People v. . Gibson

112 N.E. 730, 218 N.Y. 70, 34 N.Y. Crim. 318, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 1044
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 112 N.E. 730 (People v. . Gibson) 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. . Gibson, 112 N.E. 730, 218 N.Y. 70, 34 N.Y. Crim. 318, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 1044 (N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, Ch. J.:

The indictment is good. It charges that the defendant, acting as executor of the last will and testament of Ruzena Menschik Szabo, deceased, and having in his possession certain moneys belonging to her estate, feloniously withheld the same, and appropriated the same to his own use. (Penal Law, § 1290, subd. 2.) This is sufficient.

Some errors in the admission of evidence were committed upon the trial, but -as they were technical, and did not affect the substantial rights of the defendant, they ‘must be disregarded. (Code Crim. Pro. § 542.) The papers upon which the Surrogate’s Court made the order revoking the defendant’s letters testamentary should not have been received over the objction of the defendant, but the ruling of the learned trial objection of the defendant, but the ruling of the learned trial defendant’s consent rendered their admission harmless.

The only question which we deem it necessary to discuss relates to the demand by the district attorney upon the defendant that he should produce a document alleged to have been served upon him. This document was a paper signed by the administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Ruzena Menschik Szabo authorizing the bearer to make a demand upon the defendant for all the money and property belonging to the decedent which came into his hands while acting as her executor. When the administrator was on the stand as a witness for the People the assistant district attorney who tried the case called for the production of this paper “ under a notice to produce which was served upon counsel for the defendant on .the 16th of March, 1914,” and asked counsel for the defendant whether he had that paper. The defendant’s counsel objected to the *321 question and protested against it, and when asked why, responded : “ Because counsel has absolutely no right td address that question either to me or to the defendant; that he is attempting to transgress, and has transgressed, the constitutional rights of the defendant, and I ask in the light of that, that a juror be withdrawn. I protest against the question and I protest further against even its repetition.” The court overruled the protest of counsel and said that if he denied the receipt of the notice to produce then the district attorney would have to prove service of it. Counsel for the defendant responded : “ I neither deny nor affirm it and I deny the right either of counsel or court even to question in respect to it, and say that it is an infringement of the constitutional rights of this defendant, and upon that ground I protest and object.” The assistant district attorney then said that he had the notice to produce with proof of service; whereupon counsel for defendant again objected as follows: “ I object to that statement of the district attorney. I ask the court to direct the jury absolutely to disregard it. Will your Honor direct the jury to disregard it? ” The court then remarked that the jury had nothing to do with this matter, saying to them: “ Gentlemen of the jury, this has nothing to do with the merits of the case at all and you will disregard it.”

In view of this direction by the learned trial judge and in view of the fact that there was uncontradicted proof of the service on the defendant of the demard for any property of the estate still in his possession, we think there was no error in this matter which requires a reversal of the judgment. Assuming that the demand upon the defendant for the production of the paper was improper, the only manner in which the court could deal with the impropriety without ending the trial was to instruct the jury to pay no attention to the demand; and this was done. In other words, the error was cured in this particular instance. The practice, however, of calling upon *322 defendants in criminal cases to produce incriminating papers alleged to be in their possession is so frequently adopted by zealous prosecutors and is so objectionable that we take this occasion to express our disapproval thereof.

In McKnight v. United States (115 Fed. Rep. 972) the defendant was indicted for embezzling the funds of a national bank by causing the bank’s money to be paid to persons known,' by him to be insolvent to be used for purposes of bribery. The government proposed to introduce in evidence a copy of a certain paper whereby ihe defendant and other aldermen of the city of Louisville agreed to caucus together in order to control legislation and municipal appointments. In the course of the trial, after evidence had been introduced to show that the original paper was last seen in the defendant’s possession, the district attorney offered in evidence what purported to be a copy thereof. The trial judge then suggested that if the district attorney chose he could demand the production of the paper, whereupon the district attorney proceeded to demand it. Counsel for the defendant denied the right of the district attorney to make the demand, and furthermore declared that there was no such paper in the defendant’s possession. There was a conviction which was reviewed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit consisting of Circuit Judges Lurton, Day and Severens; and the court in a carefully considered opinion by Day, J., held that it was a violation of the immunity guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution to permit the demand to be made upon a defendant in a criminal case in the presence of the jury to produce a paper containing incriminating evidence agains b him. This was one of the grounds upon which the judgment of conviction was reversed.

Referring to the leading case of Boyd v. United States (116 U. S. 616), in which it was held that the compulsory production of books and papers in a case seeking a forfeiture of estate was within the reasoning of criminal proceedings, Circuit Judge *323 Day declared that this decision left no room for doubt that the compulsory production of a criminating document by the accused when on trial for crime was compelling him to testify against himself within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. “Nor is it essentialAo the needs of justice,” he added, “ that the accused may be thus called upon to produce evidence of a documentary character. The authorities seem very clear that in such a case where a criminating document directly bearing upon the issue to be proven is in the possession of the accused the prosecution may be permitted to show the contents thereof without notice to the defendant to produce it. As it would be beyond the power of the court to require the accused to criminate himself by the production of the paper as evidence against himself, secondary evidence is admissible to show its contents.”

To allow a demand for the production of a document to be made upon an accused person in the presence of the jury is to require him to produce it or deny his possession thereof, or by reason of his silence to warrant injurious inferences against him. For this reason the practice is properly forbidden. Where an incriminating document appears prima facie to be in the possession of the accused the prosecution may give secondary evidence of its contents without previous notice calling upon the defendant to produce the original; and this rule is not restricted to papers which are the immediate subject of the indictment. (See United States v. Doebler, Baldwin’s Cir. Ct. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.E. 730, 218 N.Y. 70, 34 N.Y. Crim. 318, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gibson-ny-1916.