People v. Simmons

125 A.D. 234, 22 N.Y. Crim. 270, 109 N.Y.S. 190, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2754
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 11, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 A.D. 234 (People v. Simmons) 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. Simmons, 125 A.D. 234, 22 N.Y. Crim. 270, 109 N.Y.S. 190, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2754 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

The defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction for larceny. We must give judgment without regard. to technical errors or defects or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties. (Code Grim. Proc. § 542.)

The error first assigned is that of the court in denying defendant’s motion at the close of the case to withdraw a juror upon the ground that the district attorney, certainly not intentionally, has spread before them in his opening an elaborate, extended, condemning, destructive story of the defendant and his associates as to their conduct, their history, their practices, their system, their enterprises, and the manner and methods in which they carried them out, in such a manner and with such detail and to such an elaborate extent as to make it impossible for-the minds of the jury not to be affected by the story told to them by the District Attorney in his opening, and that no possible fair result can be reached after all that had gone before them, and none of them being capable of again recalling objections to the admissions of proof.”

Vann, J., for the court in People v. Wolf (183 N. Y. 464), states that the general rule in opening a case is, no fact should be stated unless it is material and competent, and, hence, proper to be proved, [236]*236subject, however, to reasonable latitude where the law upon the subject is not so elementary that every lawyer should know it.” The opening of "the learned district attorney was attacked by the defendant by specific objections made at the close of the opening, and coupled with a motion that the court instruct the jury to disregard the statements objected to and strike them out. The learned district attorney replied to each objection when made, either that his statement was inadvertent and that he intended at the time to apply it to the case in hand, or that he intended to apply the statement to the facts in the case. Thereafter he also consented to the motion, and the court then instructed the jury: “ Gentlemen of the jury: You have heard the request of the counsel for the defendant, which request is joined in by the District Attorney, I will not in detail go over these various requests, but charge you to listen only to the evidence that is adduced here by the prosecution, only that evidence that will be produced here through the mouths of the various witnesses.” I shall examine the objections stated.

The first objection was to the statement in substance that these men (referring to certain individuals) are bunco men ; that they are known to the criminal fraternity as bunco men, confidence men, and that this was an old form of crime. If the evidence to be offered by the People showed that two or more confederates, by gaining the confidence of a stranger on the ground of alleged professed acquaintance with him or his friends, lured him to a place where he was afterwards fleeced at some game, or robbed of his money, or otherwise victimized, then the district attorney was entirely right in describing the participants in that scheme as bunco men and confidence men. (See Century Dictionary, “Bunco,” “ Bunco men,” “ Confidence game,” “ Confidence man.”) And this is what was done substantially in this case. Myers accosted Arnold, the prosecuting witness, who was a stranger in Hew York city, wormed his way into his confidence by saying that he had come from the city in which Arnold lived, fastened himself upon Arnold, induced him to visit Coney Island and there persuaded him to go into an inn. There the defendant joined Myers and the prosecuting witness. They, with a man named Stone, who pretended to be manager of the inn, but was not connected with it, induced Arnold to match coins with them for drinks, and then told him that he had [237]*237really won $1,000. When Arnold objected totalling the money he was accused of insulting “ a Kentucky gentleman ” — the defendant. Arnold afterwards was induced to obtain $2,000 on his letter of credit that he might prove that he was able to pay had he lost. When he exhibited the money Myers seized it and then defendant took possession of it on the ground that Myers had just wagered it for Arnold.

The second objection was that this general statement of the “ character ” of the defendant was an attack upon his character, which could not be made until the defendant had put his character in evidence. I think that to describe the defendant as a bunco man ” or a confidence man,” in view of the fact that evidence was to be offered showing that he was engaged in such a trick, is not an attack upon his “ character ” (i. e., his reputation) within the meaning of the rule invoked. If a defendant is pnt on trial for a burglary is it an attack on his “ character ” for the prosecuting officer to call him a “ burglar ” in his opening to the jury ? It is nothing more than a description of the actor as shown by the evidence to be adduced. The third objection was that the district attorney described the system of the bunco' men’s plant, saying that there were usually three or four men engaged in the scheme, and describing the perfect or well-established game which they play. The evidence showed that the money of Arnold was stolen through the criminal conduct of Myers, the defendant and Stone, acting in confederation by fraud, trick and device, aptly described in slang parlance as the bunco game or the confidence game (authority supra). The fourth objection was to the statement of the district attorney in describing the system of such people — that “ a steerer ’ is sent out to get a victim — in their parlance “ a sucker ” — in that it is a description of the general system which the district attorney charges up by that statement to the defendant. A “ steerer ” in slang vocabulary is a person of plausible manners and address, who gains the confidence of the person intended to be fleeced. (Century Dictionary, “ Steerer.”) This was, it seems to me, a fair description of what the evidence shows the man Myers was in his relations with Arnold. A “sucker” is a person readily deceived. (Ibid.) Surely such was the proper description of Arnold as revealed by his own testimony. The fifth objection was to the statement that [238]*238Myers was sent by the defendant to obtain a victim, and that such persons usually have a bankers’ directory in which are the names of banks and bank directors, on the ground that it did not apply to the facts in this case. The evidence that Myers accosted Arnold, a stranger, took him to the Coney Island inn and thereafter participated with the defendant and Stone in taking away Arnold’s money as the result of an elaborate scheme based upon the confidence of Arnold in Myers, justified the statement as to Myers and the part he played. It appeared when the effects of the defendant were searched a bankers’ directory or something of the kind was found in his possession, and the district attorney subsequently had it marked for identification. I think that within the rule laid down by Judge Vann (ut supra) he was not supposed to know that if he offered it in evidence it must be excluded. The evidence in its detail was yet to be adduced. The district attorney may have thought that proof of the possession of this directory by the defendant might be competent to show that the confederates had the means whereby either Myers as the “ steerer ” or one of them, if the occasion should arise, might appear to be familiar with the banks and the banking men of the city where Arnold lived and wherein Myers asserted to Arnold he had been engaged in business.

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Bluebook (online)
125 A.D. 234, 22 N.Y. Crim. 270, 109 N.Y.S. 190, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-simmons-nyappdiv-1908.