People v. . Becker

109 N.E. 127, 215 N.Y. 126, 33 N.Y. Crim. 93, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 986
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 109 N.E. 127 (People v. . Becker) 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 v. . Becker, 109 N.E. 127, 215 N.Y. 126, 33 N.Y. Crim. 93, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 986 (N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, Ch. J.:

The principal appeal brings up for review the second trial of Charles Becker for the murder of Herman Rosenthal. The homicide occurred shortly before 2 o’clock a. m., on the 16th day of July, 1912, when the victim was shot to death on the sidewalk in front of the Hotel Metropole on West 43rd street near Broadway. Four men were actually concerned in the fatal shooting, namely, Jacob Seidenshner, Frank Cirofici, Louis Rosenberg and Harry Harowitz—better known to their associates respectively as Whitey Lewis, Dago Frank, Lefty Louie and Gyp the Blood—and frequently referred to for convenience as the gunmen. They have all been convicted and have suffered death for their crime. (People v. Seidenshner, 210 N. Y. 341, 31 N. Y. Crim.176.) They were hired to kill Rosenthal by three professional gamblers known as Jack Rose, Bridgie Webber and Harry Vallon, who turned state’s evidence and testified not only against the gunmen but also against the defendant Becker, under a promise of immunity from the district attorney, given with the sanction of the court. Rose, Webber and Vallon claim to have acted at the instance of Becker in thus bringing about the death of Rosenthal; and the public prosecutor appears to have considered that the community would gain more by the conviction of a faithless public officer *101 than it would suffer by the escape of three confessed murderers from any punishment for their participation in the crime. This was a matter for him to determine under the responsibility of his official oath; and with the exercise of his discretion in this respect, this court has nothing to do.

The first judgment of death against the defendant was reversed because he did not have a fair trial. The judgment now under review is not assailable on that ground. This I shall endeavor to show as I proceed to discuss the principal points presented in behalf of the appellant.

On the first appeal the court expressly refrained from considering and passing upon the question whether the verdict was against the weight of evidence. While the prevailing opinion did consider at length the evidence and point out what seemed to be various weaknesses and defects in the People’s case, this was done simply for the purpose of leading up to and emphasizing the proposition that under such circumstances the appellant was entitled to a scrupulously fair trial, and it being decided that he did not have this, it became unnecessary to consider the other question of the weight of evidence which is now presented to us.

The composition of the briefs illustrates the comparative importance which is attached to the power of the Court of Appeals to deal with the facts in reviewing a capital case. Of the 540 pages which make up the brief for the appellant, 391 pages are devoted to a consideration of the facts; while 111 pages are occupied by a discussion of the facts in the district attorney’s brief of 180 pages.

The facts of the crime as developed by the evidence on both sides were elaborately set forth in the opinion of this court on the first appeal (People v. Becker, 210 N Y. 274, 30 N. Y. Crim. 452) ; and also in the case of the gunmen (People v. Seidenshner, 210 N. Y. 341, 31 N. Y. Crim. 176). It is unnecessary, therefore, to restate them in detail here. It was the *102 theory of the prosecution that Rosenthal and the defendant had been associated in the business of gambling; that the defendant had loaned Rosenthal money to be used for their joint benefit in the conduct of a gambling house; that the existence of this gambling house became known to the police authorities so that it Avas necessary for the defendant, as head of the special squad engaged in the suppression of gambling, to make a raid upon the establishment; that Rosenthal was angered by the raid and a state of enmity arose between them which led him to threaten disclosures to the district attorney and the police commissioner which would have caused the defendant to lose his position. In other words, the motive ascribed to the defendant for desiring the death of Rosenthal is the defendant’s dissatisfaction at Rosenthal’s conduct in regard to their joint gambling enterprise and his apprehension that if Rosenthal lived he would reveal misconduct on the part of the defendant Avhich would inevitably result in his ruin.

It was, and is, contended in behalf of the defendant that sentiments of enmity against Rosenthal were entertained by Rose, Webber and Vallon which were sufficient to account for their action in hiring the gunmen to kill the gambler, irrespective of any hostility to Rosenthal on the part of Becker. The contention of the defense in this respect was clearly presented to the jury in the charge of the learned trial judge; and the verdict shows that they must have rejected it.

As has often been said, proof of the existence of a particular motive is not essential to establish the guilt of a person accused of crime; but when the existence of a particular motive is suggested it becomes exceedingly important to inquire as to the probability or possibility of its having been the actuating cause of the crime. A cogent argument in favor of the defendant in this respect merits consideration. It is said that, inasmuch as Rosenthal had just .taken steps to make public his charges against the defendant by offering them to a prominent Ncav *103 York newspaper, Lieutenant Becker must have known that any attack upon Rosenthal at that time would almost certainly be attributed to his agency; and, therefore, that a man of his intelligence, however inimical he might be to Rosenthal, would not have permitted a murderous assault upon him at a juncture when the circumstances would almost unerringly point to him as the author of the crime. The sum and substance of the argument is, that it is impossible to believe that Becker would have been so foolish as to order or induce the murder to be committed at a time when he himself would almost certainly be the one man in the city of New York who would be suspected of complicity therein.

This was a proper matter to be considered by the jury and we must assume that they considered it. It cannot be laid down as matter of law that a jury is bound to hold that a specified event has not occurred because its occurrence involves unwise or foolish or blundering conduct on the part of the accused person. Indeed, the propensity of criminals to blunder has long been recognized as a characteristic of great value in the detection of crime. The criminal reports of England and this country arc full of cases in which guilt has been fastened upon the defendant by reason of the omission of some slight precaution or the commission of some apparently insignificant act which would have seemed almost impossible in the case of a person of ordinary common sense.

Extensive as is the power of review vested in this court on an appeal from a judgment of death, the law does not intend to substitute the conclusions of fact which may be drawn from the evidence by seven judges for the conclusions of fact which have been drawn from the evidence by twelve jurors, unless we arc clear that the view of the facts taken by the jury is wrong. It is our duty to affirm, if the trial was fair and without legal error and the verdict was not against the weight of evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 N.E. 127, 215 N.Y. 126, 33 N.Y. Crim. 93, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-becker-ny-1915.