People v. Veld

154 A.D. 752, 29 N.Y. Crim. 5, 139 N.Y.S. 788, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4597
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 A.D. 752 (People v. Veld) 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. Veld, 154 A.D. 752, 29 N.Y. Crim. 5, 139 N.Y.S. 788, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4597 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Carr, J.:

The defendant was convicted of the crime of perjury in the County Court of Kings county. He has appealed from the [753]*753judgment of conviction. He was a man of more than ordinary intelligence, fifty-five years of age and married, and of previous good repute. At the time of his conviction he held a subordinate public office attached to the Magistrates’ Court, in the borough of Brooklyn, and known as Probation Officer,” and he was likewise a clergyman officiating in some small congregation. He received an indeterminate sentence to the State prison at Sing Sing for the minimum of two years and the maximum of seven. A certificate of reasonable doubt was granted by a Special Term of this court and the defendant was admitted to bail pending the appeal. An opinion was written at Special Term. It will be seen from an examination of that opinion that the claim of errors at the trial arose from three separate and distinct rulings. The brief of the learned coun sel for the appellant discusses each of these alleged errors in detail, but it contains no claim that the evidence in the case did not justify the conviction of the prisoner.

The prisoner was indicted for perjury, alleged to have been committed at a preliminary examination held before Magistrate Kempner, in which E. G-.' Higginbotham, then a city magistrate, was charged with having committed an assault upon the person of a young girl named Mary Hickey. Miss Hickey had testified that the alleged assault upon her person took place in a private room of the Magistrates’ Court, which room was used by Higginbotham, and the general layout of the room was described in her testimony. She testified that there was in that room, on the day of the alleged assault, a couch, the greater part of which stood behind a desk and along a wall, and of which but a small part was visible to any one entering the room or standing in the body of the room. She had gone to the court to complain about her mother, who had fallen into grieviously bad habits, and she said thát Higginbotham took her into the room and escorted her behind the desk to the couch, where he bade her sit down, and that after she had sat down upon the couch he likewise did so, and that in a few moments he kissed her on the mouth and likewise put his hands under her clothes, as far up as the knee, against her protest. The defendant Veld was called on this examina[754]*754tion as a witness for Higginbotham. He testified that he was present at the time of the alleged assault upon Miss Hickey; that he saw no assault, and that there was no couch whatever in the room located against the wall and behind the desk, and that he was standing in the doorway leading into the room and could see everything that happened, and that as a matter of fact the couch referred to stood out in the room alongside the desk, every part of it being visible to any one about to go into' the room. It was alleged that this testimony as to the location of the couch, on the day of the alleged assault was untrue and made falsely by the defendant Veld, and that it was material testimony on the examination then and there taken. That it was material testimony there can be no Controversy, ■ and there is none. It was testified to by the janitor and his assistant that for a very long period antecedent to the date of-the alleged assault the couch in question had been located in ■ the room just as described by the complainant, Miss Hickey. Some days after the date of the alleged assault somebody moved the couch out from behind the desk and placed it alongside the desk, where it became visible to every person coming into the room. The janitor and his assistant swore that they did not move the couch and that they did not know by whom it was moved, and that their attention to the fact of it having been moved was called by Magistrate O’Reilly, who desired to know why it had been so moved. Magistrate O’Reilly, who frequently sat in the court in question, gave similar testimony to that of the janitor and his assistant. He likewise testified that, going to the court house to. sit after the date of the alleged assault, he noticed that the couch had been removed from its customary position, and that he then called that fact to the attention of the janitor and asked for an explanation, which the janitor was unable to give him. Daniel Quinn, a clerk in said court, testified .that at the time of the day of the alleged assault the couch was located behind the desk and was thereby screened to a large extent from the view of any one going into the room, and that it had been so located for a very long period of time theretofore. The People produced a witness, Wilcox, who testified that he was in company with the defend-. ant Veld while the complaint against Higginbotham was [755]*755undergoing examination, and that Veld admitted to him and others, who were in his company, on a trolley car, that the location of the furniture had been changed since the day of the assault, and that the People were g’oing to useless labor in attempting to have photographs taken of the interior of the room in question. Among the witnesses called by the defense was a clerk, Hasenflug, who likewise had testified for Higginbotham on the examination before Kempner, but even he, on cross-examination, admitted that on the date of the alleged assault the couch was located behind the desk, just as the witnesses for the People had testified.

The defendant Veld took the stand and testified in his own behalf. The manner of his testimony shows that he was acutely intelligent. Towards the close of his examination there is some testimony on his part tending to show that he was laboring under some misunderstanding as to the date of the alleged assault when he had been examined previously before Magistrate Kempner. If there were no 'serious errors of law at the trial, the facts should well sustain the conviction. This brings us to a consideration of the alleged erroneous rulings of law made at the trial.

Certain photographs were offered by the People for the purpose of illustrating the location of the furniture in the room as testified to by the witnesses for the People. They had no other purpose than to make a picture of how the room stood in relation to its furniture according to the story of Miss Hickey and the other witnesses for the People on the day of the alleged assault. They were not proof of any actual conditions of the location of the furniture on that day, and were not so offered, for concededly they were not taken on the day of the alleged assault. Their only effect was to visualize the testimony offered by the prosecution as to the location of this couch, arid which is practically without any contradiction save that of Veld himself, for even the testimony of the defendant’s witness Hasenflug, who was a friend of Higginbotham and had testified in his behalf, is in complete harmony on that point with that given by the prosecution. I can see no merit in the objections to the use of the photographs.

It is also urged that it was grave error to read in the [756]*756evidence at the trial of this Case the information which had heen sworn to by Miss Hickey, and which formed a part of the preliminary examination in the charges against Higginbotham. On this trial Veld was represented by counsel of maturity and large experience in the criminal courts.

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Related

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15 A.D.2d 678 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
154 A.D. 752, 29 N.Y. Crim. 5, 139 N.Y.S. 788, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-veld-nyappdiv-1913.