People v. . Miller

62 N.E. 418, 169 N.Y. 339, 16 N.Y. Crim. 281, 7 Bedell 339, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1175
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 62 N.E. 418 (People v. . Miller) 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. . Miller, 62 N.E. 418, 169 N.Y. 339, 16 N.Y. Crim. 281, 7 Bedell 339, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1175 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny and sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison *283 for ten years, but upon appeal the court below has reversed the judgment of conviction and granted a new trial, and the People have appealed to this court from that order. If this were a civil action the case would not be appealable to this court, since by section nine of article six of the Constitution, appeals to this court are limited to three classes of cases, namely, final judgments in actions, final orders in special proceedings and orders granting new trials on exceptions where the appellant stipulates that on affirmance judgment absolute shall be rendered against him. It is obvious that the appeal in this case does not fall within any of the three classes specified. It is an appeal from an order granting a new trial in a criminal case, and if the limitations upon appeals to this court, specified in this provision of the Constitution, have any application to criminal cases, then clearly this court would have no jurisdiction to review the order in question, but we think that it is very obvious from the language of the limitations themselves that they have no application to appeals in criminal cases. It is true that judgments in capital cases are excepted from the operation of this provision of the Constitution. The exception was probably unnecessary and inserted in the text from abundant caution, otherwise, as supposed, it might be claimed that appeals in such cases directly from the trial court had been abolished and our right to review the facts in such cases abrogated. The exception was, therefore, inserted in order to preserve the right of appeal in such cases, as it existed before the recent Constitution was enacted. This was the plain purpose of the reference in the section to capital cases, and the fact that an unnecessary exception in regard to such cases was inserted in the provision cannot, of course, include within the limitations other criminal cases not referred to. The limitation upon appeals to this court contained in that section manifestly applies to civil cases only. Nothing contrary to this proposition was decided in People v. Helmer, 154 N. Y. 596, though certainly the question was discussed. But it will be seen by an examination of the case that no question of jurisdic *284 tion was involved or decided, and the subsequent decisions in this court indicate very clearly that there was no intention to decide any such proposition in that case. People v. Willis, 158 N. Y. 392; People v. Klipfel, 160 N. Y. 371; People v. Kane, 161 N. Y. 380; People v. Drayton, 168 N. Y. 10. In the three cases first cited it will be seen that this court could not have taken jurisdiction of the appeal if the limitations prescribed in the Constitution had any application; and in the case last cited it was expressly stated in the opinion that the limitations referred to have no application to a criminal case, and that the jurisdiction of this court to hear appeals of this character rests entirely upon the provisions of section five hundred and nineteen of the Code of Criminal Procedure, re-enacted since the present Constitution went into effect. This section gives an appeal in this case to the People as matter of right, and so we have no doubt as to our jurisdiction to review the order in question.

The indictment charged the defendant with grand larceny in two counts. The first count charged the defendant with a felonious appropriation to his own use of one thousand dollars in money which he then and there had in his possession, custody and control as bailee, servant, attorney, agent, clerk and trustee of the complainant. This charge was abandoned on the trial and no further reference need be made to this count in the indictment. • The second count charges the defendant with larceny in the common-law form, namely, that “ on the sixteenth day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-nine, at the borough and in the county aforesaid, with force and arms, one thousand dollars in the money and lawful currency of the United States of the value of one thousand dollars of the goods and chattels and property of one Catherine Moser, then and there being found, feloniously did steal, take and carry away, to the great damage of the said Catherine Moser, 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.” *285 The defendant was, therefore, charged with the crime of which he was convicted in proper form. An indictment in the common-law form charging larceny is still good, and the defendant’s conviction can he upheld if the charge was sustained at the trial by the proofs. It is stated in the order appealed from that the judgment was reversed for errors of law and not for errors or questions of fact, or as matter of discretion, and that the court had reviewed and considered all the questions of fact in the case and found no error therein. This provision of the order means, of course, that the learned court below had examined the evidence given at the trial to prove the various acts and doings of the defendant, which it is claimed constituted the crime charged and found that they were sufficiently established, but reversed the judgment on questions of law. In this aspect of the case the duty of this court is very dear and simple. We are to determine whether there is any evidence in the record which could properly have been submitted to the jury in support of the charge of larceny, and if so, whether there are any exceptions to the rulings of the court upon the trial which warranted the learned court below in reversing the judgment. The fundamental question in the case is whether the proof given at the trial and embraced in the record now before us warranted the trial court in submitting the ease to the jury. The defendant’s counsel, at the close of the evidence, requested the court to discharge the defendant and dismiss the indictment, upon the ground that no proof had been given to sustain the charge of a common-law larceny, and his request in this respect was denied and exception taken. The same point was raised by other requests before the case was finally submitted to the jury.

The evidence at the trial to prove the offense charged took a wide range and covered a broad field of inquiry, and although it related to only about eight months of tine defendant’s career, there is little, if any, dispute about the facts. They are stated very fully and fairly in the two opinions rendered in the court below (64 App. Div. 450), and, therefore, a mere general out *286 line of the defendant’s transactions will be quite sufficient here for all the purposes of this appeal. The defendant’s first appearance before the public was as a member of a prominent church in Brooklyn, in the work of which he seems to have taken an active part, since he was at. one time the president of the Christian Endeavor Society. His standing in the church gave him the opportunity to form the acquaintance of the young men attending the Sunday school, with many of whom he was soon on intimate terms. Many of these young men became his first victims or customers in a financial scheme which he had formed in order to appropriate to himself the money of the credulous and unwary.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.E. 418, 169 N.Y. 339, 16 N.Y. Crim. 281, 7 Bedell 339, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-miller-ny-1902.