case overruling the motion to strike out the verdict, judgment and sentence therein.

[460]*460As we have stated, there were present at the robbery only six men, the two robbers and their four victims. Of these fou'r men, Dougherty, the bar-keeper, positively identified Duffy as one of the robbers. Finn said that he “honestly” did not think that Duffy was there at all; Geragthy identified Cleary, but said he “could not tell” who the other man was, and Coady also identified Oleary, but said he would not be able to identify the other man.

Of these four men, Dougherty, who had been pardoned after he had served twelve and a half years of a fifteen-year sentence for “murder,” was first called. He said that the men were in the room about fifteen minutes, and that while he did not remember their “head-gear,” he did remember their faces. He further said that after the robbery he had gone to police headquarters, where he was shown three or four photographs, among which was one of Oleary, which he identified. Another witness had already described the barroom as being forty feet long, with a small light “in the bar,” and counsel for the appellant, for the purpose of discrediting Dougherty’s testimony, by showing that he did not have sufficient time to positively identify Duffy in the dimly lighted room, offered to test his ability to gauge time by “holding a watch on” him. The court refused to permit that) and that ruling is the subject of the first and second exceptions. Experiments of the same general character as that proposed are frequently permitted, and may at times be helpful in testing the ability of a witness to estimate time or distance, and may properly be admitted for that purpose, but whether they shall or shall not be permitted is manifestly within the discretion of the trial court, and in the absence of evidence of a palpable abuse of that discretion, it will not be reviewed. Wigmore on Evidence, pars. 460, 994, 1152. Finding no such evidence in this record, there was in our opinion no error in these rulings.

Morris Finn, a witness for the State, had testified that, when the robbery occurred, Geragthy had a glass of whiskey in front of him, but said that he had never himself “bought [461]*461anything down there.” He was then asked by counsel for the appellant, “But you could get all you wanted, couldn’t you ?” An objection to that question was sustained and that ruling is the subject of the third exception. It was wholly immaterial and irrelevant whether the proprietors of the saloon had sufficient confidence in Finn’s discretion to sell or give him intoxicating liquor, and we find no error in this ruling.

Detective Mahaffey, of the Philadelphia police force, testified that he arrested Oleary, Duffy, and John Caput, together in the same automobile. He was then asked this question: “'Outside of denying that they had committed this crime, they did not give you any explanation of how they happened to be together or anything else, did they?” An objection to that question was overruled, and the witness answered: “I didn’t ask them why they were together.” He was then asked, “But they didn’t give you any explanation as to that ?” An objection to that question was also overruled, and tho witness answered: “They said they did not do it, and that was. all.” These rulings are the subject of the fourth and fifth exceptions. The form of these questions was highly objectionable, but as no point was made of that in the trial court it will not be considered here. Aside from that objection, these rulings appear to be free at least, from reversible error. It is true that the materiality of the questions was rather remote, because no definite inference of Duffy’s guilt or innocence of the crime of which hu was convicted could be drawn from the mere fact that bn was in Cleary’s company more than a month after the crinm was committed, and the fact that Duffy gave no explanation of that association to Mahaffey when he was arrested proved nothing. But the fact was that he was with Oleary at that time, and when Mahaffey was examined there was nothing in the record to show why he was with him, and Mahaffey’s answers certainly could not have injured the appellant, because he only stated what the jury in the absence of any evidence on the point must have inferred. That is, if no explanation of the fact that Duffy and Cleary were together had [462]*462been given, then, so far as the jury were concerned, it would have been unexplained. The appellant contends the defendant had the right to keep silence, and that no inference could be drawn from the fact that he did so. But these questions do not challenge that right; they only inquired whether in fact he did keep silent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 A. 189, 151 Md. 456, 1926 Md. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffy-v-state-md-1926.