People v. . Wood

27 N.E. 362, 126 N.Y. 249, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 952, 81 Sickels 249, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1631
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 362 (People v. . Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Wood, 27 N.E. 362, 126 N.Y. 249, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 952, 81 Sickels 249, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1631 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Peoicham, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of defendant of murder in the first degree, entered upon a verdict rendered by a jury in the Oyer and Terminer of Warren county, in September, 1890.

Our jurisdiction to review directly such a judgment rests upon the statute, chapter 493 of the Laws of 1881.

Under that statute this court can grant a new trial upon -exceptions taken to the rulings of the trial court, and it can also grant such new trial when it is satisfied that the *254 verdict was against the weight of evidence or that justice requires it.

The defendant, through his counsel in this case, does not seek our interference under the latter provisions of the act. He comes here upon exceptions and asks a review thereof as his legal right, and that a new trial shall be granted him because of legal error committed by the court below on his trial.

Where exceptions have been taken by a defendant on a criminal trial the court must give judgment without regard to technical errors or defects, or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties. (Code of Crim. Pro. § 542.)

Under this provision I think it plain that if evidence of a material nature, of a kind most important and predominating, shall have been offered on the part of defendant and ruled out on the objection of the people and under the exception of the defendant, such ruling is error, which demands the reversal of the judgment- of conviction. This is true, even if the court might be inclined to think that upon the whole, with such evidence admitted, the defendant should have been convicted. A defendant in a criminal prosecution is entitled to a legal trial, conducted in a proper way and decided upon legal evidence. Where evidence of such a character has been offered on the part of the defendant, and erroneously rejected by the court, and if, it is of a material nature, and if an exception has been duly taken, we are not at liberty, under the section of the Code of Criminal Procedure above cited, to say that the error is merely technical, or that the substantial rights of a defendant have not been affected. The defendant has the right to submit' material evidence in his behalf to the jury in order that it may pass upon its weight and credibility, and if he be deprived of that right, it is a substantial one which, when properly presented to this court by an exception, will require a reversal of his conviction. This does not in the least affect the existence and force of the other and -well-known rule that a new trial will not be granted even in a criminal case for an erroneous ruling of the court upon some legal proposition *255 where the appellate tribunal can see that by no possibility could the error have worked any harm to defendant. (Stokes v. People, 53 N. Y. 164.)

In the case of the rejection of important, material and competent evidence for the defendant, this court cannot say, unless in a most extraordinary case, that by no possibility could the error harm the defendant, or that such error was only technicál and that no substantial right of the defendant was affected. A substantial right of defendant in such case is affected, even tl rough the appellate court would, with the evidence before it, still come to the same conclusion as the jury did without it. The defendant in such case has the right to insist that material and legal evidence offered in his behalf shall be received and submitted to a jury and its opinion and verdict taken thereon, and not that of any merely appellate tribunal.

On looking through and reading attentively the very voluminous record which has been presented to us in this case, I am satisfied that many errors were committed upon the trial, and in the case of one, at least, the error is of such a nature as to necessitate the reversal of the judgment.

A brief reference to the general facts of the case is all that is necessary to enable one to see the materiality of the evidence rejected by the court when offered on the part of the defendant. The evidence on the trial showed that the killing took place near a small village or hamlet called Stony Creek, in the county of Warren, about 5 or 5^30 p. m., on the 10th of May, 1890. Leander Pasco, the deceased, was a small farmer or laboring man, living within a couple of miles of the above-named village, and was between 50 and 55 years of age. His wife had been dead a few years, and his daughter, about ten years of age, was living with, him, as was also a woman who occupied the position of his housekeeper. His sons, George and Alvin, respectively about twenty and sixteen years of age, were sometimes there, but had not been for a short time before the killing. A couple of months before that event, the defendant had married a daughter of Pasco, and it is claimed that such marriage annoyed him, and he had ceased to be on friendly *256 terms with defendant from that time. The marriage took place away from home, and Pasco did not know of it at the time. A few weeks "before the killing, the defendant took his wife and went to a small house, or shanty,” as some of the witnesses called it, about a mile from Stony Creek, and there commenced housekeeping. There was evidence tending to show that defendant was exceedingly fond of his wife, who was a young woman twenty-two or twenty-three years of age. The defendant was a man about thirty-live years of age, and was also a small farmer or laboring man. ' Both the deceased and defendant belonged to a very uneducated, illiterate and ignorant class, neither having acquired much property, and both spending a portion of their time in hunting and fishing.

On the afternoon of the tenth of May (the day of the homicide), both men were seen in the village of Stony Creek, and were overheard in a war of words in the public streets, in which each accused the other of misconduct. The defendant was seen on his way home about 3 or 4 o’clock in the afternoon, and the deceased was seen passing out of the village in the direction of the road to his home, about 5 or 5.30 in the same afternoon. It was raining, and the deceased carried an umbrella and a small bundle covered over with paper. A short distance from the village, and as the deceased was proceeding upon a lonely road, lined on each side with bushes and woods, except a portion of one side where a small fallow of a couple of acres skirted the edge of the road, he was shot in the back by shot from a gun and was instantly killed. Ho one saw the killing, and, although two reports of a gun were heard in quick succession at about half after five, the deceased was not discovered until nearly dark, when he was accidently seen lying in the road by a man walking along it on his way home. The alarm was given, and the next day, Sunday, a critical examination was made. From it the people discovered the rags which had formed the wadding of the gun, footprints in the fallow from peculiar boots which were soon seen to be exactly like those made by the boots worn by the defendant, who was present on the Sunday at the place where *257 the body lay and where quite a crowd had congregated. The rags were seen to he like the lining of defendant’s coat, which Was torn, and were subsequently most satisfactorily identified as coming from and forming part of such lining.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 362, 126 N.Y. 249, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 952, 81 Sickels 249, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wood-ny-1891.