
    The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v. Dennis Mullins, Appellant.
    
      All the parties to a misdemeanor are principalsproof of a violation of the Excise Law by a bartender is inadmissible against his employer, indicted for a like offense — the testimony of an accomplice must be corroborated.
    
    Upon the trial of an indictment in which the defendant was charged as a principal with a misdemeanor in having unlawfully offered and exposed for sale certain liquors, the People proved that one Cotter sold liquors on the defendant’s premises on the same day by the testimony of Cotter, and also by the record of Cotter's conviction, and by an examination of Cotter and also of a police officer before a magistrate.
    There was no evidence connecting the defendant with any violation of law committed by Cotter beyond the fact that he was the proprietor of the premises.
    
      Held, that the evidence was incompetent, was prejudicial to the defendant, and entitled him to a new trial;
    That all the parties were principals, and the guilt of each was a separate issue;
    That, so far as the testimony of Cotter might he deemed to charge the defendant he was to he regarded as an accomplice, and his testimony was insufficient without corroboration.
    Appeal by tbe defendant, Dennis Mullins, from a judgment of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace for the city of New York in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of said court on the 16th day of August, 1895, convicting the defendant of a violation of the Excise Law.
    
      Charles Goldzier, for the appellant.
    
      John D. Lindsay, for the respondent.
   Ingraham, J.:

The appellant was convicted upon the second count of an indictment which charged him with having on Sunday, June 30, 1895, unlawfully offered and exposed for sale certain strong and spirituous liquors, wines, ale and beer. Upon the trial the People called as a witness one Cotter, who testified that he worked for the defendant as a bartender. He was asked whether he was arrested on Sunday, June thirtieth, for a violation of the Excise Law. He answered that he was arrested for exposure. A record was then produced which was a record of conviction before the Court of Special Sessions, upon a plea of guilty of a violation of the Excise Law on June 30, 1895, at tlie premises of which the defendant was the proprietor, and for which the witness was fined fifty dollars. This record was offered in evidence, was objected to by the defendant, and the objection was overruled and the defendant excepted. We think the admission of this record was clearly error. The defendant was not indicted as an accessory, and, indeed, as the crime charged was a misdemeanor, he is the principal, whether or not under the law as it formerly existed he would in the case of. a felony have been an accessory. Upon the question of his guilt, the conviction of his associate for the commission of a crime was entirely immaterial, the defendant not being a party to it, and it could have no effect upon the question as to whether or not he was guilty.

The Court of Appeals has expressly held in the case of The People v. Kief (126 N. Y. 663), which was an indictment for a felony, that with the change effected by the Penal Code the distinction between principal and accessory disappeared, and thenceforward he who aided in the commission of a crime became equally guilty with him who committed it, and could be indicted, tried and convicted as a principal. “If it is immaterial, therefore, upon the question of his guilt, whether a party engaged in the commission of a felony directly committed the crime alleged or only abetted in its commission, it must be quite immaterial whether one jointly indicted with him for the offense has been acquitted or not. The question of the one defendant’s guilt cannot turn upon the establishment of the other’s guilt; it is an independent issue to be tried out alone.”

The case of Levy v. People (80 N. Y. 327) and others of that class do not apply. That was an indictment under the law as it existed before the change made by the Penal Code, and set out that one Freeman was the principal felon, and that he with others had been convicted of the offense, and that the plaintiff in error was charged to have been his accessory. It was there held that the certificate of the conviction of Freeman was competent evidence to prove that allegation of the indictment, namely, that he had been convicted of the offense charged. There is nothing of that kind in this indictment. The defendant was indicted as a principal. It was not necessary to prove that any one else had been convicted of the offense to establish his guilt; and evidence tending to show that some one else had been convicted of the crime for which he was indicted was plainly incompetent, and could not but have been injurious to the defendant.

In addition to this record, there was produced from the files of-the Court of Special Sessions an examination of a police officer before a magistrate, by which he swore that Cotter did offer and expose for sale certain liquor on this 30th day of June, 1895 ; also, the examination of Cotter before the magistrate, a deposition of a police officer that one Ward also offered and exposed for sale, upon the same Sunday and at the same place, spirituous liquors, and the examination of Ward upon that charge. These depositions and examinations were read to the jury against the objection and exception of the defendant. It is impossible for us to imagine upon what principle this deposition could have been admitted as competent evidence against this defendant. It was an ex parte statement of a police officer as to the guilt of the defendant’s barkeeper, sworn to in the matter of the charges against the barkeeper, where neither the defendant nor the barkeeper had an opportunity to cross-examine the deponent. The court also admitted, against the objection and exception of the defendant, the record of the conviction of one Ward, who was proved to have been another barkeeper of the defendant, for a violation of the Excise Law upon the same Sunday. The only evidence connecting the defendant with this violation of the law was the fact that he was the proprietor of the saloon. Cotter, one of the barkeepers, was called and examined as a witness and swore that the defendant was absent from his home on this Sunday; that he did not see, and had no conversation with, the defendant on the Sunday in question ; that he did not go to this place on Sunday by order of the defendant, but that he went, there to clean the place up, and while there sold some beer and put the money in the drawer.

There was not the slightest competent evidence as against this defendant that either Cotter or Ward committed a crime on that day except the evidence of Cotter, and, he being an accomplice, his evidence is not sufficient unless corroborated.

There were several exceptions to the charge which, we think, well taken, but which it is unnecessary to notice. For the errors in the admission of this evidence the judgment must be reversed.

Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.

Judgment reversed.  