People v. . Brasch

85 N.E. 809, 193 N.Y. 46, 23 N.Y. Crim. 69, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 623
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 85 N.E. 809 (People v. . Brasch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Brasch, 85 N.E. 809, 193 N.Y. 46, 23 N.Y. Crim. 69, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 623 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.:

The defendant has been convicted of murdering his wife, Roxanna Brasch, at Rochester, on the evening of June 16, 1906, by pushing her into the waters of the Erie canal, where her body was found on the evening of June 19, 1906.

There was no question on the trial that death had resulted from drowning, and the evidence was entirely consistent with the conclusion that the woman got into the water at about the time and place when and at which -tlhe defendant was. charged with having pushed her in. The serious question which remained was whether she was thrown into the canal by the defendant or whether she got there through some other agency. Eo eye witnesses of the alleged murder were sworn, the evidence on which the defendant was convicted consisting largely of alleged confessions, and the principal questions presented on this appeal are, whether the defendant’s rights were properly protected in connection with the admission of evidence of these confessions and whether the latter were sufficiently corroborated by other testimony so that the requirements of the statute on that subject were satisfied.

The history of the defendant prior to the date of his wife’s death and the record of his movements on and after that particular day are of so much importance in solving some of the questions, of law above outlined that I shall review them at some-length.

At the time of the alleged murder the defendant was a stalwart man about twenty-three years of age and a mechanic by-trade. The deceased was twenty years old and of slight figure. These parties had become married to one another January 20, *74 1904, and within a short time thereafter the deceasel had given birth .tb a child of which it is conceded the defendant was not the father. They did not live happily together and in June, 1905, entered into a formal though illegal agreement of separation. On the day this agreement was executed defendant seems to have turned his wife out of doors and then he went to Cleveland, Ohio. Shortly thereafter he became acquainted with a woman named Gilmore, and holding himself out as a widower under an assumed name he asked her to marry him after she had procured the divorce which she was then seeking. In September, 1905, these people commenced living together as husband and wife, and while this relationship continued the Gilmore woman discovered that the defendant still had a wife living. He, however, assured the former that he had an agreement of separation and would procure a divorce, and he did, as a matter of fact, consult lawyers in reference thereto. April 21, 1906, without any explanation or notice, defendant deserted the Gilmore woman and returned to Rochester, where apparently some sort of a reconciliation was agreed upon between him and his wife, inasmuch as they commenced living in the same rooms, but not, as claimed by defendant, on intimate terms.

After defendant’s desertion of her, Mrs. Gilmore discovered that she was pregnant by him, and she came to Rochester on Friday, June 15th, 1906, going directly to the defendant’s house. Defendant greeted her in an affectionate manner, assured her that he did not have anything to do with his wife and proposed that she remain until the following Wednesday, when he would return with her. On the following day, after going to her work, defendant’s wife did not return to his Lome, but at about three o’clock that afternoon she appeared at the home of her sister-in-law, where she stayed until evening, when defendant came after her, as will hereafter be more particularly stated. That same afternoon defendant arranged *75 with. Mrs. Gilmore that if she would remain over Sunday he would return to Cleveland with her, and he packed up his things preparatory to leaving.

That evening the defendant, Mrs. Gilmore and the defendant’s brother went out together, and after doing various other things the former engaged a room for Saturday and Sunday night. Quite late in the evening the defendant, who had seemed worried and for which condition he gave some innocent excuse, left Mrs. Gilmore and his brother, stating that he would be gone an hour or two in order to perform some work. He returned after about an hour or an hour and a half, spending that and the following night with Mrs. Gilmore and going on to Cleveland Monday.

It is the theory of the prosecution that the defendant murdered his wife on Saturday evening when he was absent from Mrs. Gilmore, as stated above. During this period he called at the home of his sister-in-law for his wife and the last that 'was seen of the latter alive was as she went away with her husband. The latter never gavfe any notice of his wife’s death or any innocent explanation of her disappearance while in his company. The following Monday he and Mrs. Gilmore went to Cleveland, where he renewed his suggestion of marriage, and when the woman replied that he could not marry until he got a divorce, the defendant said, “ We will wait until we hear from George ” (his brother), and which remark, the prosecution urges, is significant of an expectation by defendant that he would soon get news which he could make public of his wife’s death. As already stated, three days later the body of the deceased was found in the canal, in a condition and at a. point which corresponded with defendant’s confessions, and soon thereafter the defendant and Mrs. Gilmore were apprehended at Cleveland.

There is practically no question that all of the facts thus far stated are fully established by evidence independent of defend *76 ant’s confessions, but the exact history of what occurred between the deceased and the defendant after they went away together, as before stated, is dependent upon such confessions, to which I shall now refer.

They were made to the police authorities and were two in number. Aside from various preliminary prevarications and evasions and details which it is not necessary to recapitulate,, the material portion of each was to the effect that after meeting his wife at the house of her sister-in-law, defendant and she walked around for awhile, finally coming to the canal, and that as she walked on the edge of the latter in a somewhat secluded neighborhood he pushed her into the water, where, after brief .struggles, she sank and was drowned, the defendant then returning to the room where the Gilmore woman was. ■

The evidence as actually given with respect to these confessions indicates that they were made deliberately, voluntarily and without forbidden inducement, and that! they were entitled to the great consideration in establishing the guilt of the defendant which, I shall assume, they in fact received from the jury. The question, however, is whether that full opportunity which the law requires was given to the defendant to impeach them by showing that in fact they were secured by improper influences.

When the People produced a witness for the purpose of proving an alleged confession by defendant, before such evidence was received the latter was entitled to show if he could either by preliminary cross-examination of the proposed witness, or by other witnesses or testimony, that the alleged confession was secured by improper means, and after the production of such testimony, if any, he was entitled to a preliminary •ruling by the court on the admissibility of the proposed evidence. People v. Rogers, 192 N. Y. 331.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.E. 809, 193 N.Y. 46, 23 N.Y. Crim. 69, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brasch-ny-1908.