People v. Diamond

36 Misc. 71, 72 N.Y.S. 179
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 Misc. 71 (People v. Diamond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Diamond, 36 Misc. 71, 72 N.Y.S. 179 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Giegerich, J.

The defendant, a captain of police, has been indicted upon the charge of willfully neglecting to suppress a disorderly house within his precinct in the city of Hew York, and he makes this application for the removal of the trial of the action from the Court of General Sessions of the Peace in and for the city and county of Hew York, “to the Supreme Court of the State of Hew York in another county of said State, to be selected by the Supreme Court as -a county where a fair and impartial trial thereof can he had, and to .have the said indictment in the [73]*73criminal action founded thereon removed from the said Court of General Sessions of the Peace in and for the City and County of Hew York, to the Supreme Court, upon the ground that novel, intricate and important questions of law are likely to arise upon the trial.” .

In support of the motion for a change of venue it appears clearly from the affidavits and the exhibits submitted, that during the past year the present administration of the police department of the city of Hew York, and particularly higher officers and the captains and their assistants known as warcbnen,” have been most violently attacked by certain associations of citizens, the attack being aided by denunciatory articles contained in practically the entire local press.- Of late, and during the past two months, this systematic denunciation has become more centered upon the defendant by reason of the prosecution and conviction of one George Bissert, the defendant’s so-called wardman, upon the charge of accepting a bribe from the proprietress of a disorderly house within the defendant’s precinct, for the alleged failure to-suppress which the latter has been indicted. Following Bissert’s conviction the reports and editorials contained in all the leading newspapers have directed public attention not merely to the probability, but to the assumed certainty that this defendant received all or most of the bribe mentioned and other bribes charged to have been given to Bissert, and that his neglect to suppress, disorderly houses was due to such bribe-taking. Furthermore, campaign literature lately distributed by a political body of very considerable activity and influence, has proclaimed the defendant’s guilt as an established fact of general public acceptance.

The belief or perhaps conviction, that the police officials are constant and systematic bribe-takers, and for that reason willfully neglect to suppress unlawful places, was voiced in no mistakable terms by the district attorney in the course of his conduct of the Bissert trial, and such utterances, which were widely reported, cannot but have had their effect in forming popular opinion upon the prosecutions yet to come, if that opinion has not already taken fixed form. Further evidence of the widespread character and strength of the sentiment on this point is found in the fact that the management and conduct of the police department have been made one, and, in the eyes of many, the chief, issue of a political campaign which is just now approaching its height and [74]*74•which, is appealing to the feelings of the people in a marked degree. Hot only political, but also prominent religious and commercial bodies and organizations have interested themselves and taken action in the matter.

So far as the defendant’s relation to this public excitement is concerned it is hardly necessary to point out the intimate connection and virtual identity in the public mind between the offense of which Bissert was convicted and the offense of which the defendant is accused. Taking bribes from keepers of unlawful places, and neglecting to suppress them, are in the public mind, and properly so, regarded as cause and effect or different aspects of one and the same thing. Whatever can be said, therefore, of the one offense, can be said equally of the other. It is apparent, therefore, that the public bias, so far as this defendant is concerned, is against him for the alleged failure to suppress the disorderly house, to the same degree as for the imputed participation in the more-serious offense of bribe-talcing. In fact, it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the trial of Bissert was accepted and regarded by the public as a trial of the defendant as well as the officers generally of the police .department. This is not a case where the application is based upon the mere opinion of the affiant, that public prejudice exists. The existence of that prejudice is a matter of obvious and necessary inference from the facts which have been presented, and the extent of the apparent public bias involves much more than a suspicion of this defendant’s guilt.

The statute provides for a removal of the trial as follows:

" A criminal action, prosecuted by indictment, may at any time before trial, on the application of the defendant, be removed .from the court in which it is pending, as provided in this chapter,' in the following cases:

“ 1. Erom a county court or a city court, to a term of the supreme court held in the same county, for good cause shown;

2. Erom the supreme court, or a county court, or a city •court to a term of the supreme court held in another county, om the ground that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had in the county or city where the indictment is pending.” Code Crim. Pro., § 344.

The standard of fairness which the law contemplates has been often judicially declared.

[75]*75“ The fairness of a trial should he above and beyond suspicion, and no court should allow a trial by a jury of a vicinage the general opinion and belief of which, upon the matters involved in. such a trial, either party has industriously, through newspapers, sought to form. To do this would simply encourage parties, in advance of actual trial, to create prejudice and bias, in the hope of benefit to follow from a legal investigation before men, some of whom, at least, might have obtained their views and judgments of a cause elsewhere than in the court room.” (Moulton v. Beecher, 52 How. Pr. 18.)

The possibility of selecting a jury in the county which would be apparently unprejudiced, is not the test of such an application as this, for where there is a general sentiment adverse to the party on trial, and a strong probability that bias exists throughout the community, he should not be compelled to take the risk of coming before a jury whose members, or some of whom, are influenced by adverse sentiments which may be undiscovered in the course of examination, or which, indeed, may be not fully appreciated by the jurors themselves. (See People v. Webb, 1 Hill, 179.)

Although support may be found in certain of the earlier decisions in this State.for the proposition that before such an application as this should be granted the impossibility of obtaining a jury should be demonstrated by an actual attempt and failure to obtain one (Bowman v. Ely, 2 Wend. 250; Messenger v. Holmes, 12 id. 203), the later and better decisions repudiate it. (People v. Webb, supra; People v. Long Island R. R. Co., 16 How. Pr. 106; Budge v. Northam, 20 id. 248; People v. McLaughlin, 150 N. Y. 365, 380.)

Indeed, the obtaining of a jury apparently impartial, would' seem to be the very danger against which this provision of the statute is intended to shield a defendant. Against obvious prejudice, such as can be made to appear upon the record, courts can. protect; but this statute is designed to protect against that other prejudice which is the more dangerous because unconscious and not capable of discovery.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Misc. 71, 72 N.Y.S. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-diamond-nysupct-1901.