People v. Gonzalez

56 N.E.2d 574, 293 N.Y. 259, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1312
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 56 N.E.2d 574 (People v. Gonzalez) 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. Gonzalez, 56 N.E.2d 574, 293 N.Y. 259, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1312 (N.Y. 1944).

Opinions

Desmond, J.

On the evening of March 13, 1943, a young man named Allen Parris was shot as he stood on the stoop or in the doorway of a house on 63rd Street in Manhattan. Later that evening he died from the bullet wound. On the evidence, including defendant’s own statements to a police officer and to an Assistant District Attorney, the jury was justified in finding that the shot was fired by defendant and that each of the elements of the crime of murder in the first degree was proven beyond a reasonable doubt. On the preceding evening there had been altercations in a candy store and later in the street nearby, between a group of young men which included Parris and another group which included Victor Gonzalez, the son of defendant. On those occasions the quarrelling, according to one version, arose from an insult offered by one of the Parris group to Victor’s sister. Other witnesses said that the feuding was touched off by some discussion about the jackets Victor Gonzalez and his friends were wearing, or by an effort by one of the Parris group to steal one of those jackets. At any rate, Victor went home and reported the occurrences to his father, the defendant here. When the trouble flared up again the next night, defendant was a participant. In his statements made after the shooting, he said that, after some skirmishing between the two bands of young men, he (defendant) heard one of the Parris group make a threat to get him and take care of him ” without specifying who it was who was to be taken care of. Defendant, according to his statements to the investigators, then went home and got his revolver, joined with his son’s friends in chasing the other youths and fired the shot that ended the life of Parris.

Defendant’s counsel, in his closing address to the jury, argued that it had not been clearly proven that defendant fired the shot, and that defendant, if he did shoot Parris, did so for the protection of his son and daughter. The prosecutor in his summation took up the several ingredients of the crime of murder in the first degree. At one point he said to the jury: “ There is your premeditation; that going to get the gun and *261 coming back.” Those words are of special importance in the light of what occurred after the jury had retired to deliberate.

The Judge charged the jury on all the phases of the case and the jurors went out to consider their verdict. Three hours later they returned to the courtroom and the following colloquy was recorded: “ The Clerk: Mr. Foreman, please rise. Gentlemen of the Jury, have you agreed upon a verdict. The Foreman: Not yet. The Court: Mr. Foreman and gentlemen of the jury: a few minutes ago I received the following communication: ‘ Your Honor: If a man put a gun in his pocket for protective purposes originally, and subsequently used it in the commission of a crime, would that constitute premeditation! ’ Signed 1 Harold Derfner,’ Foreman. My answer: I am unable to answer your question in that form, except as already given in my original charge. If you care to have any portion of such charge read, indicate it and I will have it read. You may retire. Did you hear what I said! The Foreman: Yes, sir.”

Two and a half hours later the jury returned with its verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree.

We consider that the court’s response to the jurors,’ .question was no less than a refusal to reinstruct them as to an applicable proposition of law, a refusal to clarify their doubts. Their question, while not framed in language of the utmost possible clarity, was intelligible and, even if it were not, it was the court’s duty to ask the questioners to make their inquiry clearer. That there was a binding duty to answer the question cannot be doubted. Section 427 of the Code of Criminal Procedure says in part: “ After the jury have retired for deliberation, * * * if they desire to be informed of a point of law arising in the cause, they must require the officer to conduct ■them into court. Upon their being brought into court, the information required must be given * * * ”, Of .that section, which first appeared in the Criminal Code as adopted in 1881 (L. 1881, ch. 442), there has been little or no mention in the decisions until quite recently (such cases as People v. Parker, 137 N. Y. 535, and People v. Silver, 234 App. Div. 871, deal rather with another part of the" section, not above quoted, which requires that the added instructions be given in defendant’s presence and after notice to his attorney). [Recently, however, we have had to consider the statute in three cases, including this one. In People v. *262 Flynn (290 N. Y. 220) we held it to be grave error for the court to refuse to answer categorically a question from the jury which had the effect of insinuating into the case a theory of felony murder, which was not properly before the jury. In People v. Cooke (292 N. Y. 185) we were confronted with a situation where the court did proffer an answer to the question. This court, in the Cooke case, divided on the point of whether or not the additional instructions so given were correct and'sufficient. None of us expressed any disagreement with so much of the Chief Judge’s dissenting opinion, in that case, as says that section 427 of the Code of Criminal Procedure leaves to the trial court no discretion whatever as to whether or not to answer a proper question from the jury, even though the original charge contains a correct answer to that same question. In People v. Cooke the whole court agreed, I think, on these propositions: first, that a trial judge simply cannot refuse to answer a pertinent question from the jury; second, that the answer need not necessarily be a categorical1 ‘ yes ’ ’ or “ no and third, that if to a proper question the court gives no answer at all or an answer that fails to answer, then the error is reversible.

The right of jurors to ‘ ‘ ask questions of the judges for their direction ” is no new thing. (Chitty, Practical Treatise on the Criminal Law, vol. 1 [1819], p. 517; see Maurer v. The People, 43 N. Y. 1.) The general rule in the United States is that <£ the court may and ordinarily should give the jurors additional instructions on their request ” (23 C. J. S. Criminal Law, § 1376, subd. c., p. 1046). In Pennsylvania, without the guidance of any statute, the Supreme Court said: ££ In fact, the practice of giving additional instructions to the jury upon their request is so well settled in this state that we know of no prior instance- in which the request has been refused ” (Commonwealth v. Smith, 221 Penn. St. 552, 555). Using language that we - adopt here, the Pennsylvania Court went on to say: ££ It is immaterial that the court has already charged the jury upon the law of the ease generally, or has given instructions which would answer the request of the jury. The very fact that the jury, after having been in consultation, have failed to comprehend the instructions given in the charge and request further instructions, is of itself sufficient to show the necessity of addi *263 tional instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.E.2d 574, 293 N.Y. 259, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gonzalez-ny-1944.