Musso v. State

151 N.W. 327, 160 Wis. 161, 1915 Wisc. LEXIS 70
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 151 N.W. 327 (Musso v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musso v. State, 151 N.W. 327, 160 Wis. 161, 1915 Wisc. LEXIS 70 (Wis. 1915).

Opinion

SiebbcKee, J.

' The plaintiff in error (hereinafter called the defendant) was convicted of murder in the first degree on January 6, 1914. The verdict was rendered on April 11, 1914. A motion for a new trial was denied by the court, and on May 11, 1914, the court sentenced the defendant to imprisonment for life in the state prison. The defendant prosecutes a writ of error to review the judgment of conviction.

It appears that the defendant and the deceased are Italians; they were husband and wife and had been married fifteen years; they had no children; three children of defendant’s deceased sister resided with them, named and of the ages, respectively, Kosie De Gratiano nine years, Nofrio seven years, and Yincenzia four years. The deceased owned a homestead at 374 Cass street in the city of Milwaukee, and he and defendant occupied the upper part of it. The lower part of the house was occupied by a family named Foti. The members of the Foti family were the husband' Angelo, the wife Mary, their children, a brother, and a cousin.

During the evening of January 5, 1914, at about 1 o’clock, the deceased, the defendant, and the three children living with them visited the cousin of the defendant, Dominick Nuncio, and wife, where they spent the evening, and while there they drank some beer. The deceased, the defendant, and children returned home at about 9 :30 o’clock. The first information of Musso’s death came to Isador Aiello, who lived in a house at the same number, but situated on a part of the lot nearer the street and in front of the Musso house and in which Nofrio-Aiello conducted a bakery. At about ten minutes past 12 o’clock in the night the defendant came to his place and told him Musso was dead. He went with her to the Musso rooms and saw Joseph Musso lying in bed dead. He felt of his body and found it was a little warm. The de[163]*163f endant told Aiello that Musso bad come home drunk, scratched himself, and had acted sick. The witness states that he then observed material on the floor, on the kitchen sink, and on the carpet near Musso’s bed that looked like vomit. The defendant told him that she got up to get Musso a drink of water and then saw he was dead. Aiello testifies that Musso had on a nightgown and that defendant had on a black skirt and that she cried. There is no evidence that any one, except defendant and the children, saw Musso from the time they left the house of Dominick Nuccio to go home, near 9:30 o’clock, until Aiello saw him dead in his bed about ten minutes after 12 o’clock. The defendant testified that no one came to their home after their arrival in the early part of the evening until Aiello came in response to her call. She related the facts and circumstances of their visit to Nuccio’s and their return home; of Musso’s going out again and his return home about 11:30 o’clock in a state of intoxication. She described that she heard Musso coming up the stairway; that she got up and let him in and locked the door after he entered; that they had no conversation; that she returned to the bed with the children, heard him in the kitchen undressing; that he groaned and moaned before and after he went to his bed, and that when she went to him after midnight she found him dead and then called Aiello, who came with her and found Musso dead in bed.

Dr. McGovern made examinations of Musso’s body on January 6th, Jth, and 10th at the morgue and he and Dr. Young made an autopsy. They testified in effect that the deceased was a man of about the height of five feet four inches and estimated his weight at 140 pounds. They found cyanosis of the skin of the face, neck, and ears; the face and neck were covered with a great many abrasions; there were small abrasions on the right frontal eminence, on the nose, nose tip; eleven abrasions on the left side of the face above the lower margin of the chin, a large one on the side of the chin below [164]*164the lip, and. one below tbe right angle of the mouth; a large number of abrasions existed below the chin line on both sides; on the left side o’f the larynx and trachea were a number of marks that a finger nail fitted into, corresponding to the index and middle fingers of the right hand; on the opposite side of the larynx and trachea were two larger semi-lunar marks that could be made by the thumb; there were abrasions on the center, on the point, and over the head of the humerus of the right shoulder, and some abrasions on the arms; there was a contused mark in the center of the abdomen between the navel and cartilage above, other abrasions on the side and back of the body. An opening of the body showed that blood vessels had been broken, blood had infiltrated into the tissue on the left side of the neck, to the right of the larynx and trachea; the lungs were congested, the right side of the heart contained considerable blood, the liver was congested, all of the abdominal organs were normal except this congestion; upon removal of the larynx, trachea, and esophagus together, and opening the larynx and trachea, they found hemorrhage patches and the mucus membrane was larger at the upper end, no thickening of it; the hyoid bone was broken about the. middle of the left side; the brain was normal. The doctors testified that in their opinion the abrasions and marks on the neck and face were made by fingers and finger nails, that death was caused by suffocation and strangulation, and that it resulted at the time of pressure, which when applied from one to two minutes would produce death inside of five minutes. Both doctors gave it as their opinion that Musso did not die a natural death. It appeared that Musso had been in good health and that he was possessed of normal physical strength.

Counsel for the defendant contend that the evidence is wholly insufficient to sustain the jury’s finding that deceased came to his death by strangulation and that strangulation and suffocation were produced by some one other than the de[165]*165ceased. Tbe external marks of injury on decedent’s face, neck, and other parts of his body, in connection with the congested condition about the larynx and trachea, the break in the hyoid bone and the cyanotic condition of the skin, and the surrounding facts and circumstances, tend clearly to support the conclusion that death resulted from strangulation. The claim that some one other than deceased effected his death is also well supported by the facts and circumstances tending to show that he had no suicidal tendency, that the circumstances and facts of his life and conduct present no occasion naturally inducing and impelling self-destruction, that the evidence of injury to his body indicates that he was assailed by force and violence, which it was well nigh impossible to inflict upon himself, and all the surrounding conditions, which existed when he was first seen by Aiello and others, negative the claim that he destroyed himself. The evidence upon these questions, in our opinion, is amply sufficient to warrant the jury in concluding that deceased came to his death by strangulation and that it was the result of violence inflicted by some one other than himself.

It is strenuously argued that the proof wholly fails to show that the defendant is the person guilty of having committed the homicide. This claim rests mainly on the ground that the court erred in concluding that the evidentiary facts and circumstances, aside from the evidence of the child Rosie, justify the inference of defendant’s guilt. Rosie testified that the defendant is her aunt and the deceased is her uncle. She relates the facts of the family’s visit to Nuccio’s, their return home and retiring for the night.

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.W. 327, 160 Wis. 161, 1915 Wisc. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musso-v-state-wis-1915.