People v. Bertlini

171 A.D. 460, 34 N.Y. Crim. 260, 157 N.Y.S. 599, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5317

This text of 171 A.D. 460 (People v. Bertlini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Bertlini, 171 A.D. 460, 34 N.Y. Crim. 260, 157 N.Y.S. 599, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5317 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Jenks, P. J.:

The defendant was convicted of robbery in the first degree, whereby he took from the safe in Bossi’s house in Tenth street, in the borough of Brooklyn, $8,700 in money and some jewelry.

[462]*462He and two others were indicted jointly for the crime, but he was tried separately. About 3 p. m. of January 28, 1915; Mrs. Bossi and her boy, aged 6 years, were alone in that house. The robbers gained admission by pretense to her that they (or one of their number) were inspectors, and thereafter two of them seized, gagged and bound Mrs. Bossi, at least attempted to place her under an anaesthetic, and bound the lad. One of them held the woman silent at the pistol’s point, until, after signal from one of the others, he and they left the house. Mrs. Bossi freed herself from her bonds, found the safe broken open and the money and jewelry missing, and thereupon gave the alarm, but the robbers had escaped. The money was made up of 50 -hills of the denomination of $50, 35 bills of $100, $50 in gold and bills of $20 and $10. Two days thereafter the defendant was arrested in an apartment house in the borough of Manhattan by two detectives in their quest to suppress traffic in cocaine and similar drugs. At the time of his arrest there were found in his possession 14 bills of $50, and 23 pawn tickets. He was suspected of the robbery because of his possession of these bills and of his unsatisfactory explanation of his acquisition thereof. Investigation led to his indictment. It was not shown that any of the bills found upon the defendant were of those stolen from the Bossis’ safe, nor that the pawn tickets represented any of their jewelry. The only direct proof that the defendant was one of the robbers was his identification by Mrs. Bossi as him who posed as an inspector and who, with another, seized, bound and gagged her, who was present when another of the robbers held her covered by a pistol; and his identification by Miss Helen Smith, whose testimony I will discuss later, as one of the men whom she saw enter the Bossis’ house and come out of it at the time of this robbery. The defendant did not testify, but he sought to prove an alibi in that, at the time of the robbery, .he was present ah festivities in the borough of Manhattan, held in celebration of an infant borne by his sister. The defendant also called the manager and bookkeeper of a pawnbroker’s shop in Columbus avenue between Ninety-ninth and One Hundredth streets, in the borough of Manhattan, who testified that on the said day of the robbery the defendant came into that pawnshop between 1 and [463]*4632 p. m.— about 1:20 p. m.— to redeem two watches, and that he then paid for the redemption a $50 bill, and that the witness at that time saw a number of similar bills in his possession. .The alibi could have been disregarded properly by the jury, either because it did not believe the witnesses, or, although it did believe that the defendant was present sometime during the festivities, that such presence did not establish that he could not have participated in the robbery. The testimony of the pawnbroker’s employee was supported by the pawn tickets and by the books of the shop. But, even if credited, it did not demonstrate that the defendant could not have reached the Bossis’ house in time to participate in the robbery (for the proof indicates that the robbers used a motor car), but only that the defendant had a number of $50 bills in his possession prior to the robbery. The time of the attendance of the defendant in the pawnshop is not indicated by the pawn ticket, nor by the book entries, for the latter were made at the close of business from the data of the tickets received during the day.

It is to be borne in mind that the question before us is not whether the defendant is guilty, but whether he was adjudged guilty after trial “in substantial conformity to law.” (People v. Wolf, 183 N. Y. 472.) A substantial right of the defendant, if the proof submitted to the jury included illegal and improper testimony, was affected unless we are convinced that such testimony could not have been harmful to the defendant. (People v. Corey, 148 N. Y. 476, 494.)

We think that the learned court erred in the admission of evidence. We shall strive to point out the errors and then consider whether they require a reversal of the judgment. The direct examination of Mrs. Bossi, called by the People, was confined to the story of the crime and to her then identification of the defendant. But, upon cross-examination, the defendant’s counsel questioned her minutely as to an identification made by her at a magistrate’s court in the borough of Manhattan, where she had gone under the guidance of Mr. Malcolm, a detective of the police force. The manifest purpose was to weaken the force of her testimony generally, and to show specifically that such identification was prompted, suggested and directed by the detective. Subsequently the People called the [464]*464detective to the stand and, under objection and exception, the assistant district attorney was permitted to elicit the particulars of such identification, which embraced the statement that as the defendant came into the said court room in Manhattan Mrs. Bossi, as a spectator, said “that is one of them,” and that the witness said to Mrs. Bossi and to Miss Smith, “Are you sure ? ” and they answered, “Yes.” I shall discuss this ruling later.• Thereafter the people called Miss Helen Smith, a young woman 17 years old and whose testimony may be summarized, but not entirely, as follows: At the time of the robbery she lived near the Bossis’ house, and at 3 p. m. of the day thereof she stood in front of that house, as she had been walking up and down the street with two little children. She saw the defendant coming down that street with two others; the defendant spoke to ■ her; the others went into the house; the defendant parted from them, went down the street, stood at a corner, returned and went into that house after someone therein had answered an inquiry made by him. After a lapse of 25 minutes she, then standing in front of the house, saw the defendant coming out of the house. She saw his face. The others came from the house within a few minutes and thereupon the men went away. Soon Mrs. Bossi ran out of the house with her hands tied, crying, ‘ ‘ Black Hand. ” Miss Smith was then asked whether she had gone over to the court in 54th street on February 5th — referring to the occasion of the alleged identification which I have mentioned heretofore. She testified that she had gone there with Mrs. Bossi and the latter’s child, where they met the detective. They stood together outside of the courtroom door. She was then asked what happened, whereupon the counsel for the defendant objected to testimony as to any conversation, on the ground that it was in the absence and without the hearing of the defendant. The assistant district attorney then said that he would not ask the witness to say anything, and cautioned the witness not to tell anything that was said, but thereupon he added, “I think it is proper because he brought out with Mrs. Bossi what happened.” The Court: “If the other ruling is correct, it is in this case.” By the assistant district attorney: “Q. How, just tell us what happened.” Defendant’s [465]*465counsel: “ Is it conceded on the record that this is conversation in the absence of the defendant ?” The Court: “Not yet.” The assistant district attorney: “I asked her what happened.” Defendant’s counsel: “That involves a conversation.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A.D. 460, 34 N.Y. Crim. 260, 157 N.Y.S. 599, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bertlini-nyappdiv-1916.