People v. McInerney & McDonald

5 N.Y. Crim. 47, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 598
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 5 N.Y. Crim. 47 (People v. McInerney & McDonald) 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. McInerney & McDonald, 5 N.Y. Crim. 47, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 598 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.

The appellants were convicted of the crime of robbery in the first degree. The point first presented on this appeal on their behalf is, that the verdict was against the weight of evidence and justice requires a new trial. This Court has authority to review the evidence, and if satisfied that the verdict against the prisoners “ is against the weight of evidence, or against law, or that justice requires a new trial, it may order a new trial whether any exception shall have been taken or not in the Court below.” Section 527, Code of Criminal Procedure. People v. Hovey, 92 N. Y., 554 ; IN. Y. Grim., 283; People v. Boas, 92 N. Y., 563; 1 N. Y. Crim., 287; People v. Panniza, MSS. Op. Brady, J.

We have given the evidence in this case a careful study, fully impressed with the obligation imposed upon us by the section of the Code of Criminal Procedure above cited, and feel constrained to say that we see no ground upon which our duty requires us to interfere with the verdict of the jury. The testimony was to some extent conflicting. That given by the defendants themselves, if believed by the jury, would have exculpated them from all charges of crime; while that on the part of the people strongly tended, if believed by the jury, to establish their guilt. It is no province of the Court to say on such a question of conflict that the jury were wrong [49]*49in not accepting the evidence of defendants as true and therefore rejecting that given by the people. The Court must not, under the new rule of review given by section 527, above cited, cease to regard the important fact that the jury had the vast advantage of seeing all the witnesses sworn in the case, personally before them, and being able from their appearance, demeanor and manner of testifying to judge of their credibility, and to take those things into consideration in weighing their testimony, instead of the mere stenographic photograph of the words they uttered which is furnished to the Court. It is not enough to justify interference with the verdict that the Court on the case before it can see that the evidence made the case a conflicting or doubtful one, demanding the solution of a verdict to settle the doubt or conflict; but it must be quite apparent that the conflict has been settled by a verdict against the substantial and preponderating weight of evidence. We are not able, therefore, to interfere with the verdict on the first point of the counsel for the appellants.

It was said by Beady, J., in the People v. Panniza, (ubi. sup.), that “ justice requires a new trial whenever the Court can perceive in reviewing all the evidence, either that a verdict of acquittal should have been rendered or that the jury were led by reason of prejudice into convicting the defendant of a grade of offense altogether unwarranted by the evidence.”

In our consideration of the evidence in this case we - have not failed to give the appellants the full benefit of this rule.

Their crime of robbery (if committed by them at all) was committed by both acting in concert as accomplices each of the other. It was also committed, if at all, with a degree of personal violence which inflicted grievous bodily harm upon the person from whose possession the nroperty was taken.

If the jury found from the evidence that the crime charged in the indictment was committed by the defendants, they were justified in finding that it was committed with either or both of the attending circumstances which characterize it as rob[50]*50bery in the first degree. 'A finding of the assault with intent to rob, committed by the defendants and consummated by actual robbery, can leave no room to doubt that they acted in concert as accomplices; nor that they inflicted the injuries suffered by the party robbed.

The second and only other point presented is that the recorder erred in charging as follows:

“ That such a crime as this could be perpetrated in any civilized community, much less in a great city like this, -is a matter of some degree of astonishment. But that a crime was committed, and a crime of the character and description of the one I have just alluded to, there can be no question.”

Standing by itself this charge would present a very serious question. But correctly to understand the signification of the charge it must be read in connection with its context.

• In commenting upon a crime winch had been committed by some one, the recorder said “ A citizen quietly, peaceably and properly upon one of the public streets of this city is felled to the ground, and while prostrate assaulted with great brutality by some person or persons; and then follows what is above quoted and excepted, to wit, “ That such a crime as this could be perpetrated in any civilized community, much less in a great city like this, is a matter of some degree of astonishment. But that a crime was committed and á crime of the character and description of the one I have just alluded to, there can be no question.”

Thus reading the part of the charge excepted to with its immediate context, shows that the crime just alluded to was the felling to the ground and the assaulting with great brutality, of a citizen quietly, peaceably and properly, upon one of the public streets. That this occurred, was not in dispute. The defendants themselves testified, that they were attracted by the outcries of Schwarzler the complainant, and hurrying to his relief found him felled to the ground by an assault committed by some person, indicating violence and brutality. It was in a public street, where he was standing quietly, peacefully and properly; and the learned recorder committed [51]*51no error in speaking of the assault which no one denied had been committed by somebody, as a brutal and alarming crime.

The questions in the case were whether the defendants were the assailants, and whether the intent of the assault was robbery, and whether such robbery was in fact committed. Upon these questions the charge when recited as it appears in the case, to a portion of which the exception was taken, was not injurious to the defendants, nor in excess of legitimate comment by the Court upon undisputed facts of the case.

The result of our consideration is that the conviction and judgment must be affirmed.

Beady, J., concurs.

Daniels, J.

Two positions have been taken by the counsel for the appellants in support of this appeal. It is urged that the evidence did not warrant the conviction of the defendants and that the court erred in what was said concerning its effect in submitting the case to the jury. An examination of the testimony given upon the trial fails to sustain the objection taken that it did not justify or warrant the verdict of the jury. For while it is true that the evidence of the prosecuting witness was in some respects open to criticism, it was stil so far sustained as to justify the jury in believing that he testified to the truth. From his own evidence, as well as that of all the other witnesses who saw him, he appears to have been cruelly assaulted and beaten. And this he states was done by these two defendants, and after he was beaten, and before they completed their disposition of him, he testified that he felt a hand in his pocket.

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Related

The People v. . Hovey
92 N.Y. 554 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
McKenna v. . the People
81 N.Y. 360 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.Y. Crim. 47, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mcinerney-mcdonald-nysupct-1886.