State v. Stiegler

105 A. 667, 30 Del. 236, 7 Boyce 236, 1917 Del. LEXIS 48
CourtNew York Court of General Session of the Peace
DecidedNovember 23, 1917
DocketIndictment No. 189
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 A. 667 (State v. Stiegler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of General Session of the Peace primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Stiegler, 105 A. 667, 30 Del. 236, 7 Boyce 236, 1917 Del. LEXIS 48 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Boyce, J.,

after reading Rev. Code 1915, § 4215, to the witness, said:

It is for you to say whether you desire to avail yourself of the privilege which the statute affords you.

The Witness: I want-to tell the whole truth.

Mr. Harman:- I wish to ask whether or not the testimony of this co-conspirator 'is to be used solely against him or against our clients.

[238]*238Boyce, J:

The witness desires to testify. You may object to questions as they are propounded to him.

After showing by the witness that he was employed by the Speakman Supply & Pipe Company and in the capacity of a clerk, he was asked if he knew George L. Dorsey and Stephen A. Smith, and, answering affirmatively, inquiry was made of him:

“When did you first meet them? A. About the first of this year. Q. Where? A. At the store. Q. Was it during the course of your employment ? A. Yes, sir. Q. Have you had any transactions with them? A. Yes, sir. Q. When did you first have any transactions with them? What was that transaction?”

Mr. Harman:—I object; the law is very well settled in this state, in the Effier Case, 2 Boyce, 92, 78 Atl. 411, and in the Clark Case, 9 Houst. 536, 33 Atl. 310, that in a case of conspiracy, before you can prove the conspiracy, or attempt to prove it by the acts, admissions or confessions of the co-conspirators, you must first prove it by evidence aliunde. The law as laid down in Under-hill on Criminal Evidence is that the safest rule is that it must first be proved by evidence aliunde, before you can put in acts or declarations of the co-conspirators.

Mr. Reinhardt:—The part of Underhill that Mr. Harman has not referred to disposes of this question, for it holds it to be discretionary with the court to permit the evidence to go in this way, to be connected up later.

Boyce, J.:

It is clearly within the discretion of the trial court. If the state fails to make out a prima facie case, you may move to strike out. We overrule the objection.

(Exception noted for Dorsey, Smith, and Rothwell.)

“A. Norman Woodward had just left the employ of the concern, and he had promised Mr. Dorsey a bag of fittings—”

Mr. Harman:—I object.

Is Norman Woodward one of the parties named in this indictment ?

[239]*239Mr. Reinhardt:—The counts charge these four men and others with this conspiracy. It may develop that Norman Woodward was one of the unknown conspirators.

The witness was interrupted in his answer. We will take his answer, and then .entertain an application to strike out.

“A. Norman Woodward had promised Dorsey and Smith this bag of fittings, and he had left the concern and asked me as a favor to give them this bag of fittings, and I gave Dorsey and Smith this bag of fittings. Q. Whose property did you give to Dorsey and Smith? A. The Speakman Supply & Pipe Company’s. Q. Where did you get that property? A. At their store. Q. Where? A. Front and Market streets. Q. That was in the city of Wilmington, New Castle county and state of Delaware? A. Yes, sir. Q. When you gave that bag of fittings to Dorsey and Smith, what, if anything, did they say to you?

Mr. Harman:—I object; they are trying to prove tins by Woodward, who is not named in this indictment.

We overrule the objection.

“A. They said, ‘All right;’ that is all that was said. Q. Was anything else done at that time? A. No, sir. Q. Was there anything done later concerning this transaction? A. Yes, sir. Q. What was it? A. They came into the store later on and asked for a bath-cock, and I gave it to them and they gave me five dollars and told me to give half to Joe Weatherby, another employe of the store. Q. Whose bath-cock did you give them? A. The Speakman Supply & Pipe Company’s their property. Q. What, if anything, did you receive from Dorsey and Smith at that time, in payment for that bath-cock, you acting as an agent for the Speakman Supply & Pipe Company? A. I don’t understand the question. Q. What did you receive in payment for that bath-cock that you, acting as an employe of the Speakman Supply & Pipe Company should pay the company for that bath-cock? A. I received the money for myself, and not for the company. Q. Where were you paid the money? A. At the store. [240]*240Q. By whom were you paid? A. By Mr. Dorsey. Q. What was it you say he said? A. To give half of the money to Weatherby. Q. For what purpose? A. I do not know. Q. What did you do with your half? A. Put it in my pocket. Q. Did the Spealtman Supply & Pipe Company get any of that money, if you know? A. No sir; they did not.”

Mr. Harman:—I object, and ask that the answer go out. It is immaterial; if Dorsey and Smith paid this-man a proper price, they are not responsible for what this man did with the money.

Mr. Reinhardt:—But they told this man to give another man half of this money. That is an overt act to sustain .this conspiracy. * * *

“Q. Are you acquainted with the method of doing business' by the Speakman Supply & Pipe Company, when customers order or receive goods?”

Mr. Harman:—I object; it is immaterial whether he knows or not.

Boyce, J:

We overrule the objection, subject to your right to move to strike out later.

“A. Yes, sir. Q. If a customer came into your store and purchased a bath-cock, what would be done? A. I would get him the bath-cock, and go into the office and have a price set on it, tell the customer the price, receive the money, write up a cash sales slip, and give the customer the duplicate with the bath-cock. Q. Did you do that in connection with the delivery of the bath-cock to Dorsey?”

Mr. Harman:—I object; this is not material, unless it is shown that Dorsey and Smith knew their custom.

Mr. Reinhardt:—I promise to show that. -

Under the promise, we overrule the objection. * * *

Weatherby, a clerk in the said store, being called as a witness was asked among other questions:

[241]*241“Did you ever have any talk with either Smith or Dorsey about their getting material from the Speakman Supply & Pipe Company? A. Yes, sir. Q. With whom did you have the first talk? A. With Dorsey. Q. When was it? A. About three weeks or a month after I went to work there. Q. Was it in the store?”

Mr. Harman:—This witness is one of the co-conspirators in other indictments, and I want to urge the same objection as to the previous witness.

Mr. Reinhardt:—He is not charged in this indictment.

Mr. Garrett:—I represent this defendant and desire to make the same statement that I did with reference to the previous witness.

Mr. Harman:-—-Whatever these defendants, Dorsey and Smith, had to do with this witness, would constitute another case of conspiracy, and has nothing to do with this case at trial.

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 A. 667, 30 Del. 236, 7 Boyce 236, 1917 Del. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stiegler-nygensess-1917.