People v. . Friedman

98 N.E. 471, 205 N.Y. 161, 27 N.Y. Crim. 170, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1202
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 471 (People v. . Friedman) 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. . Friedman, 98 N.E. 471, 205 N.Y. 161, 27 N.Y. Crim. 170, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1202 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.:

Some time in November, 1910, one Jacob Kuhn and the appellant Ralph Friedman entered into a conspiracy to obtain money feloniously and by force, in the night time, from the person or custody of George A. Schuchart, a grocer in the city of Rochester. The conspiracy was carried into effect between half-past nine and half-past ten o’clock in the evening of November 15, 1910. One of the conspirators waited in the street outside the store; the other entered the store to perform the more active part of the contemplated robbery or larceny. A struggle ensued witbin between the grocer and his assailant during which three revolver shots were fired, one of which inflicted a mortal wound upon Mr. Schuchart. The appellant Friedman, whoi claims to have been the one who waited outside, testified that he entered the door upon hearing the three shots and found' Kuhn and Mr. Schuchart there engaged in a personal encounter. He states that he reached his arm over to knock the revolver up when a fourth shot was fired which penetrated his left wrist. The conspirators then fled leaving Mr. Schuchart dying upon the floor of his grocery. The theory of the prosecution was that the appellant Friedman shot and killed Mr. Schuchart in the store, accidently shooting himself through the wrist *173 in the struggle, while Kuhn waited outside and became liable for the murder as co-conspirator in the felonious attempt to rob or steal. In the case of People v. Kuhn, now under consideration at the same time with this appeal, the contention in behalf of the people is the same and the trial judge charged the jury therein that they could not find Kuhn guilty of actually doing the shooting although they might convict him of murder in the first degree, as they did.

I do not propose to discuss the evidence in this case further than is absolutely necessary in considering such of the excepr tions as are sufficiently serious to require notice. It is enough to say that the proof is ample to sustain the verdict.

The grand jury had jurisdiction to indict the defendant notwithstanding the pendency of certiorari proceedings in his behalf to' review the action of the magistrate by whom he hadi previously been committed to await the action of the Supreme Court. (People ex rel. Phelps v. Westbrook, 12 Hun, 646.), The objection that for this reason the indictment should be dismissed as premature is untenable.

The indictment is in the common-law form and authorized the introduction of evidence to establish the defendant’s guilt of murder in the first degree, committed either with a deliberate and premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed or without a design to effect death while engaged in committing or attempting to commit a felony. (People v. Sullivan, 173 N. Y. 122. There was sufficient evidence to sustain a finding that the appellant personally shot and killed George A. Sehuchart with a deliberate and premeditated design to effect death. The proof also suffices to- uphold the conviction even if the killing was unintentional, on the ground that the homicide was committed by persons engaged in a common attempt to commit a felony.

At the close of the charge, counsel for the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury as follows: “ If the jury believe *174 that tiie defendant Friedman and Kuhn did confederate and agree together to enter the store of Schuehart and take money from it hy stealth, and that the scope and plan of execution of their unlawful enterprise did not involve the use of force or violence which might result in the taking of human life, then the defendant is not responsible for the act of Kuhn in taking human life if they find that the defendant did not shoot and kill Schuehart.”

It is contended that the refusal to charge this request was error. I think not.

The learned trial judge had previously charged the jury correctly on this subject, as follows: “If they [Friedman and Kuhn] went to the store of Schuehart merely to steal his money,that would not necessarily mean that their errand was of a dangerous, homicidal character, or that it necessarily involved ■the use of violence which might result in the taking of human life unlawfully. But if they confederated together to commit •a felony at Schuchart’s store, then it is left to you to say whether or not they intended the natural and probable consequence of their act and each one would be responsible for the acts of the other in carrying out their joint enterprise.”

If the natural and probable consequence of the common enterprise was the killing of Mr. Schuqhart in case of resistance on his part, the defendant was liable for murder in the first degree, although be did not do the actual killing. (People v. Giro, 197 N. Y. 152, 157, 158; People v. Madas, 201 N. Y. 349, 352.) The request assumes that if the appellant did not fire the fatal shot he could escape liability unless the conspiracy expressly contemplated the use of such force or violence as might cause death. This is an erroneous view of the law. An express agreement by intending robbers not to kill in carrying out a plaii of robbery would not save any of the conspirators from responsibility for a homicide by one of them in committing or attempting to commit the robbery, if such killing was the *175 natural and probable result of the robbery or attempt to rob in such a contingency as actually occurred in this case.

In People v. Vasquez (49 Cal. 560), the prosecution was under a statutory provision similar to ours which makes it murder in the first degree to kill another where the homicide is committed in perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate the crime of robbery. In that case the following instruction to the jury was held: to be a correct statement of the law: It is no defense to a party associated with others in, and engaged in a robbery, that he did not propose or intend to take life in its perpetration, or that he forbade his associates to kill, or that he disapproved or regretted that any person was thus slain by his associates. If the homicide in question was committed by one of his associates engaged in the robbery, in furtherance of their common purpose to rob, he is as accountable as though his own hand had intentionally given the fatal blow, and is guilty of murder in the first degree.” (See, also, People v. Lawrence, 143 Cal. 148.)

I think that an error was committed, although a harmless one under all the circumstances, in receiving testimony as to declarations by Kuhn in the defendant’s presence which imported-that Kuhn did not do the shooting and from which it would follow that the defendant must have done it. Inasmuch, however, as the responses made by the defendant to these declarations were virtually counter charges against Kuhn and the conversation left each participant in the crime in the position of charging the other with being the principal offender, I do not see how the admission of the evidence could have done any injury. Under some conditions, however, an error of this character might be extremely prejudicial to a defendant. Ordinarily the unsworn statements of others as to the circumstances of a crime are not provable against an accused person even though they were made in his presence unless they elicited some express or tacit admission from the defendant tending to establish his *176 guilt.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 471, 205 N.Y. 161, 27 N.Y. Crim. 170, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-friedman-ny-1912.