People v. Whitlock

183 A.D. 482

This text of 183 A.D. 482 (People v. Whitlock) 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. Whitlock, 183 A.D. 482 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The defendant has been convicted of the crime of arson in the third degree. She is a woman, forty-three years of age, and at the time of the alleged crime was living with her husband on a farm a short distance from the scene of the fire, which occurred on the farm of James Kintz, at Meyers, N. Y. It is assumed that the fire was of incendiary origin. The prosecution, after showing the facts indicating an incendiary origin of the fire, produced evidence tending to show that tracks were found in a plowed field near the scene of the fire; that a pair of rubber overshoes found at the defendant’s home fitted into these tracks, and that the defendant had been in the habit of wearing these overshoes; that the tracks indicated shorter strides going to the point where the fire originated than those going in the opposite direction, and that there were other indications that the person was running on leaving the fire; that these tracks proceeded across the plowed land, into a clump of sweet clover, and were finally lost in a beaten path; that sometime soon after the discovery of the fire the defendant was seen by the roadside, between her home and the place of the fire; that a beer bottle which had contained kerosene oil was found near the place where the fire originated, and that similar bottles were found in the defendant’s house, though upon this point the evidence does not disclose with any degree of detail the points of alleged similarity; that pieces of newspapers were found at greater or less distances from the point where the fire originated, which corresponded with newspapers shown to have been taken by the defendant.

[484]*484It is not to be doubted that the prosecuting attorney had made a case which entitled him to go to the jury, though it is by no means certain that the defendant was so intimately connected with the circumstances that the jury would be' bound to find her guilty.' It may be read between the lines that the defendant had been associated in the public mind with various other crimes of a like nature, and there was direct evidence that she .had made threatening suggestions against the family of Kintz, but there was a decidedly weak link in the chain of evidence between the time that the tracks merged into the beaten path and the discovery of the defendant in the highway some distance away, and the mere fact that a neighboring woman was discovered, between her home and the scene of the fire, a considerable time after the fire was under- way, was not persuasive evidence that she had set the fire; any number of innocent women may have been attracted by the blaze and been present to view the spectacle.

It is unnecessary to consider what would have been the attitude of this court if the evidence had closed at this point, for we do not know what the jury would have done. There is no means of knowing what a jury, confronted with circumstantial evidence, would conclude, and the judgment of this court may not be invoked upon a' mere hypothesis. The difficulty with the case, as it is presented here, is that the prosecuting attorney introduced in evidence the conduct of a so-called German police dog, which was put upon the trail of the tracks across the plowed ground some five days after the fire, and the testimony goes to show that this dog followed the trail to the point where the visible tracks were lost -in the beaten path, thence along the pathway and the highway to the point where the defendant was shown to have stood on the occasion of the fire, and with this fink in the evidence thus strengthened the case was submitted to the jury, resulting in the conviction of the defendant, The question thus presented is whether the evidence of this dog’s conduct was, under the circumstances of this case, properly admitted.

It may be assumed that under proper conditions such evidence is admissible, without deciding the question. The weight of authority appears to be in that direction, though [485]*485it is conceded that no case has been decided by the appellate courts of this or of any controlling jurisdiction upon the exact point. Whatever we might determine upon this point, which has in it the suggestion of.romance and dramatic art, we are of the opinion that under the rules laid down by the courts in those jurisdictions in which such evidence is recognized as having probative force, it was error to permit the evidence to go to the jury upon the highly vital point to which it was necessarily addressed.

In State v. Dickerson (77 Ohio St. 34) the court say that there may be deduced a rule which until shown untrustworthy may be followed in cases where this class of evidence is offered. It is apparent that before the act and conduct of the dog can be shown a proof of preliminary foundation must be laid, and, to establish such foundation, it must be shown that the particular dog used was trained and tested in tracking human beings and by experience had been found rehable in such cases; and the dog so trained was laid on the trail, whether visible or invisible, at a point where the circumstances tended clearly to show that the guilty party had been. In addition to this, the reliability of the dog must be proved by persons having a personal knowledge thereof. This foundation may be strengthened by proof of pedigree, purity of blood, or the exalted standing of his breed and performance of such peculiar work. In the case now under consideration, the owner of the dog was called, and testified that the dog was what was known as a German police dog; that he had owned him for about three years, and since he was three months old; that he had a registered pedigree, which was given, and then the witness was asked to detail what he had seen the dog do. He testified that at the Litchfield horse show he had taken a handkerchief of his own from which the dog could get the scent, and had then made a detour of a quarter of a mile, making several turns to the right and left and going through some pieces of woods and hid the handkerchief; that the dog was held by the judges in position where he could not see the direction taken by the witness; that on his return the dog was let loose and told to go and get the article; that the dog immediately started over the course, following the trail closely, and returned with the handkerchief. The witness said he had seen substan[486]*486tially this same feat performed many times; that the dog immediately after being let loose followed the trail and never failed; and then added: “ Of course that is a trail taken up at once. I have never tried him on an older trail, but I am sure it oan be done.”

Objection was made to the last portion quoted above and a motion was made to strike it out as a conclusion, but the court denied the motion, saying: It may stand for what it is worth.” The defendant excepted. The witness then testified that he had seen the dog work out these tests four or five dozen times in the past three years, and that he never failed. But this does not attempt to show that this particular dog had ever had any training in tracking human beings generally; it simply shows that he had been able to follow the fresh trail of his own master and to find a handkerchief which had been hidden a quarter of a mile away, a clever piece of work, perhaps, but hardly up to the standard required by the rule quoted.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A.D. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-whitlock-nyappdiv-1918.