People v. Wightman
People v. Wightman
Opinion of the Court
The following opinion was delivered at General Term:
Daniels, J.
The case containing the exceptions as it has-been settled, states that the people to maintain the issues on their part introduced evidence tending to prove the acts-charged in the first five counts of the indictment. At the close of the evidence given to prove'the charges contained in those counts, an application was made for the acquittal of the defendant on the ground that the acts charged in such counts and proved by the evidence were not sufficient to constitute a crime and that the evidence was not sufficient, to warrant a conviction of the crime therein charged, in that, the letter or writing did not threaten to do any or either of the acts specified in § 558 of the Penal Code. The motion was denied and to the decision made the defendant, excepted.
These were the only objections taken to the case made-against the defendant at the trial, and they present the simple question whether proving the acts set forth in the first five counts of the indictment constituted a crime under this section of the Code. To determine this point it becomes necessary to examine these counts of the indictment, and such an examination, particularly of the third, fourth and fifth counts discloses the acts of the defendant to be such as to include the sending and causing to be forwarded to and received by one Charles C. Sears, the letter contained in each of these counts of the indictment, thereby threatening falsely and unjustly to cause and procure him to be put to great charge and expense of his moneys and give security for the maintenance of a child of which the woman named
The case was argued by the defendant’s counsel upon the theory that it wholly depended upon the language and import of the letter itself. If this position were sound and the letter were written and forwarded for the purpose of indemnifying or protecting May A. Thatcher, named in the indictment, no offense would have been committed and the argument of the counsel would undoubtedly be sound. But that is not the case as the indictment presented it, and the evidence tended to prove the facts, for the averments contained in the indictment extended far beyond the writing and sending of the letter for any purpose of protection or indemnity to this woman, and averred the facts to be that the object in writing and sending the letter to Sears was to extort and gain money from him by falsely and publicly accusing him of the immoral conduct described and set forth in those counts. These were as much the acts referred to, and which the evidence tended to establish, as the writing and mailing of the letter itself. They were each of them distinct parts of the crime intended to be charged, and in substance they disclose the facts to be that the appellant,
These are the prominent acts set forth in the indictment and bring the case within this section of the Penal Code by which it has been declared to be a crime for any person, knowing the contents thereof and with intent by means thereof to extort any money or other property, or td do, abet or procure any illegal or wrongful act, to send, deliver or in any manner cause to be forwarded or received any letter or writing threatening to expose or impute to any person any deformity or disgrace. The indictment was framed under this construction and language of the statute. By its allegations it brought the case within those provisions, and as the evidence sufficiently tended to prove them to support the verdict rendered by the jury, the judgment from which the appeal has been taken should be affirmed.
Van Brunt, P. J., Bartlett, J., concur.
The following opinion was delivered by the Court of Appeals:
Omitting the superfluous words in the indictment, it charges, among other things, in substance, that the defendant and others, well knowing the contents of the letter and with intent to extort money from the prosecutor, did on a day and at a place mentioned in the indictment feloniously send and cause to be sent to and received by the prosecutor the letter set out in the indictment, threatning to expose him to disgrace by falsely and publicly accusing him of having had sexual intercourse with one May A. Thatcher, an unmarried female, resulting in her pregnancy of a child likely to be born a bastard. The letter set out in the .indictment purports to have been written by. one of the co-defendants, an attorney-at-law, in behalf of May A. Thatcher, and was addressed to the prosecutor. The letter after stat
We think the indictment was good in substance, and that the conviction should be affirmed. See People v. Thompson, 2 N. Y. Crim. Rep. 520; 97 N. Y. 313; Reg. v. Handy, 4 Cox. Cr. C. 243; Rex. v. Tucker, 1 Moody, 134.
All concur.
Judgment affimed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PEOPLE v. WIGHTMAN
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- Published