Cole's Trial

7 Abb. Pr. 321
CourtOyer and Terminer, Albany County
DecidedNovember 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Abb. Pr. 321 (Cole's Trial) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oyer and Terminer, Albany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole's Trial, 7 Abb. Pr. 321 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1868).

Opinion

After a trial continued through several weeks, and a most able and interesting argument of the case to the jury, by Messrs. Mitchell, Beach, and Brady ■ for the prisoner, and Messrs. Sedgwick and Tremain for the people, Hogeb.oom, J., charged the jury as follows :

This protracted trial is' about to be closed, and to 7bé submitted to you for final decision. You are prepared for it by faithful attention to the testimony, and ¡to the arguments of counsel.

This attention is called for by the magnitude and importance of the case. The position of the jury is a -solemn and responsible one. The life and liberty of a fellow-citizen is in your hands, and is not to be disposed • of without the most anxious and serious consideration of all the circumstances, and grave reflection upon the ■weighty results that hang upon your decision. Nevertheless, it is a duty which you cannot decline, which ¡the law has imposed upon you, which you have taken an • oath to discharge with conscientiousness and fidelity, and ; ■which must be discharged with absolute fearlessness ;and impartiality, whatever may be the consequences, j .and upon whomsoever they may fall.

Q-eorge W. Cole stands indicted for the murder of L. .Harris Hiscock, on June 4,1867, at Stanwix Hall, in the ■ city of' Albany. Under this indictment he may, if the .evidence justifies it) be convicted of either of the two de[323]*323grees of murder, or of the four degrees of manslaughter, or acquitted upon the ground of justifiable or excusable homicide, or of an absolute or temporary deprivation of reason, the result of settled insanity, or of a momentary, but ungovernable, frenzy, induced by the circumstances of the particular occasion.

It may be desirable to inform you, particularly, of the ingredients which go to make up the crimes of murder and manslaughter, in their various degrees. Murder, in the first degree, so far as it can have application to this particular case, is the killing of a human being, when not justifiable or excusable, nor coming under the head of manslaughter, and perpetrated with a premed tated design to effect death.

The premeditated design must be completely formed before the act of killing, and must precede the act, but no particular space of time is necessary to intervene between the complete conception of its design and its execution. If a perfected design precedes the act, it is murder. This is murder in the first degree, and its punishment is death.

Murder, in the second degree, embraces all cases of murder which are not included in the definition of murder in the first degree. It is not well defined in the law, but may safely, I think, be held to include cases of unjustifiable, and unlawful, and inexcusable killing, characterized 'by premeditated design, or by no premeditation beyond an intention to pro luce death ; but not by that degree of enormity, willfulness, and premeditation which mark the commission of murder in the first degree.

The line of distinction between murder in the first degree and in the second degree, is not very dearly defined in the statute ; and something is left to the sound and intelligent judgment of the jury, in fixing the degree of the crime. The punishment of murder in the second degree, if I have read the statute aright, is imprisonment in the State prison not less than ten years.

Manslaughter in the first degree is not applicable to the facts of this case. Perhaps, not manslaughter in the [324]*324second degree ; though one division of it, the killing of a human being without a design to effect death, in the heat of passion, but in a cruel and unusual manner, might possibly be contended to embrace it; but as manslaughter in the third degree is the same offense, except that it is killing accomplished by a dangerous weapon, instead of a'cruel and unusual manner, I present that aspect of the offense to you as better adapted to the facts of this case than manslaughter in the second degree, and also as being milder in its penalty, and therefore more favorable to the prisoner.

The punishment of manslaughter in the third degree is, I believe, as modified by the statute of 1865, punishment in the State prison, not less than one, and not more than four year’s. Every, other killing of a human being by the act, procurement, or culpable negligence of another, where not justifiable nor excusable, nor murder, nor manslaughter of a higher degree, is manslaughter in the fourth degree. The punishment of manslaughter in the fourth degree is imprisonment in the State prison for not exceeding one year, or in the county jail not exceeding one year; or by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, or by both such fine and imprisonment. The feature which particularly .distinguishes manslaughter from murder is, the absence of a design to effect death.

Applying these definitions to this particular case; if you believe Cole killed Hiseock without legal justification or excuse, in the possession of his faculties, and with a mind capable of comprehending the quality of the act, and with a premeditated design to effect his death, he is guilty of murder in the first or second degree, according to the enormity of the act, and the degree of premeditation with which it was perpetrated. If done without a design to effect death, but in the heat of passion, and with a dangerous weapon, then he is guilty of manslaughter in the third degree. If done in some other way, but without a design to effect death, [325]*325and in the heat of passion, then he is guilty of manslaughter in the fourth degree.

But to constitute guilt and criminality in either of these various ways, it is necessary that the person should be capable of distinguishing between right and wrong in the particular case, and as applied to the features of the particular transaction ; that he should be in the possession of his faculties ; in the exercise of his reason; not necessarily with faculties in the same vigor or force, or under the same equanimity of mind as when perfectly cool, or in perfect health, but with faculties from which reason is not permanently or temporarily dethroned.

All men have not the same mental powers or characteristics,—the same man is not at all times in the same condition for the cool and equable exercise of his reason or mental powers ; the strength and vigor of his faculties may even be temporarily or permanently impaired or diminished by sickness or bodily ailment, or by exciting causes calculated to disturb his equanimity or to influence his passions, yet, if he be in the possession of his senses,—able to judge of the moral qualities of his acts, and of the particular act for which he is arraigned, and to distinguish between right and wrong in regard to it,—he is morally and legally responsible for his conduct, amenable to the laws of the land, and must abide by its mandates and its penalties. If, then, George W. Cole was iii this condition, he must, like other men, be tried by the standards of the law, and submit to its judgment. If, on the contrary, he committed this homicide when reason was dethroned, either permanently or temporarily, no matter from what cause, he is not amenable to the law, and is not subject to its punishment or its , penalties.

And of all these facts necessary to establish crime, and to constitute responsibii-ty for its commission, the People are to satisfy you, and to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt. They are to convince you that the prisoner was a rational being in the possession of his senses, with the power to discriminate between right [326]

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Related

Willis v. . the People
32 N.Y. 715 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Freeman v. People
4 Denio 9 (New York Supreme Court, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Abb. Pr. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coles-trial-nyoytermctalb-1868.