People v. McCallam

3 N.Y. Crim. 189
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.Y. Crim. 189 (People v. McCallam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. McCallam, 3 N.Y. Crim. 189 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Boardman, J.

The defendant appeals from a conviction at the Jefferson county Sessions of the crime of grand larceny in the second degree under an indictment for grand larceny in the first degree. Was there evidence in the case to justify the conviction ? A reading of the case satisfies us' there was enough. The fact of larceny by some one is proved, and not controverted by any evidence. The defendant alone knew from Hennessey’s wife of the possession of the money by Hennessey and that it was kept in the trunk under the lounge. From the time the trunk was last seen in Hennessey’s house until it disappeared, [196]*196defendant was the only person known to be in the house, and the evidence tends to show that no other person could have been in the house. While defendant was in the house there was a period of about fifteen minutes in the night-time when she was alone and could have removed the trunk without notice. She lived next door to complainant and within two or three rods. She unfastened and opened the door of Hennessey’s house while she was alone there and in the dark for the ostensible purpose of carrying out a bedstead. The finding of four §5 gold coins concealed in defendant’s wood-shed, of the same kind with those stolen, and the tracks of defendant and her daughter leading towards the place where the trunk was found broken open and rifled, with other circumstances of less importance, make up a body of evidence against the defendant fully justifying a submission of the same tó a jury, and its verdict should be conclusive upon the facts.

The defendant’s counsel, at the close of the people’s case, requested the court to hold cerlain abstract propositions of law as applicable to the case. The court at that stage of the ease declined to pass upon the questions and reserved them for further consideration at the close of the case. Such decision was proper and wise. Any other course would lead to an obnoxious and dangerous system of committing a court to the-expressions of opinions as to the law of the case before the facts were produced in evidence. Ho motion or application was then before the court calling for an expression of an opinion upon the propositions presented by the counsel for the defendant.

After the defendant knew she was suspected of the crime she was told by Guest, one of the officers, that “ they had found enough to convict her ; she might as well own up.” Sometime afterward, and during the same interview, in a conversation between defendant and Champlin, another officer, the tracks leading back from defendant’s house toward the railroad were talked about, and the defendant’s declaration that “she and her daughter made them carrying clothes to Fox and Hardiman, Saturday night ” (the night of the larceny), were admitted in evidence. This is claimed to be erroneous as evidence of a confession made under the influence of fear produced by threats. Code Crim. Proc. § 395. This section has not [197]*197changed the rule of the common law in favor of one charged with crime. We think there are two answers to this objection. 1st. The declaration proved is not a confession. 2nd. It was admissible under the decisions touching confessions. First, the declarations of the defendant as proved are not acknowledgments of guilt or of a criminal act. They are not made against her own interest. Confessions have force against a prisoner because of the presumption that he will not lie to his own disadvantage. Here were the tracks made by defendant and her daughter. She says they were made when they were carrying clothes. This comes within no definition of a confession. See Bouvier, Webster, &c. It is simply a declaration made by one accused of a crime, denying any criminal act and explaining suspicious circumstances for her own advantage. But secondly ; if such declarations be adjudged to be confessions, under the facts proved, they were admissible in evidence against the defendant as used in this case. The language used was not a threat. The same language in substance was used in Wentz’ case, 37 N. Y. 304, to wit, “ He was in a bad fix and had got caught at last.” The prisoner then confessed his guilt, and the evidence was held competent. Such a confession was held to be “ wholly voluntary and made uninfluenced by any threat, menace, promise or other influence.” There is nothing from which it can be inferred that the statements were influenced by fear. They may have been dishonest and untrue. But they were the deliberate and voluntary statements of the accused in her own interest.

The evidence stricken out at folio 240, was incompetent.

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Related

Moody v. . Osgood
54 N.Y. 488 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. Crim. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mccallam-nysupct-1885.