State v. Pollack

202 A.2d 433, 43 N.J. 34, 1964 N.J. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 7, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 202 A.2d 433 (State v. Pollack) 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. Pollack, 202 A.2d 433, 43 N.J. 34, 1964 N.J. LEXIS 138 (N.J. 1964).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

HaNEMAN, J.

At the consolidated trial of six indictments, each charging the defendant Milton Pollack with uttering a worthless check in violation of the provisions of N. J. S. 2A:111-15, Pollack was convicted on each indictment. He was fined $500 and sentenced to one year in State Prison for each conviction, the sentences to run consecutively. The Appellate Division affirmed in an unreported opinion and we granted defendant’s petition for certification. 41 N. J. 127 (1963).

In the Appellate Division and on this review only one issue is presented for decision, viz., whether it was reversible error for the trial court to have excluded certain evidence regarding prior transactions between the complaining witness and the defendant.

The basic facts are uncomplicated. Mrs. Betty Perrotta and her mother, Mrs. Theresa Lamberti, the complaining witnesses, testified that on January 3, 1961, the defendant delivered six checks to them in settlement of promissory note obligations, the notes being returned to him at that time. Each check was drawn on the Amalgamated Bank of New York in the amount of $4,500, dated January 3, 1961, and signed by defendant. Three checks were payable to Mrs. Perrotta and three to Mrs. Lamberti. On the following day Mrs. Perrotta deposited the checks in various banks for collection but they were subsequently returned for lack of sufficient funds. Mrs. Perrotta’s husband and brother corroborated the testimony that delivery of the checks was made on January 3, 1961.

The defendant had told Mrs. Perrotta and her mother that he was engaged in importing sweaters. Mrs. Perrotta and Mrs. Lamberti then “loaned” him $9,500 and $9,000 *38 respectively and received in return promissory notes and promises of handsome “profits” for the use of the money. The total face amount of the checks referred to in the indictment was $27,000. Mrs. Perrotta testified that the checks were in part payment of defendant’s above obligations, the total amount to be repaid being approximately $40,000.

Defendant testified that the checks were postdated, that he had delivered them on the 28th of December 1960, and that Mrs. Perrotta agreed to deposit one check a week, as she had done on previous occasions.

In the cross-examination of Mrs. Perrotta and Mrs. Lam-berti defense counsel made numerous attempts to elicit testimony regarding prior transactions between the parties. The prosecutor’s objections to any questions not specifically directed to the transactions involving the six checks in question were consistently sustained by the trial court. In the Appellate Division defendant argued that the above exclusionary rulings constituted prejudicial error, contending that such evidence would have disclosed a “habit or custom” of issuing postdated checks in payment of loans from which a strong inference would arise that such practice was observed in the situation covered by the indictments, thereby negating the necessary intent to defraud. The Appellate Division was of the opinion that the controverted questions advanced at trial concerned matters apparently remote and of doubtful relevance, and that the trial court had not abused its discretion in excluding them.

The main problem raised is the proper scope of cross-examination. Under the theory that postdated checks are not within the reach of N. J. S. 2A :111-15, State v. Barone, 98 N. J. L. 9, 12 (Sup. Ct. 1922), cf. State v. Turetsky, 78 N. J. Super. 203, 212 (App. Div. 1963), the key factual issue was the date of delivery of the checks. Mrs. Perrotta, the primary complaining witness, testified that defendant had delivered the checks to her on the same day they were dated, and that there was no arrangement as to a sequence in which they were to be deposited. She admitted, however, *39 that she had advanced money to defendant as far back as 1959 which he had partially repaid.

Mrs. Lamberti, who testified through an interpreter, also placed the date of delivery as January 3, 1961, and said that she instructed her daughter to deposit the checks for her. She admitted on cross-examination that defendant had returned other money advanced by her prior to the checks in question, and said that the difference between the $9,000 given to defendant and the $13,500 face amount of these checks represented the balance from other sums of money.”

When defense counsel attempted to pursue a line of inquiry dealing with the prior transactions alluded to above, he was cut off by the trial court upon the objection of the prosecutor. We think this was erroneous, and harmful to defendant.

The law holds high the value to and right of a defendant in a criminal case of full cross-examination of the witnesses arrayed by the State against him. Cross-examination should be allowed to extend to anything which is relevant to show the improbability of the direct evidence. State v. Bulna, 46 N. J. Super. 313, 322 (App. Div. 1957), affirmed 27 N. J. 93 (1958); 3 Wharton, Criminal Evidence (12th ed. 1955), § 861.

Had this been an isolated transaction, testimony concerning past unrelated transactions might have been of doubtful relevancy. But here, where defense counsel indicated the purpose of his cross-examination as to prior transactions was to affect the witnesses’ credibility and show that the checks were part of a series of transactions, the relevancy of that area of inquiry becomes readily apparent. Had defense counsel been permitted to continue to attempt to reveal a prior pattern of dealing between defendant and complaining witnesses which involved the use of postdated checks and agreements to make successive deposits of such cheeks, the credibility of their testimony in regard to these particular checks might have been seriously affected. Also, such inquiry might have disclosed a relationship between the parties which *40 would shed light on defendant’s intent or lack thereof to defraud Mrs. Perrotta and Mrs. Lamberti.

The Appellate Division also felt that in the absence of a clear proffer of evidence it could not conclude that the exclusion complained of was prejudicial to defendant, citing State v. Micci, 46 N. J. Super. 454 (App. Div. 1957). We disagree. As we said in State v. Abbott, 36 N. J. 63, 76-78 (1961), the proffer has a twofold purpose: (1) to inform the trial court sufficiently so that it may reconsider its exclusionary ruling; (2) to avoid an appellate court’s conclusion that it cannot find the exclusion to be harmful in the absence of a showing of what counsel hoped to prove by the excluded testimony. However, the failure to make such a proffer will not invariably lead an appellate court to find no harmful error. On the contrary, our courts have found prejudicial harm in such cases where the question excluded was suggestive of proof of issues crucial to the defense, State v. Abbott, supra, or where the court had “no real doubt” as to what the offering party expected to prove. Farber v.

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Bluebook (online)
202 A.2d 433, 43 N.J. 34, 1964 N.J. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pollack-nj-1964.