People v. . Hughes

32 N.E. 1105, 137 N.Y. 29, 9 N.Y. Crim. 277, 50 St. Rep. 62, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 62, 92 Sickels 29, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 654
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 1105 (People v. . Hughes) 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. . Hughes, 32 N.E. 1105, 137 N.Y. 29, 9 N.Y. Crim. 277, 50 St. Rep. 62, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 62, 92 Sickels 29, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 654 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

FINCH, J.

The prisoner was convicted of extortion. The verdict of the jury establishes that, availing himself of his position as the head of a labor organization, with branches in almost all sections of the country, he-first threatened and then put into operation a scheme for lessening and damaging, and to some extent destroying the business of a firm of clothing manufacturers because they did not at once obey his demands in respect to the number of apprentices they should employ; and, when they submitted to his dictation and apologized for seeking to do their own business in their own way instead of his, extorted money from the firm as the price of forgiveness. Setting in motion the enormous power which the organization, evidently misjudging the man, had suffered to fall into his hands, he extorted from the firm something over a thousand dollars as the price of ending the mischief. He called this process “soaking” the manufacturers. ’ The jury pro *279 nounced it extortion and lie was convicted of that crime and now appeals from the judgment. Before us, several alleged errors in the trial are asserted as grounds of reversal, some quite technical, but otherwise material to the result and deserving serious consideration.

1. It is objected that the record does not show that any judgment of the conviction was entered in the oyer and terminer. The point is suicidal. If correctly taken we ought to dismiss the prisoner’s appeal. His counsel put themselves in the attitude of going to the general term and then coming here on appeal to reverse a judgment which they at the same time assert never had a legal existence. The minutes of the oyer and terminer show the verdict and the rendition of a judgment upon it. We may very well assume the fact of its formal entry from the statement contained in the affidavit of the district attorney on the motion to remit the record to the court below and from the recitals in the notices of appeal served by the prisoner’s counsel, which describe a judgment of conviction in the oyer and terminer. The appellant can hardly complain if we do not turn him out of court on his own objection that his appeal is premature.

2. It is asserted that the judgment of the general term was never remitted to the oyer and terminer after affirmance. The record shows that it was. Upon the formal motion of the district attorney, founded upon an affidavit which recited the prior proceedings, the general term ordered that the judgment of conviction appealed from should he affirmed, “and all procedings herein he, and the same hereby are, remitted to the court of oyer and terminer.” The order operated to resore the authority of the latter court, which thereafter directed the sentence to he carried out.

3. The third oh j ecti on is, that the verdict convicts the defendant of the felony charged in the indictment, and that no felony was charged in the indictment because extortion is not a felony. That is a mistake. Whatever may have been the rule at common law, extortion is a felony under the definition of the Penal Code. That definition describes it as a crime “punishable” by death or *280 imprisonment in the state prison. By section 702, where the penalty is imprisonment for less than one year, the prisoner goes to the county jail. By section 703, when the term is one year, he may he confined in the county jail, penitentiary or state prison. By section 704, where the term exceeds one year, he must go to the state prison. Now, by section 554, the crime of extortion is punishable by imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years. Obviously the offense is “punishable;” that is, may be punished by an imprisonment of one year or more, which may be, or must be, in the state prison. It is not the actual sentence, but the possible one, which determines the grades of the offense. People v. Borges, 6 Abb. Pr. 132.

4. The next objection is much more serious, and relates to the ultimate constitution of the jury. William Eosenbauer, summoned as a juryman, was challenged for actual and implied bias and examined by both parties. Nothing appeared to justify his rejection, and the challenge was overruled, and the juror sworn and took his seat in the jury-box, being the eleventh juror selected. Four' others were then examined and rejected, and the challenge of the fifth was overruled by the court, whereupon the defendant challenged him peremptorily, and in so doing exhausted the last of his five peremptory challenges. At this stage of the proceedings counsel for the People stated that he desired to interpose a peremptory challenge to one of the jurors who had been sworn and passed into the box, stating as a reason that matters had come to his knowledge since the juror was sworn leading him to believe that the juror is not satisfactory. Counsel for the defendant objected upon the ground that after a juror had been sworn he cannot be challenged peremptorily except by permission of the court and in the discretion of the court, and that that discretion ought not to be exercised, and cannot be exercised unless some case is made other than the oral statement of counsel: it cannot be exercised upon the bare statement that counsel has learned something without stating what he has learned. Counsel also objected that the request was not made until after the defendant had exhausted his peremptory challenges. The court granted the *281 request of the prosecuting attorney, who thereupon challenged Rosenbauer peremptorily, and the juror left the box. The defendant’s counsel excepted to the ruling. The record makes-it very plain what the objection and what the ruling were,, and so what the exception relied oh is. The counsel for the-prisoner did not object that the juror could not be challenged peremptorily after having been sworn, but conceded the exact contrary, and admited that he might be so challenged in the discretion of the court, and, admitting and conceding that, aimed his objection at the manner of exercising that discretion, and his sole and distinct point was that the conceded discretion should not be-exercised upon the bare statement of the prosecuting attorney and after the defendant had exhausted his peremptory challenges. It-was upon that objection that the court ruled, and upon that only, and the ruling was that the discretion of the court being conceded, it was a proper exercise of that discretion to act upon the assurance of the public officer, empowered by the law, to represent the People in the prosecution of criminals. There was no error in the ruling. Assuming the truth of the concession, that the court had discretion to permit a peremptory challenge of a juror after he had been sworn, it was no abuse of that discretion to give the permission upon the assurance of the prosecuting officer. Just that appears to have been done in Tweed’s Case, before the Code of Criminal Procedure came into operation, 13 Abb. Pr., N. S., 371, note, anditisnot very wonderful that the prisoner’s counsel should have thought the rule unchanged and so conceded its existence. They made a mistake. They had a good objection, but did not know it, and with the latter information acquired are seeking so to transform their actual objection as to throw the mistake which they made upon the court, which did not make it. The basis of the effort is that their objection was founded upon and covered by section 371 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 1105, 137 N.Y. 29, 9 N.Y. Crim. 277, 50 St. Rep. 62, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 62, 92 Sickels 29, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hughes-ny-1893.