People v. Clark
People v. Clark
Opinion of the Court
The defendant was convicted upon an indictment which charged him, with having obtained a conveyance of land from one John Fay, by false pretenses which consisted in inducing him to accept as part payment a mortgage for two thousand dollars upon one hundred acres of land in Ulster county, which the prisoner falsely described in many material respects and which was, in fact, of very trifling value. The party defrauded was a witness for the prosecution and, on cross-
It was in part a theory of the defense that Fay’s contract of sale was not with the prisoner but with one McKinstry, to whom the deed was in fact given; that the mortgage was taken in reliance upon his promise to cash it within a short period; and that the fraud, if there was any, was perpetrated solely by him. As bearing on that theory, the prisoner offered to show by the cross-examination of Fay that when the fraud was discovered he settled with McKinstry and got from him one thousand dollars in discharge of his liability. This evidence did not at all tend to show that the defendant did not make the false representations charged, and that Fay did not rely upon them, and was for that reason rejected upon Fay’s cross-examination. The subject came up apparently by proof given on behalf of the prosecution and on the direct examination of Fay that he had not settled with McKinstry nor had anybody for him The cross-examiner immediately taking up the subject asked this question, “what was there about that transaction, if anything?” The court at first thought that in one view it ■might be competent, and asked counsel to state the purpose for which it was offered The counsel replied that “was with a view of shaking the testimony of the witness;” and then explained that he wanted to show by the witness that such a settlement had been made, and that the trade was with McKinstry, But the witness has just denied the settlement, and a mere repetition of that denial was of no possible moment. If the counsel' had stated that something did occur between Fay and McKinstry which he wanted to put before the jury, and had explained what it was, so that the court could have seen whether it tended to a contradiction, there would have been a basis for the objection, though even then the difficulty would have remained that the disputed fact was immaterial. It turned out, however, that McKinstry was called by the prosecution, and on cross-examination related at defendant’s request the whole transaction with Fay. The witness said that he took the deed from Fay as security for five hundred dollars of purchase money advanced by him for Clark and five hundred
No error was committed in accepting the juror Fairbanks as impartial and competent; in directing the prisoner to be tried separately from the others indicted with him; nor in refusing to restrict and narrow the cross-examination of the defendant.
Although the juror had an impression as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, he testified that he would be governed by the evidence and his previous impression would not influence his verdict. He added his belief that he could render an impartial verdict according to the evidence. And on further examination he said he would give the prisoner the benefit of every reasonable doubt and acquit him if such doubt existed. The juror was competent within the established rule.
The right of the prosecution to try the prisoner separately is fixed by statute. Code Grim. Pro. § 391
While the cross-examination of the prisoner was protracted and severe, we do not discover that the limitations of the law were exceeded by asking if he had been accused or charged with anything criminal or disgraceful. The general history and mode of life of the witness threw light upon his character, and his degree of intelligence and business experience, while his other dealings with the Ulster county tract bore strongly upon his attempted explanation and were important facts in judging of its truth How far such an examination may be carried is necessarily very much in the discretion of the court, and we do not think that such discretion was unwisely exercised.
: Several other objections have been examined but do not strike us as needing discussion
All concur, except Ruger, Ch. J., not sitting, and Miller, J., absent.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PEOPLE v. CLARK
- Status
- Published