People v. Follette

164 A.D. 272, 32 N.Y. Crim. 197, 149 N.Y.S. 888, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7798
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 A.D. 272 (People v. Follette) 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. Follette, 164 A.D. 272, 32 N.Y. Crim. 197, 149 N.Y.S. 888, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7798 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

Woodward, J.:

The defendant was indicted for the crime of manslaughter in the first degree. The case was sent to the County Court of Ulster county for trial. The jury found a verdict of guilty, and there is no doubt that there was evidence which would justify the verdict. However, there is so much of error in the case and it is so uncertain what the jury might have done if it had been tried with a proper regard for the rights of the defendant, that I am unwilling to hold that the defendant may not have been prejudiced by these errors, and so have been deprived of his rights under the Constitution and laws of this State. It is difficult to read the evidence in this case and not be prejudiced against the defendant; there is little in the record which could inspire any other emotion than that of disgust, but, to quote the language of Lord Chatham in The Address to the Throne, “ For my own part, I consider him merely and indifferently as an English subject, possessed of certain rights which the laws have given him, and which the laws alone can take from him. * * * In his person, though he were the worst of men, I contend for the safety and security of the best; and, God forbid, my lords, that there should be a power in this country of measuring the civil rights of the subject by his moral character, or by any Other rule but the fixed laws of the land. ”

Upon the trial of the case the People contended that the defendant had produced the death of a Mrs. King by means of an unskillful abortion, and the evidence upon this point is not so clearly conclusive that it might not have been discredited by [274]*274the jury if it had not been for the fact that the district attorney, with a zeal which outran his sense of fairness, persisted in trying the defendant for a long series of alleged abortions both present and prospective, and by insinuation and innuendo so surrounded the defendant with the atmosphere of crime that no jury could he fairly expected to keep in mind the one crime with which he was charged in the indictment. Indeed, it may be fairly said that, except for the ante mortem statement of Mrs. King in reference to the alleged treatment by the defendant, there was not sufficient evidence to support the verdict upon the real crime charged against the defendant, and her own declaration under oath shows her to have been the moving cause of the alleged crime, and might justify a jury in disbelieving her testimony. It is to be remembered that the crime charged is not the producing of an abortion, but the killing of Mrs. King while engaged in producing an abortion, and the evidence is to the effect that the death was produced by blood poisoning. Nothing was said in the ante mortem statement, made under oath, on this point, but a physician who was present testified that after this statement was made he talked with Mrs. King in reference to the practice of the defendant, and that she told him that the defendant took an instrument, held it under the faucet of the city water pipes, and then wiped it off on a soiled towel and inserted the same in the vagina, and the theory of the case is that the poison was injected by means of this improper practice; the contention is that the instrument, to be safely used, should have been boiled. The physicians testified that in their opinion the infection or blood poisoning was introduced into this Mrs. King by - some instrument, or otherwise, from the outside of a- human body; that it was a germ from the exterior of a human body introduced into her by means of an-instrument or otherwise, and -it. is easy-to see how- an issue of . this character could be wholly lost sight-of in the-flood of nastiness with which the district attorney surrounded the trial: . But there is evidence, in the-case that Mrs. King,-who desired to be rid of the child,-had herself-madeuse.of a-syringe¿ and it is-just as probable that she may have introduced the poison as that it was introduced by means of an instrument improperly sterilized in the hands of the defendant, and an issue [275]*275of this character ought to be kept as free as possible from all outside matters. The fact that the defendant, in the year 1904, may have produced an abortion upon some other woman is not evidence in support of the theory that the death of Mrs. King was caused by the use of an improperly sterilized instrument in the year 1913, nor does the fact, if it be a fact, that the defendant, subsequent to the death of Mrs. King, was willing to undertake a like employment, tend to establish the theory of the prosecution as to the cause of the death for which the defendant was on trial. Yet all of these matters were permitted to be placed before the jury in great detail, and with a disgusting coarseness calculated at all times to take from the attention of the jury the one point upon which they had any duty to perform. The issue was not whether the defendant was an abortionist but whether he had produced the death of Mrs. King, and upon this point, without the hearsay • testimony of one of the physicians of what Mrs. King had told him after making her ante mortem statement, the case would be practically barren of evidence to support the verdict. It is probably true that this testimony on the part of the doctor was competent, but it was of a character which would not be received except for the fact that Mrs. King was about to die, and it is not entirely certain that she understood the technical questions of the doctor, or that he clearly understood her answers in their relation to her understanding of the questions. In any event, the issue should have been closely confined to the question of the cause of death and not have been permitted to be obscured by a review of the professional life of the defendant and all the other matters which were intruded into the trial of this case.

It is practically conceded that it was error to permit- the woman detective to testify to the interview with the defendant after the alleged crime, in' which she ■ claimed .to have entered into an arrangement with the defendant to produce an abortion upon the person of her daughter, but it is urged that this did not operate to prejudice the defendant because there is so much other evidence in the case, but'if we keep in mind the fact that it was not for the crime of abortion that he was on trial, but for producing the death of a particular person [276]*276while in the ■ act of producing an abortion, it will be seen that there is in fact very little evidence to support the verdict, and that the introduction of evidence of other alleged crimes, closely related in character to that with which the defendant was charged, but wholly different in the essential issue presented, was admirably calculated to secure a conviction on general principles rather than upon the legitimate evidence bearing upon the issue presented by the indictment.

The defendant took the stand in his own defense and told a story of his treatment of Mrs. King which, if believed, would have entirely exonerated him. He claims that Mrs. King came to him suffering from the effects of an attempted abortion performed by herself, and that he made an examination of her and advised her she was in a dangerous condition, calling in another physician to confirm his diagnosis, and while the jury were not bound to believe his testimony nor that of his witness, the physician who was called in by him, yet the case is one which upon the real issue is not so wholly preponderating as to justify this court in closing its eyes to manifest error in the conduct of the trial. The defendant, having taken the stand in his own defense, was, of course, subject to cross-examination.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Proud
262 P.2d 1016 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1953)
People v. Ryan
192 A.D. 930 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A.D. 272, 32 N.Y. Crim. 197, 149 N.Y.S. 888, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-follette-nyappdiv-1914.