People v. Masterson

88 N.Y.S. 747, 96 A.D. 610
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 N.Y.S. 747 (People v. Masterson) 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. Masterson, 88 N.Y.S. 747, 96 A.D. 610 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinions

PATTERSON, J.

A careful -examination of the record presented on appeal convinces us that it is our- duty to direct a new trial of this defendant under the ample power given to this court to set aside a verdict against “a prisoner” when it appears that justice requires a new trial. Section 537, Code Cr. Proc.; People v. Boas, 92 N. Y. 560. This' defendant was convicted of the crime of abduction. The offense charged against him is defined in subdivision 1 of section 383 of the Penal Code. By that subdivision the crime is committed by a person who "takes, receives, employs, harbors or uses, or ' causes or procures to be taken, received, employed or harbored or used, a female under the age of eighteen years,, for the purpose of prostitution; or, not being her husband, for the purpose of sexual intercourse; or without the consent of her father, mother, guardian or. other person having legal charge of her person, for the purpose of marriage.” It is charged in the indictment a"s a first count that the appellant, at the borough of Manhattan, in the city of New York,. on the 16th of August, in the year 1903; “did feloniously take, receive, harbor, employ, and use, and cause and procure "to be taken, received, harbored, employed, and used, one Anna Berkley, who was then and there a female under "the age of eighteen years, to wit, of the age of sixteen years, for the purpose of sexual intercourse, he, the said Eugene A. Masterson, not being then and there the husband of the said Anna' Berkley, against the. form of the statute in .such case made and provided, and against the peace of the people of the state of New York, and their dignity.” There is another count in. the indictment, but it was not pressed ,at the trial. There was a sharp conflict of evidence on the trial as to the ag.e of Anna Berkley, the,alleged abducted female. We will assume, however, for the purposes of this appeal, that she was under the age of 18 years, but it appears that she was at the time of the alleged abduction, and long previously had been, an abandoned, vicious, and criminal girl. The story of her life, as it appears in. this record, reveals a depravity almost incomprehensible in one so young as she is alleged to have been. It was upon her testimony principally, and that of another abandoned woman, the keeper of a bawdy house, that this defendant was convicted. This profligate girl was a complainant. She made a charge against this defendant. She is a self-confessed perjurer. [749]*749as well as a thief and a prostitute. Her story, as told on the trial, is that she became acquainted with the defendant on the street, while he was walking his post as a policeman, and that she was introduced to him by her sister; that at various times he and she would walk and chat together; that they met on the street in August, 1902, and the complainant’s sister asked the defendant if he knew of a place to which the complainant could go, and he said yes, he knew of a woman on the west side. He did not give the woman’s name or place of abode, but said it was on the west side. He subsequently met the girl, and said he had seen the woman, and that he and the woman had called at her sister’s house looking for her; an'd he gave her a paper, wrote an address on it, and told her to go to that address. She says that paper was destroyed. She went to that woman, and lived there as a prostitute for several months. She says she did not know at the time what kind of a place it was. She swears positively that the defendant did not tell her anything about this woman, only that she was living alone, and that he told her “she should behave herself, and be a good girl.” The woman referred to was a Mrs. Arnold, who kept an apartment, which was evidently used for immoral purposes. It was sought to corroborate the girl’s story by the testimony of this Mrs. Arnold, who received the girl into her apartment to pursue the life of a prostitute. She was harboring this girl, and was herself guilty of the crime of abduction. Her testimony is that, before she became acquainted with the girl, she met the defendant at Coney Island. She had known him previously, but had not seen him for some years. He asked her generally what she was doing, and she said she was “running a flat” on the west side in New York, and asked if the defendant knew of “any girl for that purpose.” He said he did, and she gave him her address, and subsequently (without going further into detail) the girl went there, and after she had been there some little time the defendant undoubtedly visited her and had intercourse with her. But the charge against this defendant is that of abduction. The substance of the charge, and the essence of the offense as charged in the indictment, consists in acts of the defendant in procuring the complainant to take up her abode in this house of prostitution. The great mass of evidence in the case is directed to the establishment of the fact that it was through his procurement and by his agency that she went to this infamous place for the purpose of prostitution. We have nothing in the record to establish his acts except the testimony of the girl and this woman Arnold (who is no more worthy of belief than the girl herself) and unimportant statements of another woman. On cross-examination Mrs. Arnold testified that she was taken to the district attorney’s office, and was told that, if she did not make a charge against the defendant, she would be sent to the State Prison, and that it was under these circumstances that she made the- charge; and she said, “I am protecting myself now, as I consider, in making this charge against Masterson.” Then she made an affidavit. But, further than this, an extraordinary circumstance is disclosed in the record concerning the relations of these two women. While the alleged abducted girl was living in the apartment of Mrs. Arnold, she stole from the latter, [750]*750whereupon Mrs. Arnold preferred a charge against her of grand larceny, and this defendant assisted in making the arrest of the accused. The efforts of the defendant to arrest the girl are testified to by-Oincer Buckley. There does not seem to be much room for doubt that this charge was made by the girl in revenge for the activity of the defendant in his efforts to arrest her on the charge of grand larceny.. Bearing in mind that the substance of the offense here charged is not an act of the defendant done some time after the Berkley girl went to the Arnold apartment, but his alleged agency in causing her to go there for immoral purposes, we find the testimony of these'two females without corroboration, unless it may be such as has been given by the defendant himself. His testimony is that he did suggest to the girl to go to the apartment, but that it was his belief that she would 'go there as a domestic servant, and that when he was asked by Mrs. Arnold concerning a girl he said to her that he would get her a servant.

Considering the character, of the witnesses for the prosecution, and the interest the two women had in securing the conviction of the defendant that they themselves might escape punishment, or be treated with lenien'cy, and the statements of Mastersoti, a grave doubt exists as to whether- this defendant Was' really guilty of the particular crime for which he was indicted. But the peculiarities of this case are not exhausted yet. It was given to the jury at half past 2 o’clock in the afternoon. They returned at five minutes past 6 o’clock to hear some testimony read, namely, that given on the direct examination of the defendant. The jury then retired, and remained out all night. On the next morning, at the opening of the court, the justice presiding, of his own motion, called the jury in, and stated to them that he regretted the necessity of keeping them together so.

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

Related

State v. Greeno
342 P.2d 1052 (Montana Supreme Court, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 N.Y.S. 747, 96 A.D. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-masterson-nyappdiv-1904.