People v. . Davey

72 N.E. 244, 179 N.Y. 345, 18 N.Y. Crim. 528, 17 Bedell 345, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1104
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 244 (People v. . Davey) 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. . Davey, 72 N.E. 244, 179 N.Y. 345, 18 N.Y. Crim. 528, 17 Bedell 345, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1104 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

Werner, J.

The assault charged in the indictment and established by proof upon the trial, is one of those unnatural and revolting crimes which instinctively arouse sentiments of disgust and wrath in the breasts of normal men. The alleged victim was a girl twelve years old, and the alleged assailant was a married man forty-five years of age, the proprietor of an .automobile garage, situated on one of the principal business *531 streets of the city of Niagara Falls. We shall deal with the nasty details of the alleged offense only so far as may be necessary in the discussion of the exceptions presented for review and, before proceeding with that discussion, it may be well to emphasize a few general observations that will serve to illustrate the direction which appellate scrutiny is sometimes compelled to take in cases of this character. It has come to be one of the accepted maxims of our jurisprudence that appellate courts will not be astute to find mere technical errors upon which to reverse judgments. There are cases, however, in which apparently technical errors may be so prejudicial as to produce the gravest injustice. This may be particularly true of a case in which a defendant, accused of an abhorrent and detestable crime, finds himself confronted at the very threshold of the court room, with that subtle, pervasive and almost ineradicable prejudice which the bare charge of such a crime may engender against him, in the minds of those who are to pass upon his guilt or innocence. This lurking possibility may become almost a-probability when the charge is one which is calculated to arouse the parent to the dangers which beset his children in their necessary daily intercourse with those outside of the family circle. In such cases reason needs to be safeguarded from prejudice by everything that caution and justice can suggest, and courts should be firm and explicit in impressing upon district attorneys the necessity for strict adherence to rules of evidence and propriety of conduct so that jurors may, as far as possible, be unbiased and impartial.

The application of these general observations to the case at bar, leaves little room for doubt that some of the exceptions taken at the trial are so near the danger line, if not in and of themselves fatal, that they may properly be consider-0 ed in connection with those which we think are serious enough to justify a reversal of the judgment herein.

The alleged assault is charged to have been committed at *532 the defendant’s place of business, on or about the 22nd day .of June, 1903. The direct testimony of the complainant strongly tended to show that the assault was committed on that day. On her cross-examination the complainant was even more explicit and positively fixed that date as the day of the occurrence. Upon her re-direct examination this was somewhat modified by the statement that she had no means of fixing the exact date, but no other date was mentioned. When the defendant presented his side of the case he showed conclusively that he was in Buffalo during the whole of the day of June 22nd, 1903, and, therefore, could not have been in Niagara Falls at the time and place of the alleged assault. As bearing upon that phase of the case, the learned trial court charged the jury, in substance, that if they should find that the defendant had in fact assaulted the complainant, it was immaterial whether it had been done “on the 22nd day of June, or any other day in June, or any day in May.” While this was, doubtless, a correct general statement of the law as applied to a variance between the time, fixed in an indictment and that proven upon a trial, or to a case in which time is not of the essence of the crime (Code Crim. Pro. § 293 et seq.; People v. Krank, 110 N. Y. 488; People v. Jackson, 111 N. Y. 369), it was hardly a fair and explicit statement of the rule as it should have been applied to the facts of the case at bar. The only date definitely established' by the evidence was that mentioned in the indictment, to wit, the 22nd day of June, 1903. While we cannot say judicially that the proof was such as to require a finding that the assault was committed on that day, or not at all, we cannot escape the conclusion that the evidence on this point was so direct and almost unequivocal (even after making allowances for the age of the complaining witness, the subject-matter of her testimony and the distracting influence of her environment in court upon her youthful mind) as to make the question of the time of the commission *533 of the alleged assault a most delicate and important one, upon the bearing of which, as determinative of the guilt or innocence of the defendant, the jury should have been most fully and carefully instructed. Instead of that, however, the learned trial court barely referred to the evidence tending to show defendant’s absence from Niagara Falls at the time of the alleged assault, thus emphasizing rather than modifying the previous charge that the time of the commission of the alleged crime was of no importance. When a crime is clearly shown to have been committed the time of its commission may be purely incidental and insignificant; but when the question of time may be an important factor in determining whether a crime has been committed and when, as in the case at bar, there is a complete coincidence of the time specified in the indictment and fixed by the proof, it cannot be said that the matter of time is wholly immaterial, even if the evidence in relation to it is not clearly conclusive. While we should not feel warranted, in reversing the judgment upon this exception alone, we have discussed it because it is one of the features which was apparently operative in giving the case a trend that seems to have been prejudicial to the defendant.

Another thing that was, we think, unfair to the defendant. and that must have been damaging in its effect upon his defense, was the production in court of several children of both sexes who were requested to stand up, one after another, in the presence of the jury during the cross-examination of the dafendant. After the latter had been asked if he knew these children, he was interrogated as to certain alleged unnatural and outrageous practices upon them. He denied all these, as of course the prosecuting attorney must have anticipated he would, and since his answers in reference to these collateral subjects were binding upon the prosecution, this branch of the case apparently ended there. But did it in fact end there? The spectacle of these child *534 ren standing up in open court as silent accusers of a man charged with a nameless outrage upon a litttle girl, was more dramatic and eloquent than volumes of verbal testimony could have been. This theatrical appeal to paternal instinct and wrath left the defendant little, if any, hope for an impartial consideration of his defense. It is true, as suggested by the prosecuting officer, that when the defendant became a witness in his own behalf he laid himself open to attack from every point affecting his credibility or criminality (People v. Webster, 139 N. Y. 84), and, if the practice now under discussion involved nothing more than that, we should not attempt to criticise it.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 244, 179 N.Y. 345, 18 N.Y. Crim. 528, 17 Bedell 345, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-davey-ny-1904.