People v. Bilanchuk

280 A.D. 180, 112 N.Y.S.2d 414
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 6, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 280 A.D. 180 (People v. Bilanchuk) 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. Bilanchuk, 280 A.D. 180, 112 N.Y.S.2d 414 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Cohn, J.

Defendant was tried upon an indictment which contained four counts. The first three charged assault with a loaded pistol. The fourth accused defendant of assault in the second degree by the use of a “ billy ”. The jury acquitted defendant of the first and fourth counts, but adjudged him guilty only of the third count. The second count had been withdrawn from the jury.

On the day of the alleged assault, March 1, 1949, defendant had been for almost twenty years a member of the uniformed police force of the city of New York. Because of claimed illness, he was absent from duty on sick leave; he was not in uniform, but as required by the rules of the department had in his possession a revolver. He also carried a blackjack. At about three o’clock in the morning, while he was in a bar and grill, an argument arose among several of the patrons in which the complaining witness, Philip Lyman, a sailor in uniform intervened. According to the testimony of witnesses for the .prosecution, defendant, in the course of the dispute struck complainant over the left eye with his blackjack. The sailor retaliated by striking defendant several blows with his fist. Defendant thereupon left the premises and a few minutes later Lyman followed. Upon reaching the street, he was shot twice by defendant who lay in wait for him just outside the barroom, one bullet causing a flesh wound of the abdomen and the other penetrating the left buttock. Lyman grappled with defendant for possession of the gun and succeeded in seizing the hand of defendant which held the revolver. He pulled [182]*182defendant’s trigger finger and thus emptied the gun. Other persons who had been in the bar, on hearing the shooting, came out into the street and several, joining Lyman, set upon the defendant and gave him a severe beating.

A somewhat different story of the fracas was told by defendant. He swore that in the barroom the complaining witness intruded himself into a discussion between defendant and two of his friends; that Lyman, angered at a remark made by defendant, struck him; and that others joined in the assault upon defendant; that he did not strike complainant with a blackjack; that he managed to escape to the street, where he went to obtain assistance for the purpose of arresting Lyman; that Lyman and several others followed him out immediately and pounced upon him, beating him up; and that while Lyman was grappling with him, defendant fired two shots ‘‘ in the gutter ’ ’ to attract the attention of others so that he might obtain aid in procuring Lyman’s arrest; that at no time did he intend to shoot at Lyman; that his sole purpose in firing the gun was to obtain assistance.

Gunpowder marks on Lyman’s buttocks indicated that the gun, when fired, must have been within six inches of his body. Lyman was also found to be suffering from a bruise on the left side of his forehead. When examined at the station house following his arrest, defendant exhibited extensive wounds over his mouth, eyes and face.

The evidence at the trial was in decided conflict. Doubtless both complainant and defendant had been drinking before the altercation occurred. Prom the testimony, a jury reasonably might have found that defendant, as he testified, fired the shots to obtain assistance in an attempt to arrest the complaining witness, and not with intent to inflict upon him bodily harm. On the other hand, they might have decided, as indeed they did, that the police officer willfully and without just cause, shot Lyman as he was leaving the bar and grill.

Upon this appeal defendant seeks a new trial urging that he was prejudiced because of a long succession of questions asked by the District Attorney concerning his record as a police officer. He also asserts that he was deprived of a fair trial because of the undue and excessive intervention by the trial court in direct and cross-examination of himself and other witnesses.

As to the claim made that the trial court prejudiced defendant’s rights because of unnecessary interjection in the examination of witnesses, a reading of the record leads us to conclude that in nearly every instance the court’s questions were designed [183]*183to clarify evidence already given or to test the accuracy of some of the testimony. For such purposes, the court could properly inquire. (People v. Knapper, 230 App. Div. 487, 489; People v. Ferguson, 199 App. Div. 642, 648, revd. on other grounds 234 1ST. Y. 159.) Though we find many separate interrogatories by the trial court, nowhere does defendant single out particular questions as having a prejudicial effect, nor have we been able to discover any. Indeed, at no point was an objection registered against any of the questions asked (People v. Perrin, 224 App. Div. 546, 550, affd. 251 N. Y. 509) nor is there any indication of partiality or prejudice stemming from questions propounded by the court. In a comprehensive charge, careful instructions were given to the jury to the effect that they were the sole and exclusive judges of the facts, and that they were not to infer from the court’s asking questions that it had any opinion as to defendant’s guilt or innocence. We are satisfied that no prejudice resulted from the court’s allegedly undue participation in the trial.

We now come to the more serious issue as to whether the trial court erred in permitting detailed cross-examination of defendant on his record in the police department. Defendant testified as a witness in his own behalf. Over objection, the court permitted the prosecutor to ask a series of questions going back some twenty years relating to defendant’s record while serving as a police officer. Some of the interrogatories were excluded, many others were allowed. We refer specifically to those which defendant was required to answer. He was asked whether on January 2,1930, he had been absent from a relieving post and had spoken in an insolent manner to a superior officer; whether on September 29, 1931, he had an altercation with, and used indecent language to, another patrolman; whether on December 6, 1932, he was absent from post for. twenty minutes, and whether he had an argument with a female while in a restaurant without permission, and whether he passed indecent remarks to the female, and unnecessarily placed the female under arrest and did convey her to the station house in a patrol wagon charging her with disorderly conduct; whether on February 25, 1936, he had failed to safeguard receipts of money in certain premises, and whether he was seated at a desk there in uniform apparently asleep; whether on August 14, 1936, he had used abusive language to a civilian and made disparaging remarks about judges while serving a summons; whether on July 23,1948, while in civilian clothes, he had entered the home of a citizen and had demanded that the citizen shut off the radio in [184]*184Ms home, and thereafter unnecessarily arrested him, and whether he did use insults and insubordinate language to a superior officer He was also asked whether on November 28, 1949, he had a fight in a bar and grill, as a result of which he was hospitalized, and whether on that occasion he failed to make an arrest; and whether between October, 1948, and March, 1949, he had struck a little fellow called pushcart Joe in a bar and grill ”. Defendant denied the truth of practically each one of the charges implied in the questions asked. He testified, too, that he had denied them all at the time they had originally been made.

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Bluebook (online)
280 A.D. 180, 112 N.Y.S.2d 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bilanchuk-nyappdiv-1952.