Commonwealth v. Hughes

183 Mass. 221, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 752
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 183 Mass. 221 (Commonwealth v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Hughes, 183 Mass. 221, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 752 (Mass. 1903).

Opinion

Barker, J.

This was an indictment for murder charging the defendants with shooting Thomas Keefe a police officer of Everett on February 20, 1902. The defendant Hughes, against whom the jury found a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree, was about forty-five years of age, and was the uncle of the defendant Blake who was acquitted by the direction of the court, and who was about seventeen years old. Hughes and Blake lived together in Charlestown. The night of February twentieth was clear and cold and with a bright moon. The evidence tended to show that the defendants rode in a closed street car from the terminal station of the Elevated Railroad in Charles-town and left the car at Everett Square on Broadway in Everett at 12.30 A. M. and asked the way to the Catholic chapel, which was on Broadway, and then walked in the direction of the chapel. [223]*223At one o’clock officer Keefe who was on duty and in uniform was seen standing on the sidewalk near the Catholic chapel. At 1.10 A. M. he was seen in company with the two defendants near the post office on the opposite side of Broadway to the chapel and nearly in front of it, walking toward Everett Square. --They crossed Broadway and were walking together, and were going in the direction of the police station.

Another police officer, Morrill, testified that he left the police station at one o’clock, and that about ten minutes past one he saw officer Keefe with the two defendants and crossed the street to see if Keefe needed help and was on the edgestone of the sidewalk when Keefe and the defendants came along; that Keefe was next to the edgestone, Hughes next to Keefe on the inside and the defendant Blake just ahead of Hughes. That the witness spoke to Keefe, merely passing the time of day, and after they passed walked along behind them for a time and then for a short time stood on the corner of Broadway and Chelsea Street which was five or six hundred feet from the police station, and that before he left the corner they were beyond the patrol box going in the direction of the station.

The evidence further tended to show that when Keefe and the defendants were within about two hundred feet of the station two shot's were fired one after the other at an interval of from three to ten seconds, and that one of these shots entered Keefe’s body near the middle of the back and fatally wounded him. That the two defendants ran away, Blake in the direction in which they had been walking down Broadway and being immediately followed and arrested within seven minutes after the shooting, and that Hughes ran down another street and was arrested at the place where he lived in Charlestown at about six o’clock the same morning. When arrested neither defendant had firearms in his possession.

In the street car on the way to Everett, Blake wore white overalls such as are used by masons and about his neck a red and white muffler resembling in color a red and white table cloth about four feet square found about the neck of Hughes at the time of his arrest, and which belonged on the table in the house where the defendants lived, and which was not on the table at twelve o’clock on the night of the homicide. The evidence tended to show that this cloth or muffler was not worn by either [224]*224defendant when they were walking on Broadway with officer Keefe. The evidence tended to show that when they were so walking Blake was swinging in his hand a hatchet like a mason’s hatchet, and that this after the shooting was picked up on the sidewalk near the place of the shooting. The evidence also tended to show that Hughes wore a broad brimmed slouch hat pulled down over his eyes, and a long dark overcoat much worn, and had a two or three weeks’ growth of beard and an unkempt appearance, and that both of the defendants when in the .street car were “ suspicious looking characters ” and not “ respectable looking people” and that Hughes was a “hard looking man” having a “ general tough appearance.”

After the arrest of Hughes he denied having been in Everett and said that he had passed the night from about half past eight in the evening until between three and four o’clock in the morning with a man named Mullen at a house in the South End of Boston on Pleasant Street where they sell liquor and have women, and that he did not know enough to go there again, and did not know where to find it.

The evidence also tended to show that when officer Keefe and the defendants were walking down Broadway, Hughes had his hands in the pockets of his overcoat, and that the coat was left in his possession after his arrest, and that when he had been in jail some weeks he was asked for the clothing which he wore into the jail and delivered all but this overcoat; that at a later time he was asked for the overcoat and then took it from under the mattress of his bed and delivered it to the officer and said that he had forgotten it before. The pocket lining appeared to have been cut and torn and there was a large hole in it. Outside the coat opposite this hole in the pocket was a hole in the coat which showed that the nap of the cloth had been removed around the hole, and there was evidence that the hole in the coat was as large when Hughes was arrested as at the time of the trial. There were no powder marks visible on the coat of officer Keefe, and there was no testimony that there were powder marks on Hughes’ coat or pocket.

The evidence also tended to show that a police sergeant in charge of the station at the time of the shooting heard the shots and when he heard the first one went to the window, and from there about two or three seconds after the second shot saw offi[225]*225cev Keefe in front of the station, with his revolver in his right hand, motioning to the sergeant and looking up at the window, and that Keefe then went into the station and laid his revolver on the desk, and that the revolver was not smoking and that every chamber in it was loaded; that of the five cartridges in it four had indentations, one of the four two indentations, and that one cartridge was not indented, and that there was a catch on the revolver which when down would prevent the cartridge from being exploded when the trigger was pulled. The defence admitted and contended that Keefe must have attempted to fire his revolver and have failed to discharge it.

Three of the exceptions relate to evidence. Morrill the police officer who testified that he was on the edgestone when Keefe and the defendants passed in the direction of the station just before the shooting, put on a pair of glasses when examining a map to which his attention was called while on the witness stand. Upon cross-examination he testified that he had used glasses for one or two years to read and write, but that he used them for no other purpose; that he did not wear glasses at night, and did not have them on the night of the shooting. The defendants then asked leave to exhibit to the jury the glasses which the witness had used in examining the map, and to introduce them in evidence in order that the jury might observe the depth of the lens and the density of the glass to prove that the witness had defective vision. The court excluded the glasses as evidence and the defendants excepted.

This exception must be overruled. That any one who uses certain glasses to read and write or to examine a map has no tendency to show that without glasses he cannot clearly see persons near him in the street.

Flynn, a police officer of Everett, testified for the Commonwealth that he arrested the defendant Hughes in Charlestown on the morning of the shooting.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Mass. 221, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hughes-mass-1903.