Summary
In People v. Miles, 143 N.Y. 383, Finch, J., writing the opinion, said: "In advance of the selection of a jury, and before any of the panel had been examined, the mode and order of that selection came up for discussion.
Summary of this case from People v. RendigsOpinion
Argued October 9, 1894
Decided October 23, 1894
Wilbur F. Porter for appellant. Virgil K. Kellogg for respondent.
The defendant has been convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. His counsel assails that judgment for alleged errors occurring at the trial, and also insists that upon the merits the conviction should only have been for murder in the second degree.
In advance of the selection of a jury, and before any of the panel had been examined, the mode and order of that selection came up for discussion. The court allowed the parties to choose whether all peremptory challenges should be reserved until twelve jurors had been provisionally selected, or whether the case of each juror should be fully settled before leaving the witness stand, and if accepted the final oath be at once administered. The parties chose the latter method and the court assented.
Thereupon Walton B. Canter was called and sworn as to his qualification as a juror. He was examined by the prosecution and at the close of that examination the prisoner's counsel asked if the juror was satisfactory to the People, to which the district attorney replied, "we do not challenge him for bias nor for favor." The defense insisted that the prosecution should at once accept or reject the juror and exercise its right of peremptory challenge immediately if it meant to do so at all: and to the refusal of the court to so direct an exception was taken. The juror was then examined in behalf of the prisoner, and both examinations having been concluded, and the basis obtained for determining whether challenges should be interposed or not, the court called upon the district attorney for the exercise of his right. There was no challenge for general disqualification, nor for implied bias, nor for actual bias, and then the district attorney was called upon to exercise his right of peremptory challenge. He interposed none, and, after a few further questions, the prisoner's counsel announced himself satisfied and the juror was sworn. In this process there was full obedience to and no disregard of the provision of the Criminal Code that challenges to an individual juror must be first taken by the People and then by the defendant. (§ 385.) The next section, fixing the order of the different challenges, indicates that they might have been disposed of in that order. Practically that result was accomplished, but at all events the prisoner's counsel was in no case and in no manner compelled to challenge until after the prosecution had fully exhausted its right.
One of the defenses interposed on the trial was that of insanity. To sustain it proof was given of the conduct of the defendant at Evans' Mills on an occasion when he was trying to settle his business difficulties with Mrs. Ward, and it was claimed on his behalf that his words and actions on that occasion were so strange and inexplicable as to indicate insanity. To rebut that inference and answer the manifest tendency and purpose of the proof, the prosecution were allowed to show that on that day and that occasion the defendant was intoxicated, and that his excited and ugly conduct was explainable by that fact. The evidence was clearly admissible.
On the day of the homicide the witness Carpenter was one of the first persons who came upon the scene, and described in very considerable detail what the prisoner said, what his appearance was, and the manner of his conduct. The following question was then propounded by the defendant's counsel: "After you were over there at the house with him, before leaving for Evans' Mills, how did his acts and conversation, which you have here related upon the stand, impress you at the time as to being rational or irrational?" To this inquiry the prosecution objected that it aggregated a whole series of acts and words and called for an opinion upon that aggregation, leaving it impossible to determine upon what specific acts or words the impression of the witness was founded. The court took that view of the question and at first excluded it, but thereafter changed its ruling and explicitly allowed the question read from the stenographer's minutes to be put to the witness and answered by him. Thenceforward similar questions were asked by the defendant's counsel of other witnesses, and I have discovered no instance in which they were excluded.
The remaining objections respected the charge of the court.
The trial judge defined murder in the first degree, using for that purpose the words of the statute. In so far as that definition involved homicide while engaged in the commission of a felony the prisoner's counsel insisted that it had no application to the facts disclosed. The defendant as a witness testified that the fatal shot was fired not at Mrs. Ward, and not even at Rusaw, but in the latter's direction, without intention to kill or even to wound him, but solely to frighten him and so drive him away from the premises. The truth of that testimony was submitted to the jury, the court saying that upon that theory the woman was shot accidentally and the prisoner was not guilty. The jury disbelieved the pretended accident and rejected the explanation, and that they were fully justified in that conclusion is apparent from two facts. If the killing of Mrs. Ward had been accidental the prisoner would have said so at the time; it would have been the first word to spring to his lips; the natural and swift explanation made to those who came upon the scene. But no such word was then uttered. His first word to Carpenter was "What are you going to do with me?" and then he said: "I have shot that woman." He proposed to carry the dead body into the house, and when Carpenter doubted their right to do so, he insisted and said: "They will electricity me." This was the evidence of Mrs. Carpenter, who did not go into the house when they carried the body in; but she adds that when they came out the defendant in answer to her remark, "You hadn't ought to done that," replied, "I don't think I had ought to, but she would have other men around her, and she slept with that hired man all night," and further added, "She has got my property all away from me." The defense called Mr. Carpenter, who not only corroborated his wife, but repeated what occurred in the house when the body was laid upon the bed. The prisoner bent over her and kissed her, and said: "Mary I have shot you — I have killed you — my God, Mary, I have killed you — but I couldn't help it — I done it because I loved you — you have lied to me — you have proved false to me and I couldn't stand it." All these expressions indicating an intentional killing, and the motive for it are utterly inconsistent with any theory of accident, which was evidently an afterthought. Beyond that the two lines of fire, towards Mrs. Ward in one direction and toward Rusaw in another, were shown to be seventeen feet apart, and made the theory of an accident quite improbable.
But assuming that Miles did shoot at Rusaw intending to wound or kill him, and by a false aim killed Mrs. Ward, the defendant's counsel contended that the court erred in describing it as murder in the first degree, and that a felony affecting another than the person killed will not be sufficient to make the homicide murder in that degree. The words of the statute are "by a person engaged in the commission of or in an attempt to commit a felony either upon or affecting the person killed or otherwise." (Penal Code, § 183.) The construction asserted is that the word "otherwise" relates only to felonies against property and does not include a felony upon or against a person other than the one killed. The supposed authority for this construction is People v. Greenwall, ( 115 N.Y. 520), but it decides no such proposition. In saying that the word "otherwise" cannot be changed into "another" it means only that it cannot be so narrowed and limited and that it includes a felony against property as well as against another. There was no error in the charge in this respect.
That charge was not unfair or an invasion of the province of the jury. The evidence could not be re-called and put before them in its logical order without seeming to bear heavily upon the prisoner, but they were left to find the facts and steadily instructed that no opinion of the court was intended to be expressed, or should at all influence their conclusion. No opinion was expressed upon any fact in dispute, but the testimony given was recalled so far as was needed to make plain the legal rules which it was the duty of the court to state and to explain. There was in truth no defense available to the prisoner. The proof of insanity fell far short of the legal standard, and the examination of the prisoner himself showed that he fully understood at the time the nature and quality of his act.
We see no reason for a reversal of the verdict.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.