
    The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v. Irving Nitzberg, Appellant.
    Argued October 20, 1941;
    decided December 10, 1941.
    
      I. Maurice Wormser, James F. Ryan and David Cahill for appellant.
    The trial court committed reversible error in charging the jury that they could consider the testimony of Bang, the motorcycle policeman; Reardon, the patrolman; Eifler, his partner; McDermott, the police inspector; Moskowitz, the garage proprietor; Freundlich, the owner of the stolen automobile license plates; Dorothy Walker, the friend of Lepke; and of Breitman, the owner of the stolen Buick car, as bearing upon the credibility of the accomplices. (R. v. Webb, 6 C. & P. 595; R. v. Wilkes, [7 C. & P. 272; R. v. Stubbs, 1 Dears. 555; 7 Cox Cr. 48; People v. Feolo, 284 N. Y. 381.) The testimony of Bang, the motorcycle policeman; of Breitman, the owner of the stolen Buick car; of Inspector McDermott of the Police Department in Brooklyn; and of Dorothy Walker, the woman who harbored “ Lepke ” in her flat, was inadmissible. (People v. Harris, 209 N. Y. 70; Marler v. State, 68 Ala. 580; Childers v. State of Georgia, 52 Ga. 106; Commonwealth v. Bosworth, 22 Pick. 397.)
    
      William O’Dwyer, District Attorney (Henry J. Walsh and Julius Helf and of counsel), for respondent.
    The trial court committed no error in its charge respecting the weight of the testimony of the non-accomplice witnesses. (2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence [11th ed.], § 730; State v. Hayes, 109 W. Va. 296; Bruton v. State, 21 Tex. 337; State v. Watson, 31 Mo. 361; Ettinger v. Commonwealth, 98 Penn. St. 338; State v. Mancy, 54 Conn. 178.)
   Loughran, J.

The defendant stands convicted of murder in. the first degree. One Shuman was the victim of the homicide. On January 10, 1939, his slain body was found in an automobile that was parked on a street in Brooklyn.

(1) Abraham Reles — a self-confessed accomplice in the crime — was the chief witness for the People. Put into direct discourse his story in substance was this: My business was murder in Brooklyn. Lepke was one of my bosses. In December, 1938, Mendy Weiss and I visited Lepke at his hideout apartment where Mendy told Lep that Pug Shuman was speaking to Inspector McDermott, giving him information against him.” Lepke said, “If he is giving information against me go out and take him.” After that, I got from the defendant — who knew the man — a promise to lure Shuman into the hallway of a building near the intersection of Eastern parkway and Buffalo avenue in Brooklyn so that we could kill him there. Later on I thought less of that plan when I recalled that a traffic policeman was usually on duty at that street intersection. I told this to the defendant and gave him another plan which was carried out on the night of January 9, 1939. The defendant at that time got Shuman to go riding with him in a stolen automobile I had supplied and shot him to death while I followed in another automobile in which the defendant and I drove away.

Reles having given this testimony, the prosecution in its direct case brought Dorothy Walker, Philip J. Bang, Herman Breitman, Michael F. McDermott, Bernard Moskowitz and Bernard Freundlich to the witness stand. Walker ■ — the housekeeper for Lepke at his so-called hideout apartment — testified that Reles and others (of whom the defendant was not one) had visited Lepke there in the latter part of 1938. Bang testified that, as a member of the police department assigned to traffic patrol on Eastern parkway throughout December, 1938, he had during that month spent some time at the corner of Eastern parkway and Buffalo avenue, because accidents frequently happened at that spot. McDermott is the police inspector to whom Reles referred in his testimony. McDermott’s evidence was that from time to time in December, 1938, he had had conversations with Shuman at police headquarters in Brooklyn and at the office of the District Attorney of the county of New York. Breitman was the owner of the automobile in which Shuman’s body was found. He testified that the vehicle had been stolen from a garage in Long Island City in September, 1938. Moskowitz was the keeper of that garage. He gave similar testimony. Freundlich testified that the license plates that were on the car in which Shuman’s body was found had been stolen in December, 1938, from another automobile owned by himself.

For convenience we shall here and there refer to Walker, Bang, McDermott, Breitman, Moskowitz and Freundlich as the non-accomplice witnesses.

After the trial judge had delivered his charge to the jury he was requested by counsel for the defendant to instruct them that the facts sworn to by the non-accomplice witnesses were “ insufficient evidence to corroborate the accomplice.” The judge responded: “ That is right, and I so charge, that those facts which you have just stated are not intended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime, but they are intended to corroborate the witness as to whether or not he is telling the truth as to credibility.” Counsel for the defendant thereupon made this protest: I say that that evidence cannot tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” Again the judge rejoined: I so charge, but it does tend to show, or prove or disprove the credibility of a witness.” To these rulings, and to the refusal of the trial judge to strike out the testimony of some of the non-accomplice witnesses, counsel for the defendant took exceptions which are now pressed upon us.

Each and every of the matters sworn to by the non-accomplice witnesses was undisputed by the defendant. Not a single item of the testimony of any of them had any applicability whatsoever to his identity as a participator in this crime. So, indeed, the trial judge ruled. In that state of the case the question is whether we can sustain the further ruling that such independent testimony was none the less to be used by the jury in constructing for the accomplice witness Beles a general credibility that would perhaps amount to a sanction for his narration of the vital and controverted particulars of his story against the defendant.

Was the fact that Walker (in the defendant’s absence) saw Beles in Lepke’s apartment relevant to show that Beles was truthful in his testimony that he and the defendant planned this crime? Was the fact that Officer Bang patrolled Eastern parkway relevant to show that Beles was truthful in his testimony that he told the defendant an officer was on duty there? Was the fact that Shuman was in communication with Inspector McDermott relevant to show that Beles was truthful in his testimony that he had prevailed on the defendant to kill Shuman? Was the fact of the theft of the automobile in which Shuman’s body was found relevant to show that Beles was truthful in his testimony that he procured that stolen vehicle for the defendant? There is no element of novelty in any of these queries, save as they bring to the top of our minds one or two rules of ordinary human thought that have seldom called for explicit statement in the case law.

“ There is a principle '1 — not so much a rule of evidence as a presupposition involved in the very conception of a rational system of evidence * * * — which forbids receiving anything irrelevant, not logically probative.” (Thayer, Preliminary Treatise on Evidence, pp. 264, 265.) “ It is not the law which furnishes the test of relevancy, but logic. Probative value, or capability of supporting an inference, is a matter of reasoning * * * and the rules of relevancy aim only to determine whether a given fact is of sufficient probative value to be admissible at all.” (1 Greenleaf on The Law of Evidence [Wigmore’s 16th ed.], § 14.) For the purposes of the present case it is enough in the way of a definition of relevancy to say that a fact is relevant to another fact when the existence of the one renders the existence of the other highly probable, according to the common course of events. (See Sir James Stephen, Digest of the Law of Evidence [Chase’s 2d ed.], Introduction xvni. Cf. Platner v. Platner, 78 N. Y. 90, 94.)

The fact sworn to by Walker — the presence of Beles in the Lepke apartment — was a criminal fact. On the say-so of Beles that fact initiated the killing of Shuman. The fact sworn to by Breitman, Moskowitz and Freundlich— the theft of the vehicle in which Shuman’s body was found — was on the face of it a criminal fact. On his own say-so, too, Heles was closely tied to that fact. Now it was precisely because he was attainted in that way that Heles as a witness stood in need of support from a purer source to show that he was not doing a bad turn by putting the defendant in his place in the disputed accusatory parts of his story. In other words, Heles’ self-confessed connection with those criminal facts put him outside the limit of the presumption that witnesses ordinarily are honest up to their fights. In the face of all this the trial judge, nevertheless, told the jury in respect of Heles that the independent evidence of those very criminal facts does tend to show, or prove or disprove the credibility of a witness.”

We think it unnecessary to probe this idea that a strong implication of the non-credibility of a witness may be rebutted by independent evidence which confirms him in his confession of the very criminality which gives rise to that implication. Whatever its merits, such a process, we believe, is not fit for the trial of issues on which fife and liberty depend. To our minds it appears safe enough to say at once that the testimony of Walker, Breitman, Moskowitz and Freundfich did not indicate with any fair degree of probability that Heles might here be taken in the fight of common experience to have been over all a truthful witness. We do not mean, however, that their testimony was not receivable as evidence of a part of the principal occurrence in issue. (Cf. People v. Sherman, 103 N. Y. 513.)

The testimony of Officer Bang has a somewhat different aspect. The location of his post of duty was a fact that had no necessary connection with Heles. Indeed, it was a fact that was known to everybody. But if an accomplice-witness could be supported at large by independent evidence that he told the truth in matters of that sort, then every accomplice (not incompetent for want of understanding) could always rake into his story materials for such confirmation of it. (See Commonwealth v. Bosworth, 22 Pick. [Mass.] 397, 399.) It has been a long time since an accomplice witness has been suffered so to lift himself by his own boot-straps. (Cf. People v. Katz, 209 N. Y. 311, 342.) We are not persuaded that the location of the post of Officer Bang on Eastern parkway made it highly probable in point of reason that Beles was truthful in his testimony that he told the defendant an officer was usually on duty there.

So with the testimony of Inspector McDermott that Shuman (the victim of this crime) had been in communication with him. We will make the good-sized assumption that this testimony was well enough as evidence that Beles had reported the same fact to Lepke. This report of Beles (as he said) had been made in a secret conference among him, Lepke and Weiss when they were privately assembled for the sake of their common protection from interference by the police. To us it seems that the results of ordinary human experience do not countenance the notion that the testimony of Inspector McDermott was proximately probative of the fact that the truth was in Beles once more when (after his arrest and with the promise that the District Attorney “ would speak to the court for me ”) he testified that the major part in the commission of this crime had been taken over by this defendant.

In a word, all the testimony of the non-accomplice witnesses was, in our judgment, inadmissible as evidence of the credibility of the accomplice witness Beles, because it was of merely slight, remote or conjectural significance in respect of that issue — to say nothing for the moment of the fact that such a use of that testimony inevitably tended unnecessarily to confuse the real issues and unfairly to surprise the defendant to his prejudice. (See People v. Harris, 209 N. Y. 70.) !

Perhaps it should be added at this point that there was in this case no question of restoring the credit of Beles after his impeachment as a witness. The facts that discredited him came out on his direct examination and, as we have noticed, the non-accomplice witnesses were called by the prosecution in its direct case. (See People v. Edwards, 282 N. Y. 413.)

(2) We pass to the authorities that have been invoked for a different opinion. There is no occasion now to inquire as to the scope of Mr. Bishop’s commentary that “ The jury may consider evidence tending to show the probable credibility of the accomplice’s narrative, though coming short of the required confirmation.” (2 Bishop, New Criminal Procedure [2d ed.], p. 998.) For Mr. Bishop did not say that the probable credibility of an accomplice witness can be made out by independent evidence having no connection with the guilt of the defendant nor any tendency even to associate him with the accomplice; and the leading case of Commonwealth v. Bosworth (supra), cited by Mr. Bishop, has been held by the court that decided it to be authority to the contrary. (Commonwealth v. Holmes, 127 Mass. 424.) In the Holmes case the indictment was for burning a barn. The accomplice witness testified that before the offense was committed the defendant gave him certain bank bills for his aid in its commission. The Commonwealth was then allowed to introduce independent evidence that on the day before the fire the witness had in his possession bank bills corresponding in number and amount with those he said he received from the defendant. Exceptions of the defendant to the admissibility of this evidence were sustained on the ground that the evidence did not have “ the slightest tendency to prove any facts connecting the defendant with the crime charged, or any participation of the defendant with the accomplice at any stage of the transaction ” (p. 445). (So, People v. Haynes, 55 Barb. 450. See 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], p. 403, and the cases there collected.)

In his dissenting opinion, Judge Lewis brings in People v. Reddy (261 N. Y. 479). The Reddy case recognized the obvious possibility that transactions which occur on the scene of a crime at the time of its commission may sometimes be at least theoretically relevant to the credibility of an accomplice witness; though the actual decision made by the Reddy case on that point was that the argumentation there made on that basis led to no more than a mere conjecture that the accomplice had a motive for being truthful in his testimony. Since in the Reddy case the People made no attempt at any stage to truss the credibility of their accomplice witness by independent evidence of collateral facts, we are unable to see what bearing that case has on the questions now before us.

Linsday v. People (63 N. Y. 143), it will be observed, is a case that was decided at a day when the law of this state was that a conviction could be had on the sole credit of an accomplice. (See People v. Mahew, 150 N. Y. 346, 353.)

The Linsday case (p. 158) gave us a quotation from the celebrated essay on the Evidence of Accomplices written in 1844 by Chief Baron Joy, whose view — that it does not matter how an accomplice witness is shown to be trustworthy— has the indorsement of Mr. Wigmore. Still, as Mr. Wigmore says: “ In England, this view obtained at first, that no specific corroboration need be furnished as to the accused’s identity. But the opposite opinion began to be taken at Nisi Prius some twenty years later, and finally prevailed. In the United States, * * * when by statute the cautionary practice [to warn the jury not to respect an accomplice’s uncorroborated story] was in many juridictions created into a rule of law, this definition of the scope of corroborative evidence was expressly retained.” (7 Wig-more on Evidence [3d ed.], § 2059. See the cases in this court there cited.) The rule of law so referred to is this: “ In a criminal charge, an accomplice’s testimony alone, uncorroborated by other evidence, is not sufficient. The corroborative evidence must apply to the accused’s identity as a participator.” (Wigmore’s Code of Evidence, §§ 1973, 1974.)

(3) Our statute adopted that rule of law in these words: A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice, unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” (Code Crim. Proc. § 399.) Accordingly, it has long been the settled law of this state that the-corroborative evidence so required must be evidence from an independent source of some material fact tending to show not only that the crime has been committed, but that the defendant was implicated in its commission. (People v. Hooghkerk, 96 N. Y. 149; People v. Kress, 284 N. Y. 452. So, Rex v. Baskerville, [1916] 2 K. B. 658.) The People now aslc us to amend the statute so that it will read as follows: “A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice, unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime; —but the credibility of the accomplice may be established by evidence that has no tendency to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime and by evidence having no necessary connection with either the defendant or the accomplice.”

We have no power so to reopen the way to the very danger to a fair trial against which the Legislature enacted the statute. Nor have we the wish to make the conception here pronounced by the trial judge a basis on which any citizen of the state, however innocent, could be tried for his life or liberty. (See People v. Walker, 198 N. Y. 329, 335.) Nor do we believe that conception to be any the more acceptable because as one of its consequences a guilty accused would be entitled to confirm an interested witness for his defense by dint of the same rambling and outside process that was here resorted to in the endeavor to under-prop the intrinsically dubious oath of Beles.

The foregoing considerations cannot be disposed of simply by saying that a trial judge may limit the scope of theoretically relevant evidence of credibility not amounting to corroboration. There is no rule and no principle which forbids delay, tediousness, and complication, pure and simple, and always; what is forbidden is unnecessary complication, delay and tediousness * * *. When the nature of the issue requires it, enormous dangers of this sort have to be run.” (Thayer, Preliminary Treatise on Evidence, 517, 518.) If, then, in a case like this, remote evidence of credibility not amounting to corroboration were deemed to be necessarily admissible, we would find it not a little hard to see what bounds could be put on it. The higher the depravity of the accomplice the more would be the need of a cloud of witnesses to that end.

Correspondingly, however, the more the volume of such evidence the greater would be the undue prejudice to the defendant, who would hardly be able to anticipate what matters having no connection with him he would so be called upon to meet. See how in the present case Walker’s evidence by its very nature tended to deprive the defendant of any actual chance to disprove it. Her testimony — that in the defendant’s absence Heles was with Lepke at the so-called hideout apartment- — -presumably could have been denied by no one but Lepke or their confederate Weiss, the only others there at the time. Notice, too, that the primary fact sought to be evidenced by the testimony of Officer Bang was a change in the mind of Heles himself. Taken as evidence of his general credibility, the testimony of Walker and Bang was freighted with unfair surprise. We reject the supposition that the prosecution’s burden of proof should have thus been artificially leavened merely because the evidence against the defendant came from sources that were polluted.

On the whole, without further detail, and without deciding that an accomplice witness may not be confirmed by evidence of, his probable credibility not amounting to corroboration, our conclusion is that the foregoing ruling of the trial judge cannot be sustained.

(4) We come now to an often burdensome question. May the error be regarded as technical and insufficient to require a reversal? (See People v. Marendi, 213 N. Y. 600, 618, 620.) This defendant took the stand. His guilt is far from being clearly exhibited by the record. Of the three witnesses for the People who gave evidence sufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement of corroboration' of Heles two had been prisoners in a jail where the defendant had been confined. Their testimony was that the defendant admitted his guilt to them or in their hearing to persons who visited him there. The third of these witnesses was a thrice-convicted criminal,

In that state of the record we cannot say that the inadmissible use made of the testimony of the non-accomplice witnesses did not affect the result. It is quite manifest that their testimony was adduced in the apprehension that without such use thereof it was not unlikely that the verdict would be not guilty.

The judgment of conviction should be reversed and a new trial ordered.

Lewis, J.

(dissenting). I dissent from the decision about to be made which rests upon the conclusion that the defendant’s rights were prejudiced by the admission of evidence adduced from certain non-accomplice witnesses and received in support of the credibility of three accomplices.

No one doubts the wisdom of the statute (Code Crim. Proc. § 389) which casts upon the prosecution in a criminal trial the burden of proving the guilt of an accused beyond a reasonable doubt. We know, however, that burden to be immeasurably increased when, as in the present case, the state’s proof of the defendant’s guilt comes from the lips of accomplices who blatantly admit before a jury their complicity in organized crime. Truth does not come naturally from sources so polluted. Credence may, however, be induced by corroborating facts.

In this case the question upon which the court divides is whether, in his effort to dispel reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt, the District Attorney was rightly permitted to support the credibility of three accomplices by evidence from certain non-accomplice witnesses. Their testimony is now challenged because, it is said, it was of slight, remote or conjectural significance in respect of the general credibility of the accomplices; that it had an inherent and inevitable tendency unnecessarily to complicate the case and unfairly to surprise the defendant. In my opinion the challenge is without merit in any of the particulars mentioned.

The point in controversy requires a statement of only those portions of the evidence which relate themselves to the challenged testimony of the non-accomplice witnesses.

Albert Shuman met his death during the night of January 9, 1939. At an early hour of the following morning his lifeless body was found in a slumped position on the front seat of a black Buick sedan which bore 1938 New York license plates No. 9K 1131 and was parked on East Ninety-fifth street in the borough of Brooklyn. The discovery was made by Police Officers Reardon and Eifler, whose testimony, with that of other non-accomplice witnesses, is presently to be considered. Two bullet holes — wounds of entrance — were in the back of the victim’s neck, around each of which was a well-defined powder mark which, according to the undisputed expert testimony, had been produced by a gun held at a distance of only three inches. For this homicide the defendant has been convicted of first degree murder.

Among witnesses called by the prosecution were three accomplices — Abraham Reles, Albert Tannenbaum and Seymour Magoon. It is a mild statement of facts made clear by the record to say that Reles is a hardened criminal and that the records of Tannenbaum and Magoon in crime had not escaped reproach by the law. In other words, their admissions of participation in prior crimes was a warning to the jury that caution should be used in valuing their testimony. (People v. Cohen, 223 N. Y. 406, 422.) It is from testimony by these three accomplices that the District Attorney brought out the sordid details of a carefully laid plan which had for its sole object the death of Albert Shuman.

It should be said at this point that upon this appeal the defendant does not assert a failure by the prosecution to corroborate the three accomplices Reles, Tannenbaum and Magoon, by other independent evidence required by section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure — evidence which tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” The defendant does contend, however, and this court is about to hold that the trial court erroneously permitted facts prejudicial to his rights to be brought into the record by the testimony of non-accomplice witnesses as to which the court ruled* * * those facts * * * are not intended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime, but they are intended to corroborate the witness [an accomplice] as to whether or not he is telling the truth * *

From testimony adduced by the District Attorney from the three accomplices it appears that some time in the late months of 1938 the decedent Shuman had been seen coming from police headquarters in Brooklyn where, it was said, he had been giving information to Inspector McDermott concerning Louie Lepke Buchalter, allegedly a notorious underworld character, commonly known as Lepke,” who was then “ hiding out ” in an apartment on Foster avenue in Brooklyn. When Heles learned that Shuman had conferred with Inspector McDermott he visited Lepke at the latter’s1 apartment and told him of that fact. On that occasion and on subsequent visits by Reles to Lepke’s “ hide-out ” there was pres» fit in the apartment the People’s witness Dorothy Walker, When Lepke was told of Shuman’s conduct he said to Reles: “ If he [Shuman] is giving information against me, go out and take him.” Thereupon a plan to kill Shuman quickly took form. It involved A ruse in which defendant Nitzberg was assigned an important role and by means of which the victim was to be lured into the entrance hallway of an apartment house on Lincoln Place between Rochester and Buffalo avenues in the borough of Brooklyn, where he would be shot. That plan was changed, however, when Reles reported to his fellow conspirators that “ The spot which we picked out is no good, because right around the comer there is a motor-cycle cop at all times, and after they kill Shuman in the hallway they are liable to walk right into the cop’s arms.” This suggestion caused the abandonment of the original choice of the place where the planned murder would be committed and the adoption of a new proposal by Reles that Shuman should be lured into an automobile in which he would be driven through Buffalo avenue, Eastern parkway and Rockaway avenue to a point .beyond Bethel Hospital where Shuman would be shot while he was seated in the car.

The plan thus changed was carried through with smooth precision on the night of January 9, 1939. Upon the pretext that they were taking him to an apartment where he was to participate with them in a robbery, the defendant and another enticed Shuman into a black Buick sedan which, according to testimony by Heles and Magoon, was a stolen car previously secured by them and turned over to the defendant to be used in carrying out the plan. The victim met his death while he was seated on the front seat of the black sedan to the right of Tannenbaum who had been assigned to drive the car. The shooting had been assigned to, and was carried out by the defendant Nitzberg, who was seated alone in the rear of the car behind his victim’s back.

From this abbreviated recital of testimony given to the jury by the three accomplices I pass to a consideration of testimony by the non-accomplice witnesses. Police Inspector McDermott, who, according to the accomplice Heles, was visited by Shuman in the late months of 1938, testified that in the fall of 1938, while he was in command of the detective force in the borough of Brooklyn, Shuman carpe to his office on three occasions. Dorothy Walker, who, according to Heles, was present in the Lepke “ hide-out ” when he called there and advised Lepke that Shuman had been calling upon Inspector McDermott, testified that she was present in the Lepke apartment on that occasion and on later days when Heles called. Police, Officers Reardon and Eifler testified that in the early morning of January 10, 1939, they discovered, on East Ninety-fifth street in Brooklyn, the body of Albert Shuman in a black Buick sedan bearing New York license number 9K 1131. They described in detail the car, the position of the body, the wounds and powder marks. Moskovoits, the keeper of the public garage in which had been stored by the state’s witness Breitman the black Buick sedan in which the body of the deceased was found, testified that the car was stolen from his garage on the night of September 8, 1938. Breitman, the owner of the black Buick sedan, testified that when the car was stolen from the Moskowitz garage on September 8, 1938, it bore his own New York license plates No. 10P 92. Freundlich testified that New York 1938 license plates No. 9K 1131 (the license plates found on the black Buick sedan when it was discovered by Officers Reardon and Eifler on the morning of January 10, 1939) were stolen from his Chevrolet automobile on the night of December 7, 1938, while it was parked in front of his Brooklyn residence. Bang, a motorcycle policeman, testified that during the month of January, 1939, he was on patrol duty at the intersection of Eastern parkway and Buffalo avenue near the site where (according to Reles) it -was first planned to commit the murder. It will be remembered that Reles testified that it was he who advised a change in the proposed site for the killing “ * * * because right around the corner there is a motor-cycle cop at all times * *

I find nothing in the testimony of these non-accomplice witnesses which prejudiced the rights of the defendant. Although the testimony had reference to minor details in the succession of events related by Reles and the other two accomplices, it served in each instance to confirm and .give credence to their narrative the source of which, when uncorroborated, did not inspire belief in its truthfulness. (2 Bishop, New Criminal Procedure [2d ed.], p. 998; 7 Wig-more on Evidence [3d ed.], § 2059.) The material matters upon which the credibility of an accomplice may be supported are not “ as to the place of his birth, his age, his residence, but the detail of the crime and matters connected with it.” (Emphasis supplied.) (Linsday v. People, 63 N. Y. 143, 158.) Of the testimony by the non-accomplice witnesses it may be said here as this court ruled in People v. Reddy (261 N. Y. 479, at p. 486), “All that it does and all that can be claimed for it, is to give support to some of the facts — and those not the most essential — testified to by [the accomplice] * * * on the basis of which the truth of [the accomplice’s] accusation against the defendant might be conjectured. * * * While this testimony was relevant and was corroborative of certain circumstances relating to the crime, it had no tendency, as we think, to connect the defendant with its commission.” (Emphasis supplied.) That was precisely the basis of the ruling of the trial judge in the present case, “ I * * * charge, that those facts [to which the non-accomplice witnesses mentioned above had testified] which you have just stated are not intended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime, but they are intended to corroborate the witness as to whether or not he is telling the truth * * *.”

From earliest times there has been a natural distrust of the testimony of an accomplice. Prior to the enactment of section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (L. 1881, ch, 442, as amd. L. 1882, ch. 360) a conviction could be had upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice alone. (People v. Everhardt, 104 N. Y. 591, 594; People v. Mayhew, 150 N. Y. 346, 353.) But the trial court, as a rule of practice and not of law, was accustomed to warn the jury that a' conviction on uncorroborated testimony of the accomplice would not be justified. (People v. Dixon, 231 N. Y. 111, 116, and see 7 Wigmore on Evidence [3d ed.], § 2056.) The kind of evidence held to be sufficient as corroboration was merely such evidence as tended to establish the credibility of the accomplice on some material point in his narrative. (Linsday v. People, supra, pp. 157-159.)

The enactment of section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure established no exclusive test for the admissibility of corroborative evidence. Such evidence as was formerly admissible might still be received, but it was no longer sufficient. (Cf. People v. Goldstein, 285 N. Y. 376, 382.) Under the new section there may be no conviction upon the testimony of the accomplice, corroborated merely for the purpose of proving credibility, in the absence of corroborative independent evidence tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime. In effect we are now asked by the appellant to rule that the enactment of section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure established not only an exclusive rule for the admission of evidence to corroborate the testimony of an accomplice, but also served to render useless and confusing to a jury that type of evidence which for over a hundred years was accepted by courts throughout this country and in England as sufficient to corroborate an accomplice and justify a conviction. (See 7 Wigmore on Evidence [3d ed.], § 2059.)

To say, as do a majority of the court, that the testimony given by the non-accomplice witnesses was “ of merely slight, remote or conjectural significance ” in respect of the general credibility of the accomplices, is not, as I view it, a correct appraisal of its value. More appropriate, I think, is the statement by Chief Baron Joy in his Evidence of Accomplices, The correct and accurate manner in which an accomplice details the circumstances of the transactions shows that he was cool and collected, that he possessed observation, that his recollection is fresh, and that he was an observer, not an inventor of facts and incidents; and if we find that in every point in which the evidence of other witnesses can be brought into contact with his, they fit into one another and correspond exactly, it is good ground for presuming that his entire narrative is correct.” (The Law Library [Wharton], 3d Series, vol. 45, appendix, p. 10.)

Nor does the testimony of the non-accomplice witnesses inevitably ” tend unnecessarily to confuse the real issues and unfairly to surprise the defendant to his prejudice.” I find nothing in the record of the trial — which lasted ten days, during which sixteen witnesses were called by the defendant ■ — which gives the slightest indication that at any time the defendant was prejudiced by surprise; nor is there any indication of confusion as to the real issues. There were no errors of major importance and none which adversely affected the substantial rights of the defendant. The defendant stands convicted of one of the most atrocious crimes ever planned and consummated by organized crime in this state. In my opinion the decision about to be made — which casts aside the jury’s finding of the defendant’s guilt, upon the ground that his rights were prejudiced by the admission of the evidence considered above — fails to give heed to the mandate of the Legislature that After hearing the appeal, the court must give judgment, without regard to technical errors or defects or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.” (Code Crim. Proc. § 542.)

Lehman, Ch. J., Rippey and Desmond, JJ., concur with Lotjghran, J.; Lewis, J., dissents in opinion in which Finch and Conway, JJ., concur.

Judgment of conviction reversed, etc. (See 287 N. Y. 754.)  