People of the State of New York v. . Dowling

84 N.Y. 478, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 421
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 84 N.Y. 478 (People of the State of New York v. . Dowling) 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
People of the State of New York v. . Dowling, 84 N.Y. 478, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 421 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

*481 Folger, Ch. J.

We think that the ground for the reversal of the judgment, stated in the opinion at General Term, is too close. It rests finally upon the motion of the prisoner’s counsel to strike out the count in the indictment for burglary and the granting of the motion by the court, and the striking from the indictment a count for burglary. What this motion meant and what it was understood to mean by the court, and what the granting of it was understood by court and counsel to mean, and what the striking out of a count meant, is shown by the next sentence in the error-book. There the prisoner’s counsel moves to quash the count in the indictment for larceny, which motion the court denied, thinking that there was proof enough to go to the jury on the taking from the cars. Now, there was not in the indictment a single and simple count for burglary, nor was there a single and simple count for larceny. That count in the indictment that charged a burglary, the same count charged a larceny, and vice versa. If the motion made to strike out the count for 'burglary meant to ask for a striking out of the whole count that charged burglary and larceny, why, when the motion was granted, did counsel at once move to quash the count for larceny ? And why did the court hear to the motion but deny it % If the striking out of the count for burglary took out the whole of the count in which burglary was charged, there was left no count for larceny to be the subject of a motion to quash. The motion to quash the count for larceny recognized that there was a count there to quash. But it was not there, unless it was in the count for burglary and larceny. Now, if the striking out a count for burglary struck out the count for burglary and larceny, the retaining the count for larceny and making it the subject of a motion to quash retained the count for burglary and larceny. Besides, to ask to strike from the indictment the count for burglary was to ask to strike out what was not there, for there was no single and simple count for burglary in the indictment; and to grant the motion was to grant what could not be done, and to strike it out was to strike out nothing. To be as technical as is the position of the defendant in error, there was no count for bur- *482 glory in. the indictment; and to make and grant a motion to strike out a count for burglary was to do a vain thing. A count for burglary is one that charges a breaking and entering with a specified felonious intent, and stops there. When a count goes farther, and after charging a breaking and entering with a felonious intent also charges the doing of that which' was the intent in the breaking in, it becomes a count different ' from one for burglary simply; as, if the intent charged is to steal, take and carry away certain goods there being, and the asportavit is also charged, it ■ becomes a count for burglary and larceny. When, then, the court said, Strike out the count in the indictment for burglary, it cannot be held, in strictness^ to have said, Strike out the count for burglary and larceny, for that the latter is a thing which the language of the court did not take hold of. We are at liberty, then, as there was not that in the indictment upon which the court could do that which its language, strictly taken, would show it did, to seek just what the court meant to do, arid just'what it did, by language that can have no literal application to the indictment. From the fact of the next step in the case being the motion to quash the count in the indictment for larceny, entertained but denied by the court, and from the fact that the court charged the jury at some length on the'matter of the larceny alleged, and that the counsel for the prisoner took no exception to the charge in this particular, it is plain that the court and the counsel deemed that the plaintiff in error was on trial for larceny, from the commencement until the jury gave their verdict. And we think that what was .meant, and what was done at the trial, was no more than to hold that the prisoner could not, on the evidence, be convicted of burglary, and that the only charges for the consideration of the jury were that of receiving stolen goods, knowing them to be stolen, and that of larceny of thé goods.

Therefore, while we have, for other reasons, concluded to affirm, in effect, the judgment of the General Term reversing the conviction, and ordering a venire de nova, we hold that the indictment has not been affected, and that the new trial, if any *483 there is, must be had upon the same indictment as'it was presented by the grand jury, with a limitation soon to be expressed herein.

But there is another question, arising under the inexact verdict of the jury. By it, the prisoner was found guilty of larceny. It made no mention of the count for receiving stolen goods, nor of the charge of burglary contained in the count for burglary and larceny. Being silent as to those, while it found specifically upon the charge of larceny, it was equivalent to a verdict of acquittal on the count for receiving, and of the charge of burglary (Guenther v. The People, 24 N. Y. 100); and where on a trial on ail indictment of different counts, there is a specific verdict of guilty on one count, and the verdict is silent as to the other counts, and there is a conviction on the verdict of guilty, it is a bar to further prosecution on the counts on which the verdict is silent. (Id.) So much is settled in this State. Yet there is a further question. The prisoner has brought his writ of error, the General Term have reversed the conviction, and in effect have set aside the verdict of guilty, and this court so far affirms the judgment of the General Term. Clearly that trial and conviction are not now a bar to a subsequent trial for larceny. “ No case is cited where, the verdict of guilty having been set aside on the motion of the defendant, it has been held a bar to a new trial.” ( United States v. Keen, 1 McLean, 435.)

But the reversal of the conviction does not disturb the verdict of acquittal. It is like a case of several defendants, some of whom are acquitted and some found guilty on the trial. The court may grant a new trial as to those convicted, without being forced to set aside the entire verdict. (Tidd’s Pr. 820; Rex v. Mawbey, 6 T. R. 619.)

The matter at the bottom is the constitutional provision that “No person shall be subject to be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense ” (Const. of N. Y., art. 1, § 6), and yet new trials are granted in criminal cases on the motion of the accused, and if he gets a new trial he is thus subject to be twice put in jeopardy. This is done on the ground, that by asking for a correction of errors made on the first trial, he does waive his *484 'constitutional protection, and does himself ask for a new trial, though it bring him twice in jeopardy. But that waiver, unless it be expressly of the benefit of the verdict of acquittal, goes no further than the accused himself extends it. His application for a correction of the verdict is not to be taken as more extensive than his needs. He asks a correction of so much of the judgment as convicted him of guilt. He is not to be supposed to ask coz-reetion or reversal of so much of it as acquitted him of offense.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.Y. 478, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-the-state-of-new-york-v-dowling-ny-1881.