Gaffney v. . the People

50 N.Y. 416, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 439
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 416 (Gaffney 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
Gaffney v. . the People, 50 N.Y. 416, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 439 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

Upon the trial of this indictment the regular panel of jurors having been exhausted and but five competent jurors having been obtained, the counsel for the prisoner moved the court to order and direct that talesman to complete the jury be drawn from the list of jurors for the Superior Court of Buffalo, returned by the assessors of the city to the clerk of that court.

The court denied the motion and directed the sheriff to summon fifty tales jurors; and from the jurors so summoned, according to this direction, the remaining seven jurors were selected to try the indictment.

The counsel for the prisoner excepted to the refusal of the court to grant the motion, and to the order made.

The Superior Court of the city of Buffalo was created by chapter 96 of the Laws of 1854.

By sections 9 and 10 of the act, civil jurisdiction in specified *420 cases was conferred upon the court, and by section 31 jurisdiction was given to inquire by grand jury of all crimes, and to try and determine all indictments found in said court, or sent there by another court, for crimes committed in the city of Buffalo.

By the twenty-eighth section a list of petit jurors, to serve at said court from the residents of the city, is to be made by the assessors of the city and returned and filed with the clerk of the court in May of each year; and the twenty-ninth section declares that, from the list so returned the clerk, in the presence of one of the justices of the court shall, at least fourteen days prior to any term of the court for the trial of issues of fact by a jury, draw thirty-six persons, or such other number as the court may order, to -serve as petit jurors; and that the persons so drawn shall be summoned by the’ sheriff of Erie county, in the manner prescribed by law for summoning jurors in the Supreme Court.

The order made on the trial was made in pursuance of the provisions of section. 3, title 5, chap. 2, part 4 of the Revised Statutes, which provides as follows: “When twenty-four jurors, duly drawn and summoned, do not appear, or when, by reason of there being one or .more jurors impanneled, or in consequence of jurors being set aside, or for any other reason there shall not remain twenty-four ballots, containing, the names of jurors then attending, the court shall order the sheriff to summon from the bystanders, or from the county at large, so many persons qualified to serve as jurors as shall be necessary to make, at least, twenty-four jurors, from whom a jury for the trial of the indictment may be selected.”

If this section applies to the trial of indictments in the Superior Court of Buffalo, there was no error in the order made. One of the contingencies specified in the section had arisen, upon which the authority given by the .section could be .exercised.

The chapter in which the section is found is entitled: ■“ Of proceedings in criminal cases.” The title preceding the *421 one containing this section relates to the return and summoning of grand jurors, with their powers and duties: the finding of indictments and proceedings thereon, and other proceedings in criminal eases. And the title containing the section in question is entitled: Of trials for offences, bills of exception, and other proceedings incident to trial.”

There is nothing in the act establishing the Superior Court, of the city of Buffalo, excluding the application to that court of the general provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to the finding and trial of indictments, except in respect to the drawing the panel of jurors for the terms of that court. Many of the provisions manifestly apply.

There is no provision in the Superior Court act in relation to the review of judgments on conviction in criminal cases.

The right of defendant to tender a bill of exceptions is given by section twenty-one of the title in which section three in question is found, and in the same title are provisions relating to evidence to be given on trial of certain indictments, and awarding separate trials in case of persons jointly indicted for a felony, when demanded by either.

That these and other provisions in the title have a general application as well to the Superior Court as to other courts of record having criminal jurisdiction is apparent.

And we see no reason why section three should not be deemed also to apply to that court. If it does not apply, then, until the amendment of the Superior Court act in 1857, there was no provision of law whereby tales jurors could be summoned.

The twenty-ninth section of the act of 1854, before referred to, was amended by chapter 754 of the Laws of 1857, by adding thereto as follows: The court for the trial of issues of fact or for -the trial of indictments may, in its discretion, order talesmen to be drawn from said list, and may order the sheriff to summon the same forthwith, and if any person so drawn as a talesman shall not be found by the sheriff the court may cause the name of such person to be returned to the box.”

*422 It is claimed that by this amendment the power of the court to summon additional jurors is limited to the method therein prescribed.

But it is to be observed that the statute of 1857 does not purport to repeal the prior statute applicable to the same subject, nor is there any repugnancy or inconsistency between them. The court by that statute is authorized in its discretion to pursue the method, in procuring additional jurors, therein prescribed, but that method is not in terms or by nócessary implication exclusive.

-^The next question arises upon the admission by the court of a written statement made by one Curran, a witness on the part of the prisoner, offered in evidence by the prosecution.

The theory of the case and the proof on the part of the people was that the death of Fahey was caused by a pistol-shot, fired by the prisoner, in Sweeney’s saloon, in Buffalo. The deceased was found by the officers in a dying condition on the sidewalk, a street distance from the saloon. The witness, Curran, testified on behalf of the prisoner, that the deceased, the prisoner, the witness, and some other persons, were together in the saloon shortly before the pistol-shot was fired; that Fahey left the saloon before the others, leaving behind the prisoner and some other persons, including the witness, engaged in playing cards; that about twenty-five minutes afterward a report came to the door that a man outside was hurt, and that the prisoner with the others, then rose from the table where they were sitting and went out and found the deceased lying upon the sidewalk, wounded and dying.

This was material testimony, and, if true, was inconsistent with the theory of the guilt of the prisoner.

It appeared from the evidence that Curran and others were arrested on the morning of the occurrence, and were detained for examination.

The witness, Curran, testified on his cross-examination that while in custody, and on the day of the homicide, he made a *423

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. 416, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaffney-v-the-people-ny-1872.