State v. Herbert

105 A. 796, 92 N.J.L. 341, 1918 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 30, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 A. 796 (State v. Herbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Herbert, 105 A. 796, 92 N.J.L. 341, 1918 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 1 (N.J. 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kalisch, J.

The plaintiffs in error were convicted, in the Atlantic County Quarter Sessions, of the crime of conspiracy. The judgment on that conviction is brought here for review on bills of exceptions and under section 136 of the Criminal Procedure act. The indictment, consisting of four counts, substantially charges in three of the counts that the accused entered into an unlawful and corrupt agreement to obtain, by the criminal means set out at great length, a divorce for Helen [343]*343Knittel from her husband on the ground of adultery. The third count charged that the object of the unlawful agreement was to falsely move and maintain a certain suit, in the Court of Ciiancery, for a divorce from marriage between Helen Knittel and her husband.

While it is true that the first count alleges generally that the unlawful and corrupt agreement was to pervert and obstruct the due administration of the laws of this state relating to divorces from marriage between husband and wife, it is obvious that this allegation is a result predicated upon the allegation that the illegal and corrupt agreement between the accused was to obtain a divorce for Mrs. Knittel by unlawful means. And this comment applies with equal force to the second count.

The fourth count reiterates some of the recitals found in the preceding counts and charges that the unlawful agreement was for the purpose of obtaining a divorce for Helen from the marriage of her husband on the false evidence that he had committed adultery with Kathryn Abrams.

To this indictment the several defendants pleaded not guilty. Before trial, however, counsel representing the state moved for a severance of the defendants Mae and Kathryn Abrams and Helen Knittel, which motion was unsuccessfully resisted by counsel of the plaintiffs in- error and Helen Knit-tel. The trial resulted in an acquittal of the co-defendants, Gertrude McGowan and Edmund Shaw, and in a conviction of the plaintiffs in error in manner and form as charged in the indictment. The voluminous record before us presents a large number of assignments of errors and specifications of causes for reversal based upon alleged trial errors. The case was argued, orally, for the respective parties, hv learned counsel who, having obtained permission from the court, later submitted elaborate briefs.

The record discloses that the husband of Helen Knittel was a witness for the state and, against objection duly made by counsel of plaintiffs in error, was permitted by the court to give testimony in the cause incriminatory of Helen Knittel.

[344]*344The record further reveals evidence tending to establish that the defendants did, as charged in the indictment, unlawfully and corruptly agree together to entrap the husband of Helen Knittel into a compromising situation with Kathryn Abrams, so that the testimony, to be given relating to the situation in which the parties were found, would give rise to the inference that adultery -was committed by them; though not so, in fact, and by this deceptive means to impose upon the Court of Chancery and procure for Helen Knittel a divorce from her husband, and thereby pervert and obstruct justice; that all the defendants named in the indictment, with the exception of the two Abrams, mother and daughter, who testified for the state, and Weinberg, did appear as witnesses in the Court of Chancery, and testified pursuant to the arranged plan between them in the divorce proceedings brought by Mrs. Knittel against her husband on a charge of adultery with Kitty Murray — the name Murray being used in the petition for divorce and intended to designate Kitty Abrams; that the taking of testimony and hearing in the matter was before an advisory master, and was concluded on the 15th day of December, 1916; that on the 8th day of January, 1917, the master advised a decree denying the divorce, whereupon Mrs. Knittel appealed to the Court of Errors and Appeals, in which court the appeal was argued on March 19th, 1917, and was decided by that tribunal on June 18th, 1917, the decision being an affirmance of the decree refusing the divorce.

Now, it appears, with respect to the period between January 8th, 1917, the day when the petition for divorce was decreed to be dismissed, in the Court of Chancery, and the 19th day of March, the day when the case was argued and submitted for final determination to the Court of Errors and Appeals, and the 18th day of June, the day when the case was finally decided, by the latter tribunal, that the trial judge, against objections duly made by counsel of plaintiffs in error, received testimony, both oral and documentary, which related to the alleged acts of the alleged co-conspirators mentioned in the indictment during that period.

[345]*345We find it unnecessary to refer in detail to the documentary evidence emanating from, and statements said to have been made by, the alleged co-conspirators, because the assertion that such evidence was admitted, namely, writings of an alleged co-conspirator, which had their origin between January 8tli and March 17th, 1917, and statements made by the alleged co-conspirators between those dates and June 18th, 1917, is conceded by counsel of the state. The state’s contention is, that such evidence was properly admissible, for the reason that the object of the conspiracy was not consummated until the Court of Errors and Appeals had pronounced its judgment on the appeal. So, that the question presented, on this branch of the case, is, Was the unlawful agreement brought to an end on January 8th, 1917, the day when the decree of the Court of Chancery was advised, or on March 19th, the day when the case was submitted to the Court of Errors and Appeals for its decision, or on June 18th, 1917, when the latter tribunal handed down its determination ? Eor if the object of the conspiracy was consummated when the decree was advised, then, of course, the documentary evidence, consisting of letters, telegrams, &e., of Weinberg, an alleged co-conspirator, after the date of that event, could not be properly received by the trial judge as evidence and treated as such against Weinberg’s alleged co-conspirators. And likewise statements and acts of Weinberg after March 19th, 1917, if the conspiracy was at an end on that date, could not be properly treated and used as evidence against his alleged co-conspirators.

An additional salient ground urged for a reversal is, that the trial judge in his charge to the jury stated as a fact proven in the case that Weinberg was a witness for Helen Knittel in her divorce case, whereas he was not. We will now proceed to examine into the merits of the propositions chiefly relied on, by counsel of plaintiffs in error, as grounds for reversal of the judgment under review in the order above presented.

First. The reception by the court of the testimony of Charles A. Knittel, which testimony tended to accuse his wife, Helen Knittel, in whose behalf a severance had been previ[346]*346ously granted, with the crime of which she stood indicted, in conjunction with the plaintiffs in error, who were then on trial under said indictment, was error which requires a reversal of the judgment.

The record shows that when the husband of Mrs. Ivnittel was called as a witness by the state, counsel of plaintiffs in error objected to his competency to give testimony charging his wife with participation in the offence charged in the indictment against her and the plaintiffs in error, and that this objection was overruled by the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 A. 796, 92 N.J.L. 341, 1918 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-herbert-nj-1918.