Wolf v. State

122 A. 641, 143 Md. 489, 1923 Md. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 122 A. 641 (Wolf v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf v. State, 122 A. 641, 143 Md. 489, 1923 Md. LEXIS 118 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Urner., J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are one hundred and twenty exceptions in the record presented on this appeal. They relate to the admissibility of evidence in a trial which resulted in the conviction of the appellant under an indictment charging him and others with having engaged in a conspiracy to obstruct the administration of justice.

The issues of fact and law in th© case were tried before Ciitef Judge Gorter, and Associate Judges Boyd, Duffy Staytoy and Steiy of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City. It is earnestly contended that, their decision against the appellant was improperly influenced by the admission of the testimony to which the numerous exceptions refer. In the brief submitted by the appellant’s able counsel it is further insisted that, reg-ardlessi of the exceptions in the. record, there was such manifest error in the conviction, in view of all the evidence, as to justify a reversal of the judgment and a remand of the case for a new .trial.

*493 This Court has no authority to decide as to the appellant’s guilt or innocence. That duty and responsibility rested upon the five judges before whom, as a jury, the case was tried iu the lower Court. Under the Constitution of our State, and in their capacity as a jury, they were “the judges of law, as well as of fact” in the ease. It is therefore; not within our jurisdiction, as an appellate tribunal, to determine as to tbe legal sufficiency of the evidence upon which the vferdiet was rendered. Weeks v. State, 126 Md. 223; Jessup v. State, 117 Md. 119. The only judicial concern we can have; with respect to the evidence, is. to ascertain whether any ruling of the trial court as to the admissibility of any portion of it was erroneous and tended to prejudice the appellant’s! interests.

In the indictment under which the appellant was tried it is charged that he conspired with John Keller and Walter Socolow to convey certain misleading information to police officers and to the State's Attorney of Baltimore City for the purpose of obstructing the prosecution of Socolow and others for the murder of Willi ami B. Korris, by discrediting a confession obtained from E'rank L. Allers, one of the participants in tbe robbery in the. course of which the homicide occurred. Those implicated by tbe confession, besides. Allers himself, were Socolow, John L. Strath, Charles. P. Carey and James Hart. When the confession was made Socolow and Hart were still at large. Keller had no part in the robbery or murder, but subsequently aided Socolow and Hart while they were evading arrest. The plan of deception, which the appellant was alleged to have agreed to> and promoted, was to have Keller first secure the confidence of the prosecuting officers, by conducting Police Captain Inverton to the place where the cash box taken in the robbery, and the license tags of the automobile used by the bandits, had been secreted, and then make the statement, that he had heard Allers say he was “framing” Socolow. The suggestion of this scheme is said to have been made by Socolow, and to. have been accepted by *494 the appellant and Keller, in an interview' at the appellant’s home on the evening of the day on which the confession of Allers appeared in the newspapers. On the following day Keller met Oaptain Leverton at the appellant’s law office and went with the officer to a pond from which the cash box and license tags sought for were recovered. Soon afterwards, at the Central Police Station, Keller told Inspector Hurley and Mr. O’Oonnor, Deputy State’s Attorney, that he heard Allers say: “Mow is the time to frame Socolow, Wiggles (meaning Smith) and Carey.” This statement is proved to have been false, and Keller testified, in effect, asi a witness for the State, that it was planned in the interview with the appellant and Socolow on the occasion we have mentioned.' There was a positive contradiction of Keller on this- point by the appellant and by Socolow in their testimony.

The admissibility of the evidence with which the exceptions are concerned must, of course, be considered with- particular reference to the precise nature of the charge sought to he proved. The specific purpose of the conspiracy into which the appellant is accused of having entered- was to obstruct jus-ticei by means of -a false and misleading' statement to be made to the prosecuting officers by one of the conspirators. Any evidence having a legitimate tendency to- support that accusation was not subject to a valid exception.

Tn discussing and disposing of the exceptions we shall follow generally the order and classification adopted in the appellant’s brief.

There are ten exceptions which relate to the admission of evidence that, in the interval between the murder of Mr. Morris, on August 18-th last, and the -time of the interview of Keller and Socolow with the appellant, which occurred on the night of August 23rd, the police had been searching for Socolow, Hart, Smith and Lewis, who were suspected of having participated in the -crime, that the automobile used by those who committed it had been located, that Smith and Lewis had been arrested, that Allers had voluntarily surreal *495 dered and had confessed, that on the afternoon of August 23rd his confession had been published in the Baltimore Evening Sun, and that the appellant had represented Socolow in a criminal case, in April, 1921.

In order that the significance of the alleged conspiracy might, be understood it was proper that the State should prove the conditions to which it related. The principal facts to- which the evidence just referred to was directed were averred in the indictment. They were proved, as they had been alleged, for the purpose of presenting the case in its proper perspective. To support the theory of the indictment, that the appellant conspired to defeat the prosecution of Soeolow, and his associates in the robbery and murder of Mr. Norris, it was permissible to offer evidence of the fact that such, a prosecution was impending. As, the appellant was. charged with having conspired to discredit a confession upon which the- State would rely, it was material to prove that the confession had been made and had been given such publicity as to- justify the inference that it had come to the appellant’s knowledge before the interview in which rbe conspiracy is said to have had its inception. The evidence that the appellant had previously acted as Soeolow’s attorney was unobjectionable.

Til,ero are three exceptions in the second group to be considered. They refer to admitted testimony of Keller to the effect that he was with Hart and Soeolow on the night of August 20th and went with them to a, garage^ where the money box and license tags already mentioned had been concealed, and helped them to take those articles to- thei pond from -which they were afterwards recovered by the police with Ms aid. This testimony describes conditions directly related to the conspiracy charged. The association of Keller with the men who disposed of the. cash box and license tags, and his knowledge of the place where they had been deposited, were facts to he used, according to Ihe State’s theory, in the promotion of the unlawful project with which it proposed to *496 prove the appellant to have been identified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 A. 641, 143 Md. 489, 1923 Md. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-state-md-1923.