People v. Restell

3 Hill & Den. 289
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Hill & Den. 289 (People v. Restell) 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. Restell, 3 Hill & Den. 289 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

By the Court, Bronson, J.

The depositions of Mrs. Purdy, who had died before the trial, were offered in evidence upon two grounds : 1. as depositions taken de bene esse in the court of general sessions • and 2. as examinations before Mr. Merritt, the committing magistrate.. There is a difficulty at the outset, in allowing them to be read as depositions taken in the general sessions ; for, at the time they were taken, there was no suit or proceeding against the defendant pending in that court. The. defendant had just before been committed to prison by a magistrate on a criminal charge; but no indictment had been found, and whether she would be indicted, if at all, in the sessions, or the oyer and terminer, was a question about which nothing could then be known. I do not see how the sessions could acquire jurisdiction of the matter except by indictment found in that court, or in the oyer and terminer and transmitted to the sessions for trial. If the court had no jurisdiction, the depositions are extra-judicial, and consequently void. But as this difficulty was not mentioned at the bar, there may be some legal provision on the subject which I have overlooked, or there may have been an understanding between the counsel that the objection should not be made. It is proper, therefore, to consider the case upon the broad ground discussed at the bar.

Can the public prosecutor have depositions taken de bene esse in criminal cases, and read them in evidence without the consent of the defendant 1 I think he cannot. The general rule certainly is, that the witnesses must appear in court and be confronted with the accused party. In trials for homicide [295]*295the dying declarations of the person murdered may be given in evidence against the defendant. This is, I think, the only exception to the general rule which has been mentioned, except such as are based upon some statute law. A practice sprung up in this state at an early day, of taking depositions de bene esse in civil suits, which were afterwards read in evidence on proof of the death or absence of the witness. (Mumford v. Church, 1 John. Cas. 147 ; Sandford v. Burrell, Anth. N. P. 184 ; Jackson v. Kent, 7 Cow. 59 ; Wait v. Whitney, id. 69 ; Packard v. Hill, id. 489.) This practice has since been sanctioned by the legislature. (2 R. S. 391, Art. I.) But this statute does not, nor did the prior practice extend to criminal cases.

We are referred to another statute which provides, that “ the proceedings prescribed by law in. civil cases, in respect to the empannelling of juries, the keeping them together, and the manner of rendering their verdict, shall be had upon trials of indictments ; and the provisions of law in civil cases relative to compelling the attendance and testimony of witnesses, their examination, the administration of oaths and affirmations, and proceedings as for contempts to enforce the remedies and protect the rights of parties, shall extend to trials and other proceedings on indictments, so far as they may be in their nature applicable thereto, subject to the provisions contained in any statute.” (2 R. S. 735, § 14.) It was not the object of this section to give new remedies in criminal cases, but to direct the mode in which existing remedies should thereafter be applied. “ The provisions of law in civil cases,” in relation to the matters particularly specified, are extended to the like proceedings on indictments; but it is only u so far as they may be in their nature applicable thereto.” Much stress has been laid upon the words “ their examination,” as applied to witnesses. But those words must be restricted to cases where the examination was already provided for by law; and there is ample scope for their operation. They apply when the witness is produced in court, when he is examined on commission, and when ex[296]*296amined conditionally at the instance of the defendant. (2 R. jS. 731, § 73, 75.) The legislature did not intend by this general provision in relation to the forms and modes of proceeding in criminal cases to introduce a new rule into the law of evidence. This is the more evident from the fact that special provision had already been made in the same chapter for the examination of witnesses out of court. After issue joined upon the indictment, the defendant may have a commission to examine witnesses residing out of the state, and the prosecuting officer may join in the commission, and name witnesses on the part of the people. (2 R. S. 731, § 73.) And after indictment found, the defendant may also examine witnesses conditionally, as in civil cases. (§ 75.) After having thus specially provided for particular cases, it is impossible to suppose that the legislature, in the general provision which follows on page 735, ^ 14, intended to cover an entirely new class of cases, and provide for the examination of witnesses de bene esse on the part of the people.

There is a class of cases where depositions taken out of court, and without the consent of the defendant, may he read in evidence against him. The statutes 1 § 2 Phil. <5* Mary, c. 13, and 2 <$*3 Phil. <$• Mary, c. 10, provide, that the magistrate shall take the examination of the prisoner, and the information of them that bring him, put the same in writing, and certify it to the next gaol delivery within his commission. We have a similar statute. (2 R. S. 708, § 13—27.) It is generally agreed that' depositions taken in pursuance of these statutes may, when the witness is dead, and in some other cases, be read in evidence on the trial. The statutes do not provide that the depositions shall be evidence ; but they are admitted on the ground that they have been taken in the course of a judicial proceeding expressly authorized by law, when the defendant wras present and had the right of cross-examination. It is sometimes said in the books that the deposition is admitted because it is not extra-judicial. But that is only a part of the true reason, and is calculated to mislead. Going upon that [297]*297reason alone, the original complaint on oath before the magistrate on applying for the warrant would be admissible evidence against the defendant, although he had not then been brought into court. That is a judicial proceeding) and yet I am not aware that the original complaint was ever received in evidence against the defendant. The contrary was expressly adjudged in The State v. Hill, (2 Hill’s Law Rep. So. Car. 609.) The deposition must not only be taken in a judicial proceeding, but it must be taken when the defendant is present and has the opportunity to cross-examine the witness) otherwise it will not be received.

It is said that depositions taken by the coroner on holding an inquest are evidence, although the defendant was not present when they were taken. This doctrine has been gravely questioned, and I am strongly inclined to the opinion that it cannot be maintained. The great principle that the accuser and accused must be brought face to face, and that the latter shall have the opportunity to cross-examine, can never be departed from with safety. Neither life nor liberty should ever be put in peril by listening to ex parte depositions. It is better that the guilty should sometimes go free, than that the innocent should be subjected to such an ordeal.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Hill & Den. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-restell-nysupct-1842.