Case ID: nys_105/html/0165-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "INGRAHAM, J. CLARKE, J. (dissenting).", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

(120 App. Div. 81)
    PEOPLE v. GATTO.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department.
    June 21, 1907.)
    1. Assault and Battery—Sufficiency of Evidence.
    In a prosecution for assault, evidence examined, and held sufficient to support a conviction.
    2. Criminal Law—Trial—Instructions—Reasonable Doubt.
    Where, in a prosecution for assault, the court charged that, if there was no exercise of that defense which the law permits a man to call to his own protection in the hour of danger, then the defendant was guilty if the jury found that beyond a reasonable doubt; that the law presumes every defendant in a criminal action to be innocent until the contrary is proved; that the contrary must be proved if a conviction is to be supported beyond a reasonable doubt; that, if a reasonable doubt arises in the minds of the jury from a consideration of all the facts in the case, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of it; and that the jury may convict if they find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt—a refusal to charge that it was not necessary for defendant to establish the defense of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt was not error.
    Clarice, J., dissenting.
    Appeal from Court of General Sessions, New York County.
    Gavino Gatto was convicted of assault, and appeals.
    Affirmed.
    Argued before McLAUGHLIN, INGRAHAM, LAUGHRIN: CLARKE, and SCOTT, JJ.
    Nathaniel Cohen, for appellant.
    E. Crosby Kindleberger, for respondent.
   INGRAHAM, J.

The defendant was indicted for assault in the second degree. The assault was committed upon one Antonio Cicillo, who testified that he had known the defendant for 33 years; that on the 20th day of November he met the defendant in front of 105ya Cherry street, who asked the witness if he had written a letter to his brother; that the complainant then said to the defendant, “Why ,do you tremble?” to which the defendant answered, “This is none of your business.” The witness then charged the defendant with having spoken disrespectfully of the witness’ sister-in-law, who was in Italy, whereupon the defendant grabbed the witness by the throat and struck him with an umbrella; that the witness took the umbrella from the defendant, when the defendant put his hand in his pocket; upon that the complainant started to run. away from him, but the defendant shot him with a pistol underneath his right arm; and that after the defendant shot the complainant he ran away. No pistol was found upon the complainant, and he seems to have had np weapon of which the defendant could have been at all in danger. The complainant also testified that the defendant at the time told the complainant that he was going to kill him because the complainant’s sister-in-law had a case with the defendant’s father in Italy. The complainant was corroborated by a companion who was with him at the time. A policeman who arrested the defendant testified that the defendant said he shot the complainant because the complainant’s sister-in-law was annoying his father in Italy.

. The defendant was examined as a witness in his own behalf. He testified that the complainant had threatened to kill him some time before this shooting; that on two occasions the complainant had assaulted him, all based upon this dispute in Italy; that, when they met at the time of the shooting, complainant looked at him in a threatening manner, and that the defendant was afraid that he was going to do something to him, so he started to walk away, and then the complainant said to the defendant, “Come with me,” to which the defendant answered, “Where do you want me to come”; that the complainant then took hold of the defendant- by the lap of the coat and hit him two or three times, and threw him down on the ground; that the defendant had an umbrella in his hand, which the complainant took away, and attempted to put the umbrella in the defendant’s eye; that the defendant’s companion then took hold of the complainant, and the defendant got up, whereupon the complainant struck him again, and again the defendant fell; that the complainant then renewed his effort with the umbrella, whereupon the defendant pulled a pistol out of his pocket, and shot in the air to attract the attention of the police; that he got the pistol only that morning, taking it from a boarder; that at the time the defendant fired the pistol in the air he believed the complainant intended to- do- him bodily harm, because the complainant' had something in his hand which the defendant thought was a razor. The witness examined on behalf of the defendant testified that he saw the defendant running away and the complainant hitting him with an umbrella, and that it was after the two men got into a house that the shot was fired. There is no evidence in this case, unless it be that of the defendant, that would justify a finding that the offense was committed in self-defense. There were several people in the street at the time Not one of them testified to any act of the complainant which would justify the defendant in considering that he was in danger of his life, or serious bodily harm. The complainant "and his companion who were in the street testified to. an unprovoked assault. The testimony of the defendant was contradictory and unsatisfactory, and was contradicted by his own witnesses. The defendant committed a dangerous assault by the use of a pistol which he was carrying, in violation of law. His excuse that he fired the pistol in the air to attract the attention of the police is contradicted by defendant’s witnesses, and his account as to the injuries that he received in the fracas is contradicted by the police officer who arrested him.

The only question is as to the response of the court to a request to charge of the defendant. The court charged the jury, in substance, that if the defendant was under the apprehension that his life was in danger, even though it was not in danger, if he was under the honest belief that there was danger to his life or limb, and that he was trying to escape from that danger when he shot this man, then the jury should acquit the prisoner. This was much more favorable to the defendant than was justified. The jury were further charged that, if they found “that there was no exercise of that defense which the law permits a man to call to his own protection in the hour of danger, then the defendant was guilty if you find that beyond a reasonable doubt. But the law presumes every defendant in a criminal action to be innocent until the contrary is proved, and that the contrary must be proved, if a ■conviction is to be supported beyond a reasonable doubt”; and, further, that, if a reasonable doubt arises in the minds of the' jury from a consideration of all the facts of the case, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of it; that the jury may convict if they find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The defendant then requested the court to charge the jury that it was not necessary for the defendant to establish the defense of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt, to which the court responded:

“No; it is for the jury themselves to say whether there is a preponderance or enough to satisfy them that there really was a necessity for self-defense.”

All that was excepted to was an assumed refusal of the court to charge the request, when it would seem that the court did charge that it was not necessary to establish the defense beyond a reasonable doubt. There was no exception to the instructions that the court gave the jury that it was for the jury themselves to say whether there was a preponderance or enough to satisfy the jury that there really was a necessity for self-defense. The attention of the court was not called to the distinction now sought to be taken, that the burden was upon the prosecution to establish the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt, and the burden was not upon the defendant to establish self-defense. But, as before stated; the court had told the jury that they must find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and had explained in a way that .was quite favorable to the defendant what would justify the defense of self-defense; and, reading what the court said in connection with the rest of the charge, I do not think that the observation is fairly capable of the construction that it was intended to show that there was any burden upon the defendant, or that the former charge that the people must prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt was at all modified.

It is quite clear that this defendant was guilty, that nothing occurred that justified the defendant in shooting the complainant, and I do not think that any error was committed, taking the charge as a whole, in the submission of the case to the jury, that would justify a reversal of the judgment.

The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.

McLAUGHLIN, LAUGHLIN, and SCOTT, JJ., concur.

CLARKE, J. (dissenting).

The defendant was convicted of the crime of assault in the second degree in shooting one Antonio Cicillo with a pistol. The complainant and the defendant are Italians, and had been acquaintances in Italy. The complainant testified that he met the defendant upon the street, each in company with a friend, and that, after some preliminary conversation—

“I said to the defendant, Gatto, ‘You told somebody that you called my sister-in-law a-, my sister-in-law in Italy.’ I-Ie grabbed me by the throat, and had an umbrella in his other hand, and he struck me with the umbrella. I took away the umbrella from his hand. When I took the umbrella away from him, he put his hand in his inside coat pocket, and I started to run away from him, and he shot me right underneath the right arm. As soon as I received the shot, I turned around, and saw the defendant, Gatto, running away. While he was running, I saw the pistol in his hand. * * * The defendant had an umbrella with him that morning. When he grabbed me by the throat and lifted the umbrella and struck me, I took it away from him. I had it in my hand, I did not go to strike him with it. I used forcti to take it away, because he had me by the throat.”

Pitello, a witness for the people, testified:

“I saw the two were getting hold of each other, Gatto and the complainant. We attempted, He Stefano and I, to separate the two, and at that moment the defendant, Gatto, put his hand in his coat pocket, inside coat pocket, and drew a revolver, and the complaining witness had Gatto’s umbrella in his hand. When the defendant, Gatto, got the pistol out of his pocket, the complainant hit the defendant with the umbrella. He hit him on the arm where the fellow had the revolver. Gatto then shot the complainant, and, when Gatto shot the complainant, he, Gatto, ran in the yard. * * * I do not know who struck the first blow. * * * As soon as he pulled the pistol out of liis pocket, the complainant hit the defendant on the hand" with the umbrella.”

The defendant took the stand in his own behalf, and testified: That, while he and the complainant had formerly been friendly, they had ceased to be so from the time that Cicillo received a letter from Italy, stating that defendant’s father had sued Cicillo’s sister in Italy. That after that Cicillo had threatened to kill him. That he had kicked him two or three times, on one occasion after which he was sick for five months. That upon another occasion he had punched him seven or eight times, saying:

“That pig of a father of yours is making a lot of trouble in Italy, and I am going to have revenge here.”

That upon the morning in question, as he was going out of the house with a friend, he encountered the complainant, and that De Stefano and Cicillo began to speak together. Also:

“When these two men started to talk, Cicillo looked at me in a threatening manner, and I was afraid that he was going to do something to me again. So I started to walk away from him, towards my house. Then the complainant said to me. ‘Come with me,’ and I answered, ‘Where do you want me to come?’ Then the complainant got hold o£ me by the lapel of the coat, and he hit me three or four times, and threw me down on the ground. I had an umbrella in my hand, and, when I fell down, the complainant took the umbrella away from me, and was trying to stick the end of the umbrella in my eye. Antonio De Stefano was also on top of me, and was holding the complainant from hitting me. As I was getting up from the ground, De Stefano let go of the complainant, and the complainant went at me again, and I again fell. Then he attempted to strike me again with his umbrella, and I pulled the pistol out of my pocket and shot in the air to attract the attention of the police. He hit me two or three times with the umbrella. Q. At the time you fired the pistol in the air, as you say, did you believe the complainant intended to do 3rou bodily harm? Yes; because he had something in his hand which I thought was a razor, and that he wanted to cut me. * * * When I pulled out the revolver, I was on the ground. AVhen I told you that I pulled out the revolver when I was running away, I mean by that that I took the pistol out of my pocket while I was on the ground, and then I got up and started to run away. * * * He blackened both my eyes before he took the umbrella away from me. When I was lying on the ground, the three of them, Stefano, Fitello; and Cicillo, were on top of me. The other two were trying to get Cicillo off, I believe. He cut my eye with the umbrella. It left a mark there on the right eye.”

The mark was shown to the jury, and a police officer testified that shortly, after the arrest he saw a cut on the defendant’s nose appearing to be about a half hour old. One Lopez testified that the complainant hit the defendant first. There was presented upon contradictory evidence a question of fact for the determination of the jury, and there was sufficient evidence, if believed, to warrant the verdict arrived at, and upon the facts I see no reason to interfere with that verdict.

There was presented, however, evidence tending to show prior threats and assaults by the complainant upon the defendant; an altercation upon the street, in which the complainant took away the defendant’s umbrella, struck him with it, blackened • his eyes, cut his face, threw him down, and continued to assault him until the shot which the defendant swore he fired when in fear of grievous bodily harm. There was thus presented evidence which, if believed, might have been sufficient to have raised a question of reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury, or some members thereof, as to whether the defendant tvas guilty of the crime of assault in the second degree, namely, willfully and wrongfully assaulting another by the use of a weapon or other instrument or thing likely to produce grievous bodily harm. In other words, there was presented upon the evidence the defense of self-defense, and the learned court, in its charge, presented the question of self-defense as one of 'the issues to be determined by the jury. At the close of the main charge counsel for the defense said:

“I ask your honor to charge the jury that it is not necessary for the defense to establish the defense of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt. The Court: No; it is for the jury themselves to say whether there is a preponderance or enough to satisfy them that there really was a necessity for self-defense. Counsel for the Defense: I except to your honor’s refusal to charge as requested.”

There was thus presented the only question in the case which seems to be necessary to consider.

It is settled beyond controversy that the burden rests upon the people from the beginning to the end of a criminal case to establish the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. It is also settled that, although the people have made a prima facie case and the defense of self-defense is offered, the burden does not shift, and the defendant is neither obliged to establish that defense beyond a reasonable doubt, nor by a preponderance of the evidence. In People v. Riordan, 7 N. Y. Cr. R. 10, 3 N. Y. Supp. 775, Mr. Justice Martin said:

' “It seems to us quite clear that by this the jury were led to understand that the burden, of proof rested upon the defendant to establish the fact that he killed the deceased while acting in self-defense, and that he was required to establish that fact beyond a reasonable doubt, or at least by a fair preponderance of evidence. 51 * * The vice of this charge rests in the fact that by it the obligation of showing affirmatively that the homicide was committed under such circumstances as to excuse or justify it was imposed upon the defendant, while under the authorities in tills state the burden of proving, not only that a human -being has been killed, but also that the killing was perpetrated under such circumstances as constituted the crime charged, is imposed upon the prosecution, and the burden of establishing and maintaining those facts remains with the prosecution throughout the case.”

In the same case the Court of Appeals (117 N. Y. 71, 22 N. E. 455) said:

“The rule that in criminal cases the defendant is entitled to the benefit of a reasonable doubt applies, not only to a case as made by the prosecution, but to any defense interposed”—

and concurred in the opinion of the General Term.

The rule was stated in People v. Hill, 49 Hun, 432, 3 N. Y. Supp. 564, as follows:

“The burden of proving that the act complained of was committed under such circumstances as to constitute a crime is never changed. It always rested upon the prosecution, and if, upon the whole evidence of both sides, a reasonable doubt exists as to the guilt of the defendant, he is entitled to the benefit of it.”

In People v. Shanley, 49 App. Div. 56, 63 N. Y. Supp. 449, the trial court had charged: .

“But, where a defendant comes into court and sets up self-defense as a plea, then the rule of law is changed, for the reason that the burden of proof is upon the defendant to show that he did commit the act in self-defense. Therefore, if you consider his defense as being one entitled to serious consideration, you must find that this defendant has established it on his part by a preponderance of evidence.”

The Appellate Division said: '

“It is clear that the charge, as made by the court, that the burden of proof was upon the defendant to show that he did commit the act in self-defense, and that he must establish the fact by the preponderance of evidence, was error’,’—

and uptin a careful review of the cases reversed the conviction.

In People v. Epaski, 57 App. Div. 91, 67 N. Y. Supp. 1033, where the defense of self-defense was interposed, the trial court had charged:

“But that, in this case, if you find that the 'defendant admits the killing, then you are to say whether he has established to your satisfaction that he was justified in killing.”

The Appellate Division said “that the charge was erroneous requires no special discussion,” and reversed the conviction.

As the learned court in the case at bar had not referred to the matter made the subject of the request, it was the clear legal right of the defendant to have the jury instructed as requested; said request being proper in form and substance. Instead of charging it, the court said;

“No, it is for the jury themselves to say whether there is a preponderance or enough to satisfy them that there really was a necessity for self-defense.”

Giving to this the construction most favorable to the prosecution, it was an instruction to the jury that the defense need not be made out beyond a reasonable doubt, but that it must be by a preponderance of enough to satisfy them that there really was a necessity for self-defense. This was an unwarrantable shifting of the burden, and it is no answer to this error that the jury have determined the question of fact against the defendant, and that the provisions of section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure should be applied. I do not understand that an error of law in the charge, duly excepted to, which shifts the burden of proof in a criminal case, is such an error as we are justified in overlooking under the provisions of said section. There was enough, as it seems to me, in the evidence of previous threats, assaults and the altercation itself, if believed, to have raised the question of reasonable doubt, a matter solely for the jury and each member thereof, and the fact that under this charge the jury have not given weight to said evidence is no answer, because it may have been on account of the charge that the verdict, which we are now called upon to review, was rendered.

It follows therefore that the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered.