People v. Weiss

252 A.D. 463, 300 N.Y.S. 249, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5689
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 252 A.D. 463 (People v. Weiss) 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. Weiss, 252 A.D. 463, 300 N.Y.S. 249, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5689 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

Johnston, J.

Appellants were convicted of the crime of kidnapping. The statute (Penal Law, § 1250), so far as material, provides:

A person who wilfully:

1. Seizes, confines, inveigles, or kidnaps another, with intent to cause him, without authority of law, to be confined or imprisoned within this State, or to be sent out of the State, or to be sold as a slave, or in any way held to service or kept or detained, against his will; * * *

“ Is guilty of kidnapping.”

Each was sentenced to imprisonment in the State prison at Ossining under an indeterminate sentence, the minimum of which shall be not less than twenty years and the maximum of which shall be for his natural life. Appellants and three others — Murray Bleefeld, Ellis Parker, Sr., and Ellis Parker, Jr.— were jointly indicted. The indictment charges: The defendants from February 14, 1936, to February 24, 1936, inclusive, in the County of Kings, did commit the crime of kidnapping, in that the said defendants on the said 14th day of February, 1936, in the County of New York, State of New York, did seize one Paul H. Wendel, against his will and without authority of law, and thereupon and on the said 14th day of February, 1936, did take the said Paul H. Wendel, against his will and without authority of law, into the County of Engs, State of New York, where he was confined, inveigled and detained until the 24th day of February, 1936, against his will and without authority of law.”

The facts are as follows: Parker, Sr., chief of the county detectives of Burlington county, N. J., in the course of his investigation into the Lindbergh kidnapping case, came to suspect Paul H. Wendel — his friend of many years — as kidnapper and murderer of the Lindbergh child. Wendel, at the time, was hving at the Hotel Stamford in New York county. Parker desired to apprehend Wendel and to detain him for the purpose of obtaining a confession that he was the kidnapper and murderer. He enlisted the services of Bleefeld, whom he knew and to whom he unfolded his reasons for suspecting Wendel, and, through Bleefeld, appellants were contacted. The elder Parker, in the development of the plot which [466]*466found Wendel eventually a prisoner, remained entirely in the background. The younger Parker, however, participated openly in the plot.

On February 14, 1936, pursuant to a prearranged plan, appellants Bleefeld and the younger Parker waited outside the Hotel Stanford to seize Wendel. Bleefeld had rented an automobile and Schlossman was the driver. When Wendel appeared Bleefeld and Weiss approached him and, after telling him he was wanted for questioning, requested he go with them. Wendel testified that Weiss produced a gun and, under compulsion, he entered the car, Appellants said they used neither a gun nor force. Wendel, Weiss and Bleefeld entered the rear of the automobile and Schlossman drove them to his home at Sheepshead Bay, Kings county, in the basement of which a room had been prepared for Wendel, The younger Parker followed in his automobile and, unknown to Wendel, took personal charge of the attempt to extort from Wendel a confession, which was to exculpate the convicted Bruno Hauptmann in New Jersey and bring ultimate fame to the Parkers.

Wendel was detained in the basement for a period of ten days. During his confinement, and in order to induce his confession, Wendel was subjected to indignities, privations and physical punishment, the nature of which it is unnecessary to describe. For days he endured these outrages, but finally succumbed and made a written confession of his guilt as the kidnapper and murderer of the Lindbergh baby. The confession was delivered to the younger Parker and finally to the elder Parker in New Jersey, where Wendel was taken on February twenty-fourth. The case against Wendel, based upon this confession, collapsed, and subsequently appellants, together with Bleefeld and the two Parkers, were indicted in Kings county for the kidnapping of Wendel, The indictment originally contained two counts, the first charging kidnapping and the other assault in the second degree, committed with intent to commit the crime of kidnapping. The Governor of New Jersey, where the Parkers resided, denied an application for the extradition of the Parkers. A second request for their extradition is still pending. WTen the indictment was moved for trial in February, 1937, only three defendants — Weiss, Schlossman and Bleefeld —- appeared, and the case proceeded against them. During the trial Bleefeld pleaded guilty to the first count, charging kidnapping, and is now at liberty, under bail, pending sentence. At the close of the People’s case the court dismissed the second count charging assault in the second degree, and the only charge submitted to the jury as to the remaining two defendants, appellants herein, was that embraced in the first count. The jury disagreed. At the [467]*467second trial, which is the subject of this review, appellants were found guilty.

Bleefeld and appellants previously had testified before the grand jury, under waivers of immunity, and had confessed their separate and collective parts in the kidnapping, Upon the trial the appellants’ grand jury testimony was read. Bleefeld testified for the People.

No one can read this record without concluding that defendants are guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, Appellants assign several grounds as reasons why the judgments of conviction should be reversed. We have examined all of them and are satisfied that, under the facts, most of which are not in dispute, the judgments must be affirmed.

Appellants attack the sufficiency of the indictment and contend that, under the statute, a specific criminal intent to cause the victim to be confined is an essential element of the crime of kidnapping, and must be pleaded. They urge that, since the indictment fails to allege such specific intent, it is insufficient in law. There can be no doubt that when a particular intent accompanying an act is requisite to Constitute a crime, it should be alleged. It is likewise true that, under the statute, to constitute the crime of kidnapping there must be the willful and unlawful seizing of a person against his will with intent to cause him to be confined, imprisoned or detained within the State. (People v. Hope, 257 N. Y. 147, 152; Hadden v. People, 25 id. 373.) In People v. Hope (supra) there are dicta to the effect that the intent with which the victim was seized and confined must be pleaded. I believe the absence of such an allegation is not fatal where, as here, it is alleged that on February fourteenth Wendel was seized against his will and without authority of law and actually confined and detained against his will and without authority of law until February twenty-fourth. The statute requires seizure with intent to confine. Seizure alone is not sufficient. But where seizure and actual confinement against the victim’s will and without authority of law are alleged, the unlawful intent appears, it is implicit in the indictment, and the crime defined by the statute is sufficiently pleaded, and if those facts are established the crime is proven. In determining the sufficiency of an indictment the test is: Does it identify the charge against the defendant so that his conviction or acquittal will bar a subsequent charge for the same offense; does it notify him of the nature and character of the crime with which he is charged so as to enable him to prepare his defense and to permit the court to pronounce judgment according to the right of the case? (People v.

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Bluebook (online)
252 A.D. 463, 300 N.Y.S. 249, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-weiss-nyappdiv-1937.