Summary
In People v. Jackson (7 N.Y.2d 142) we reversed a conviction because there was one such incident in that the District Attorney during summation told the jury that although one of his witnesses had failed to identify the defendant at the police lineup he (the prosecutor) knew the reason for this failure and would be happy to tell why after the trial was over.
Summary of this case from People v. RosenfeldOpinion
Argued October 21, 1959
Decided December 30, 1959
Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the First Judicial Department, CHARLES MARKS, J.
Martin Erdmann and Florence M. Kelley for appellant.
Frank S. Hogan, District Attorney ( Peter R. Rosenblatt, Charles W. Manning and H. Richard Uviller of counsel), for respondent.
On the night of January 17, 1958, two men committed a robbery in a liquor store operated by Patrick and Francis O'Brien. The appellant Jackson and another defendant were indicted for the crime and at the trial, held some eight months after its commission, both O'Briens identified Jackson as one of the robbers. Significantly, however, Patrick O'Brien had not picked Jackson out of a line-up which he had viewed seven months earlier and only two weeks after the robbery.
Whether the appellant was one of the robbers was, so far as he was concerned, the only issue in the case, and the evidence that Patrick O'Brien, who identified him at the trial, had failed to select him from the line-up was unquestionably a factor of prime importance to the defense. However, the effect of this earlier failure to identify him was dissipated, completely destroyed, by a statement of the prosecuting attorney during his summation. Without any evidence whatsoever to support him, he blandly assured the jury that Patrick had "recognized" the appellant in the line-up and that, although "he didn't" pick him out, there was good reason for this, adding,
"I will be more than happy to tell you * * * why after this trial is over."
This was a serious impropriety, an error both egregious and inexcusable, whose potential for prejudice was incalculable. (See, e.g., People v. Lovello, 1 N.Y.2d 436, 438-439; People v. Tassiello, 300 N.Y. 425, 430; see, also, People v. Ochs, 3 N.Y.2d 54, 57-58.) On the only issue in the case, identification, the district attorney proceeded to place his own veracity and official position in the scales against the accused. Only one of the three trial witnesses had been requested to view the line-up and he had failed to pick the appellant from it. This might have given the jury pause as to the accuracy and validity of the trial identification and created considerable doubt as to whether the appellant was one of the robbers. But what possible chance could he have had once the prosecutor had assured the jurors that O'Brien had in fact recognized the appellant and that he would tell them the reason why the witness did not pick him out, after the trial was over?
It is urged that this impropriety was "harmless" because it had not been repeated, because it had been "confined to a single isolated instance" in a case where there was "overwhelming evidence of guilt" (opinion of DYE, J., p. 146).
We cannot agree with this evaluation of the proof. It is quite true that the two O'Briens testified at the trial that they were sure that the appellant was one of the men who held them up; but, as we have already observed, Patrick, the only witness who viewed a line-up, and that shortly after the commission of the crime, admitted that he had failed to pick out the appellant Jackson. It is also true that another witness, a patrolman, testified that Jackson was the man whom he had pursued on the night of the robbery; but he acknowledged that his only view of the suspect was "a glimpse * * * for not more than two or three seconds" and, in addition, he admitted that he had expressed a doubt, immediately after the chase, as to his ability to identify that person. This is hardly "overwhelming" proof on the issue of identification.
However, even if the proof could be so considered, we do not see how we may treat the impropriety complained of as harmless error. Although section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure directs an appellate court to disregard "technical errors" not affecting "substantial rights", it could never have been the legislative design that a court should regard errors as technical, however grave they may be, upon the hypothesis that, in any event, the jury correctly decided the case. Observing that "Such a course would tend to abolish `all forms of law taught by experience to be necessary to the protection of the innocent'", this court recently wrote, "convincing though the evidence of guilt may seem to be, we could affirm only if we were to announce a doctrine that the fundamentals of a fair trial need not be respected if there is proof in the record to persuade us of defendant's guilt. We are not prepared to announce such a doctrine." ( People v. Mleczko, 298 N.Y. 153, 162-163.)
Nor is it possible to hold that the instructions given by the court erased the impression made on the jurors' minds or eliminated the harm thereby occasioned. (See People v. Carborano, 301 N.Y. 39, 42; People v. Robinson, 273 N.Y. 438, 445-446.) If instructions could have such an effect, then, we have declared, "the prosecution would be in a position to violate the rules of fair conduct with impunity, secure in the thought that the verdict, if one of guilt, would not be upset as long as the judge simply directed the jury to disregard what had occurred." ( People v. Carborano, 301 N.Y. 39, 43, supra.)
Although we may not be able to say that the prosecutor's remark on summation actually brought about the appellant's conviction, there can be little doubt that it must have had a tremendous impact upon the jurors in their deliberations. Some indication of this is found in the fact that the jury did not return its verdict of guilt against the appellant until more than eight hours after it had retired and in the interim, between retiring and verdict, it had actually reported to the court that, while a verdict had been reached as to his codefendant, "agreement" on a verdict with respect to the appellant himself "looks doubtful".
In the light of all of the circumstances, we may not, therefore, treat the error as technical or harmless and disregard it.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
I dissent and vote to affirm. I agree with the general rule that improper comments during summation may warrant a new trial whenever the defendant's rights before a jury are prejudiced, particularly when the prosecutor makes himself an unsworn witness and supports his case by his own veracity and position ( People v. Tassiello, 300 N.Y. 425; People v. Lovello, 1 N.Y.2d 436). However, we have deemed it harmless when the impropriety is confined to a single isolated instance which, under the rulings of the court, could not have prejudiced the jury in the light of overwhelming evidence of guilt ( People v. Broady, 5 N.Y.2d 500 [April, 1959]; People v. Marks, 6 N.Y.2d 67 [May, 1959]).
On this record, the complained of prejudice falls more nearly into the pattern set by the line of cases exemplified by Broady and Marks than by Tassiello and Lovello. In both the latter cases there was a continuing and persisting course of intemperate behavior on the part of the prosecutor to which the court gave acquiescence and substance by ruling against the defendant's objections.
Here, we note a distinguishing difference, since the complained of impropriety is limited to a single isolated instance found only in the words "I will be happy to tell you the reason why after the trial is over". This was met, as it was in Broady and Marks, by a motion for a mistrial which the court denied, and by objection which the court sustained, followed by a prompt, clear and adequate instruction to the jury to disregard the reason why, or the fact that Mr. Jones or any one else knew the reason why, as well as granting the defendant's request to charge in respect thereto.
Under the circumstances of this case, the uncontradicted and overwhelming evidence of guilt, the single slip of the tongue, the prompt ruling by the court's instructions to the jury, made on his own initiative as well as pursuant to the defendant's request to charge, we are satisfied, as was the court below, that the comment, concededly improper, was too inconsequential to adversely affect any substantial right of the defendant (Code Crim. Pro., § 542).
The judgment of conviction should be affirmed.
Chief Judge CONWAY and Judges DESMOND and VAN VOORHIS concur with Judge FULD; Judge DYE dissents in an opinion in which Judges FROESSEL and BURKE concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.