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The People v. Larned

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Dec 1, 1852
7 N.Y. 445 (N.Y. 1852)

Opinion

December Term, 1852

John V.L. Pruyn, for the plaintiff in error.

E. Brown, for defendant in error.



There was no error in impaneling the jury. The statute (2 R.S. 420, § 61) directs that "The twelve first persons who shall appear as their names are drawn and called, and shall be approved as indifferent between the parties shall be sworn and shall be the jury to try the issue. And section 67 directs that if any juror be absent at the time his name is drawn and called, the ballot containing his name shall be returned to the box containing the undrawn ballots.

These directions were literally and exactly followed. John Cushman a juror on the panel was absent and did not appear when his name was called. Perhaps it was in the discretion of the court to direct his name to be called a second time, but neither party could require it to be done as a matter of right. The objection to the course directed by the court is groundless.

The tools found near Cooperstown shortly after the burglary, were rightly allowed to be exhibited to the jury. They were offered together with evidence tending to show the prisoner's connection with the tools and with the offense; and their production and exhibition were followed up by strong proof to that effect. The exhibition of the tools themselves afforded better and more satisfactory evidence to the jury than any description of them from the testimony of witnesses.

The evidence to show that the tools with which the bank was broken open, came from the premises in Oxford, Massachusetts, on which the defendant resided with his mother, over two hundred miles from the place where the offence was committed, was properly received in connection with the proof which had already been given. It had been shown that the prisoner was seen on the day after the robbery, under very suspicious circumstances, so near to the place where it was committed that he might have committed it. Proof that the implements used in the commission of the offence came from his home, was a circumstance very proper to be submitted to the jury in connecting him with the crime.

The evidence in relation to the bars of iron found in the granary of Barton one of his neighbors in Massachusetts, was admissible on the same principle. It had a tendency to show that the tools came from near his residence and from a place to which he probably had access, and was receivable as circumstantial evidence.

There was nothing in the comments of the presiding judge to the jury upon the facts either censurable in itself or erroneous in point of law. The conviction or acquittal of the prisoner depended upon the question whether the jury gave credit to the witnesses called by him to prove an alibi, or whether they believed the witnesses who testified to having seen him at Rome and at Deerfield shortly after the offence was committed. If they believed the witnesses last mentioned, they could not have believed those who swore to the alibi. The case was fairly submitted to the jury.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

The People v. Larned

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Dec 1, 1852
7 N.Y. 445 (N.Y. 1852)
Case details for

The People v. Larned

Case Details

Full title:THE PEOPLE against LARNED

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Dec 1, 1852

Citations

7 N.Y. 445 (N.Y. 1852)

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