People v. Milks

55 A.D. 372, 15 N.Y. Crim. 220, 66 N.Y.S. 889
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 A.D. 372 (People v. Milks) 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. Milks, 55 A.D. 372, 15 N.Y. Crim. 220, 66 N.Y.S. 889 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

McLennan, J.:

A careful reading of the evidence bearing upon the question of defendant’s guilt leads us to the conclusion that it was such as to require the submission of that question to the jury. It will, therefore, be unnecessary to review the evidence, except so far as it may be material to the discussion of the questions raised by the objections and exceptions taken by the defendant during the progress of the trial.

The first objection and exception to which attention is called relates to a statement made by the learned district attorney in opening the case to the jury. The district attorney said: “We expect to prove that within the last six or eight years this defendant has had at least six fires destroying his property, which was insured, and where he obtained the insurance money every time up to this time. I shall offer that proof.”

“ The defendant’s counsel objected to his going further with this statement about former fires that Milks' had had, and to his stating further upon that subject, and to the statement which has already [375]*375been made upon the subject of former fires and receiving the insurance upon them, upon the ground that it is improper in this case. The defendant objected to his stating anything upon the subject of former fires not connected with this transaction. By the court: Tou may proceed. The defendant’s counsel duly excepted. By the district attorney : I shall offer to prove here in this case every fact which I have just stated, claiming that that will have a bearing upon this question on trial before you. I shall not offer that proof with a view of trying another fire, but only offer it as bearing upon . the intent and the probability of the defendant’s being connected with this fire. I believe that' proof is competent, and when the time comes I shall make my argument as to that legal proposition, but not now. I expect to show the motive in carrying this heavy insurance.”

The statement standing alone, having been objected to and an exception taken by the defendant, clearly constituted reversible error within the decision in People v. Smith (162 N. Y. 520). Upon the trial of that case, which was upon an indictment for arson, in opening the case to the jury the district attorney said: “We shall show you, if permitted, that before this fire, which occurred at the Boulevard, in which some seven buildings owned by the mother and family of this defendant were burned, many other buildings which this defendant had assisted in erecting, or in which he was interested, were destroyed in a similar manner. Within less than a year before the fire on the Boulevard —.”

At this point and before the statement was completed, the defendant’s counsel objected that it was improper. The objection was overruled by the court, to which ruling an exception was taken, whereupon the prosecuting attorney remarked: “ If counsel insists upon it, I will not go into the matter at this time.”

The Court of Appeals held that the statement was improper; that it might have been prejudicial to the defendant, and have caused the jury to infer “ that they were dealing with an old offender,” and for such error the judgment of conviction was reversed.

In the case at bar it is insisted by the learned district attorney that the error was cured because later in the case he offered to prove the facts stated in his opening. Upon the direct examination of one Arthur G-. Reynolds, called as a witness by the People, who was [376]*376an insurance agent and had insured the buildings in question, the witness was asked by the district attorney: “ Q. During the last six years have you effected insurance upon other property- of Gilbert Milks aside from this occasion, this mentioned in the policy % A. Tes, sir. Q. And during the last six years have there been five fires before this of property that was insured by you in fire insurance companies, and in each of these cases did the property burn, and was the insurance money in each of the cases paid to Gilbert Milks ■? Objected to upon -the ground that it is-immaterial and incompetent. Tends to prove circumstances not in any way connected with the charge contained in the -indictment, and upon trial here.' By the district attorney: 1 propose to prove that the defendant, Gilbert Milks, has had other property insured during the last six years, and that five different pieces of property have been insured by him in fire insurance companies, and the buildings and property so insured have burned in each and every case under suspicious circumstances, and that the insurance in each and every case prior to the one of June 4th, 1898, has been paid to the defendant by the insurance companies. By the court: My present impression is that the proof is incompetent for the purpose of bearing upon any question in this case; the only purpose it seems to me it could be would be upon the question of intent; it hardly seems that where a similar act was done so- remote from the time when this offence was committed, if one was committed, would have any bearing upon this case; such a bearing as the jury might consider in determining the offence, if this act was committed; unless I get more light I shall exclude it; the matter of time is the _ question here ; I think' the question is fairly -up, and if you can supply proof to connect these fires, possibly that might make a difference, but the way the offer -is stated now, I do not think this is proper.”

We fail to see how the fact that the incompetent proof referred to in the opening was subsequently offered by the People, could cure the error or in any way militate against the force of the improper statement. In .the case of People v. Smith (supra) the district attorney did not offer to prove the facts stated by him in his opening address. In speaking of 'that feature of the- case the court said: “ If the district attorney had the- right to make the proof he proposed, he did not make it, and thus may have prejudiced the [377]*377defendant by a charge he could not or did not intend to support ; if the distriet attorney had no right to mahe the proof, then the charge, although no more harmful to the defendant, was a more reprehensible invasion of his rights.”

After pointing out that it would have been error to have received proof of the facts contained in the statement made in that case, the court said : “ It is difficult to lay down an inflexible rule applicable to irrelevant statements by the public prosecutor to the prejudice of the defendant. In some cases it is manifest they do no harm. In others, where the case depends upon a mass of circumstances, many of which are contradicted, others equivocal except as light is reflected upon them by their association, it is more important that nothing but proven and relevant facts should be brought into the whole field of observation from which the jury are to deduce their conclusion. And as the field enlarges it is the more important that care should be taken to prevent the mingling of mere statement with fact. Enough has already been said to show that the case before us is of the latter kind. If the court had sustained the objection of the defendant, the jury would have been instructed as to the range of the inquiry. As the court overruled it, they understood the district attorney to be speaking within proper limits, and they might have inferred that they were dealing with an old offender.”

The remarks are especially applicable to the case at bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 A.D. 372, 15 N.Y. Crim. 220, 66 N.Y.S. 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-milks-nyappdiv-1900.