People v. Rathbun

21 Wend. 509
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 21 Wend. 509 (People v. Rathbun) 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. Rathbun, 21 Wend. 509 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1839).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

I think none of the exceptions to the admission or rejection of evidence were well taken. 'The objections to admission were in the main professedly founded on irrelevancy, which always depends upon the object for which testimony is offered. While many times it may not be obviously relevant, when referred to the issue -upon the record, it becomes quite material for the purpose of collateral issues arising in the course of the cause. The direct issue was the forgery and the fraudulent uttering of -She note mentioned in the third count, and much of the testimony objected to tended to make out the scienter. This was, among other things, sought to be proved by Rathbun Allen, an accomplice, while it was sought to be repelled by ■inferences from the great extent and complication of the business of the prisoner, and his ignorance of his money matters, which were conducted by others. The jury were -asked to infer that forgeries, therefore, had been mingled with his genuine paper without his knowledge, and that his negotiating such forged paper was a mere mistake. To show the scienter, or sustain the accomplice, or repel the inference mentioned, or to answer all three of these purposes, the letters, memoranda and declarations of the prisoner, embraced by the exceptions, were plainly admissible.

One of the exceptions, and I do not know but more, complains that evidence tending still farther to show the extent, variety and complication of debts and business, was [518]*518overruled. It is a somewhat singular ground of defence, at best, that forged paper, conducing to a man’s individual and exclusive profit, has been-made and mingled in his 'affairs by some third person. It assumes that there is,a disinterestedness and generosity in crime, which, I apprehend, is without the pale of presumptive evidence. , I cannot say I should have been' dissatisfied had all the evidence which was proposed to fasten voluntary forgery on others been excluded. The account is more natural, as given by the accomplice, that if he forged the endorsement, it, was as an instrument used by' the prisoner.

The remark by the judge, that the paper or transaction purporting to be for the prisoner’s benefit and operating so in fact, might be considered as weighing against him,."seems to have been better in accordance with the" philosophy of the human mind. Truly, a note drawn by one who passes it with forged endorsements, seems, as the judge said, not only, to call for an explanation from him how that could innocently be, but a much more 'satisfactory explanation than was given. The doctrine was Igid.do.wn much more strong, ly against the prisoner in State v. Britt, 3 Dev. 122, 125, by Mr. Justice Ruffin.

That the prisoner advised Allen, the accomplice, to break jail and éscape* hé being charged with the crime imputed by this indictment to the prisoner, might have been regarded by the jury either as indicating a desire to, get him out of the way, and thus .to prevent his being a witness, or as betraying a guilty, knowledge of the crime which' the prisoner assumed for the foundation of his advice. It is hardly to bel supposed thathe would ,interfere thus to defraud, justice, without being a colleague in the guilt which the advice 'supposed. One of the commonest effects of a community in crime, is the undetected accomplice .lending a hand forth e escape "of his more unfortunate associates. • It is one means of escape usually looked to in a copartnership of guilt —a'circumstance which more than any other renders ourJ jails insecure.

It was offered to show, that the prisoner, although advised by his assignees to escape and go beyond the reach of pro[519]*519cess, and having an opportunity to do so, declined; and it is supposed that the admissibility of such proof, follows from the rule which turns an attempt to escape against the prisoner. A strong declaration of Hume, in his treatise on the trial of crimes, that such a fact should be received as conclusive against any ease sustained by circumstantial evidence merely, was cited. But the difference between an attempt to escape, and refusal to escape, whatever degree of moral conviction the latter might carry to the mind of the writer, is quite obvious when they are offered as legal evidence. The attempt implies guilt, and operates against the party like a confession. The refusal is an act and confession in his own favor. Once receive it, and the criminal courts will be loaded with such evidence.- It is almost as easily manufactured as a declaration of innocence. The prisoner and his friend may introduce a third person to give the advice and hear the refusal, who may be a witness with perfect integrity. A dupe himself, he may testify to the fact "without being guilty of perjury; and thus the practical working of Mr. Hume’s rule would in effect neutralize the force of all circumstantial evidence—a species of evidence which is in general the only resort for the establishment of infamous offences, and# when received under proper caution, is at least equally satisfactory with the most positive proof. The ease with which an alibi is said to be got up and maintained by perjury, renders it a very suspicious kind of proof. So the art with which insanity may be counterfeited. But the false declaration of innocence, or subsequent acts which appear to indicate it, are. too common a resort to be regarded as even admissible.

The question whether the assignees had not taken possession of the whole property of Rathbun, pressed with a view to infer his original integrity, was inadmissible for the samé reason. Acts and declarations which are a part of the res gestee are admissible. Thus,-on a trial for a riot in destroying a threshing machine, the defendant’s witness was allowed to state .that he and the defendant were compelled to join the mob; but they had before agreed to run away the first chance: which they did, the witness in ten minutes, [520]*520and he being joined by the prisoner in a quarter' of an hour-after. Rex v. Crutchley, 5 Carr. & Payne, 133, and see the note to that case. Farther than this, the common law cases do not go. Mr. Hume wrote on the- Scotch law. In The State v. Scott, 1'Hawks, 24, both the declarations and conduct of the prisqner, the next morning after the homicide, were repudiated as incompetent evidence even of insanity.

I am satisfied with the charge of the judge. The branch' of the charge mainly relied on for error, is the refusal to direct an acquittal, on the ground of the advice in the letter which enclosed the note and endorsements to Mr. Evans, that they were made for a special purpose, and a request to-lock them up. This advice, and this request; it is said, absolutely negatives all fraudulent intent against the endorsers, the only persons whom the prisoner was accused of intending to defraud, in the count upon which he was convicted. Negotiating the note, if supposed to be genuine, it is said, would be a perversion of it, and a defence would, therefore, be absolutely available against it in the hands of the holder. , I do-not understand the judge to have denied all weight to such a circumstance; but merely to say that the offence might, notwithstanding, be complete, or be considered as made out in-evidence. The natural consequence, admitting the endorsements were genuine, was to charge the endorsers. The note was sent to Evans with the view óf raising money, and had that effect. Had he found' himself in danger, he would have sought to charge the endorsers.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Wend. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rathbun-nysupct-1839.