People v. Flechter

44 A.D. 199, 14 N.Y. Crim. 328, 60 N.Y.S. 777
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 A.D. 199 (People v. Flechter) 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. Flechter, 44 A.D. 199, 14 N.Y. Crim. 328, 60 N.Y.S. 777 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinions

Patterson, J.:

The defendant was tried in the Court of General Sessions of the-Peace on an indictment containing two counts : Firsl, for the lar[201]*201ceny of a violin ; second, for criminally receiving such violin knowing it to have been stolen. Near the close of a protracted trial, the record of which, consisting of some 650 printed pages, is now before us, the prosecution was required to elect upon which of the two-counts it would rely, and thereupon it determined to abandon the first and go to the jury upon the second. A verdict of guilty was rendered, and from the judgment entered thereon the defendant-appeals. The substantial inquiries relate to the sufficiency of competent evidence to support the particular count of the indictment on which the conviction was had, the fairness of the trial, the correctness of certain rulings of the recorder who presided at the trial, and of instructions to the jury.

Cardinal matters in evidence were practically without contradiction. They may be summarized in a short narrative. Professor Bott, a musician, was the owner of a' Stradivarius violin of great-value. He had employed the defendant as his agent to sell it. Negotiations had been entered into between the defendant and Signor Nicolini for the purchase by the latter of the instrument for the-sum of $4,500, but the transaction fell through in consequence of Mr. Bott’s refusal to accept payment in a certain way. The defendant had seen and knew the instrument and its value. About a week after the negotiations with Nicolini failed the violin was stolen from the apartment of its owner. The defendant was informed of the theft, and undertook to aid Mr. Bott and his wife in efforts to recover it. Thus the defendant knew the article and that it was stolen. Some months subsequent to the larceny, and also to the death of Professor Bott, and also after the defendant had been informed that Mrs, Bott contemplated leaving the United States, the defendant offered for sale a violin, which he represented at one time to be, and ataño ther not to be, a genuine Stradivarius, but his final assertion was that it was genuine, and he offered it for sale as such. He was induced by a stratagem, arranged by persons who suspected him, to take the instrument for inspection to a house in Gramercy park, where Mrs. Bott was in waiting, and there, after a careful examination, she declared it to be her husband’s violin. The defendant, qn leaving the house, was arrested with the violin in his possession. It was retained by the police authorities until it was produced before [202]*202& committing magistrate on the investigation of a charge against éhe defendant. ■ After a hearing, the magistrate decided that the violin was not the one stolen from Mr. Bott, and directed that it be restored to the defendant, which was done. Immediately thereafter -the present indictment was found by the grand jury, and on the -trial the defendant exhibited a violin, hereafter, referred to • as Exhibit F 1, which he claimed, and' offered proof tending to show, -was the instrument produced before the magistrate, and he .further gave in evidence its alleged history to show that it was not Processor Butt’s violin. The prosecution admitted that it was not, but jit the same time insisted that it was not the one taken from the «defendant at the time of his arrest, and that it was not the one produced in the Police Court, and that the professor’s violin was the «one in the Magistrates’ Court and the one found on the person of-the «defendant when he was taken into custody upon leaving the house -jn Gframercy park.

The issue before the jury, therefore, on the second count of the -indictment was as to the identity of a violin. If the defendant had -in his possession what he knew to be the Bott instrument, and knowing it to have been stolen, offered it for sale, he had the guilty intent «of depriving the true owner of his property, and the criminality of ■itlie possession becomes indisputable. A clear, independent line of -testimony, positive in character and conclusive if entitled to credit, ¡showed (some of it was not before the magistrate) that the violin in -the Police Court was Professor Bott’s, and there- were no less than -ten 'witnesses who testified that the instrument Exhibit F 1 was not -the one taken from the defendant when he was arrested, and was :not the one before the police magistrate. On the other hand, five ■persons called by the defense swore that Exhibit F 1 was the idqn-tical instrument produced before the magistrate. In considering •this conflicting testimony, the jurors were aided by evidence as to -the means of knowledge and the acquaintance with the instrument jot instruments of each of the witnesses, and there was also a detailed ¡and minute description given them of the Bott violin, the measurements of which do not seem to be in full accord with those of Exhibit F 1. The history of that exhibit (in which there is one important gap) as given by the defendant’s witnesses is in effect that it was originally an ordinary, if not cheap, French article, and one [203]*203•of them swears that it was counterfeited hy the defendant’s direction hy erasing the name of the French maker and hy putting on it .a forged label or mark of manufacture and a spurious date, and it was in that condition offered to a supposed intending purchaser for '$5,000. On this one line of oral testimony, the jury were authorized to find the verdict they rendered if they believed the witnesses for the prosecution. Its effect -upon one reading the record is to •create not only a moral conviction that the defendant had in his possession the Bott violin, but also to satisfy the reader that the charge in the second count of the indictment was proven to a legal certainty so far as that may result from weighing conflicting testimony.

But the foregoing considerations do not by any means dispose of the case. While pursuing the inquiry only on one line, an appellate court may declare the verdict of the jury to be supported, yet •there was another line of proof, claimed to have been improperly .allowed, which may have been that on which the verdict was arrived .at. It was made so conspicuous' and almost controlling in the rulings of the court and was so prominent a feature of the trial that we cannot assume that the jury were not induced by it to find the defendant guilty. The issue as to the identity of the violin so far as it has been above considered, depended on the credibility of witnesses, and that was exclusively for the jury. Had there been no other evidence than that relating to the theft, the defendant’s knowledge of it and the oral statements of the witnesses as to identity, we could feel assured that the result was attained by the jury relying upon the knowledge -and veracity of the witnesses for the prosecution on the latter point, although they may have given heed .■also to circumstances telling against the defendant, but to which it is not necessary now to advert. But the other line of evidence may have been, as before remarked, influential and even decisive with the jury. The defendant now contends and the argument has been •earnestly, ably and ingeniously presented, that but for it the jury might have declined to convict and at least have found a reasonable •doubt to exist, but that with it such an atmosphere was created and such facts presented that a conviction became inevitable. That it was fatal in character is clear. It is necessary, therefore, to inquire whether it was. properly allowed, and if so, whether it was properly dealt with by the court. The Bott violin was stolen on the 31st of [204]*204March,. 1894.

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Bluebook (online)
44 A.D. 199, 14 N.Y. Crim. 328, 60 N.Y.S. 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-flechter-nyappdiv-1899.