People v. . Carlin

87 N.E. 805, 194 N.Y. 448, 23 N.Y. Crim. 282, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1301
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 805 (People v. . Carlin) 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. . Carlin, 87 N.E. 805, 194 N.Y. 448, 23 N.Y. Crim. 282, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1301 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.:

This is a case of the premeditated and deliberate killing of a mother by her youthful son, apparently inspired by motives of hatred and revenge for real or fancied-neglect and ill-treatment on her part. At the time of the homicide, which was committed in the apartments of the victim at Yo. 587 Quincy street, in the borough of Brooklyn, Kings county, Yew York, on the 8th day of April, 1908, the defendant was twenty-two years of age and his mother was fifty-one. A large part of the defendant’s life had been spent in charitable or reformatory institutions, one of which was a Catholic protectory. After leaving this protectory, he appears to have been convicted of an attempt to commit grand larceny in February, 1906, for having assisted in the theft of a horse and wagon. For this offense he was sentenced to the Elmira Reformatory, where he remained eleven months, when he was transferred to the reformatory at Yapanoch. From Yapanoch, according to his own testimony, he wrote to his mother asking her assistance to procure his release on parole. She made no response; then, as he testified, “I swore I would kill her if I had to go to hell five minutes afterwards; I took my oath on it; any mother that has any love in her would certainly write a letter to her son *284 while he is in prison. I am willing to' go to the chair for what I did, whether she is my mother or not. I don’t want to go to prison; I am willing to go to the chair. I know you are fram- • ing it up to send me to prison.”

The defendant further stated while testifying in his own behalf that when he was at Napanoch he made up his mind that when he got out he was going to return to New York and kill his mother. This intention he carried out by firing-four pistol shots into her body when she met him upon his entry into her apartment in Brooklyn on April 8, 1908. He testified: “I was close to her when I shot the pistol off. I must have hit her four times. I kept plugging away.” His married sister was present, and immediately after he had shot his mother the defendant exclaimed to her, “I would kill you, too, if it was not for the kid.” Thereafter he was speedily overcome and detained until the arrival of the police by a neighbor named George Ton jes, to whom he admitted that he had done the shooting, and said that if he had a knife and could get away he would kill his sister.

The case which the record thus presents for our consideration upon this appeal is one in which the killing by the defendant is established beyond any possible doubt and wherein the elements of premeditation and deliberation are proved by the sworn statements of the defendant himself. There is no suggestion of any defense except insanity; and although no express plea was interposed based upon that ground, proof that the defendant was insane was receivable under the plea of not guilty, and if such proof sufficed to raise a reasonable doubt as to his guilt in the minds of the jury, it would have justified an acquittal.

The minutes of the trial occupy less than twenty-two printed pages; and there are only five exceptions in the case. I will discuss these exceptions in the order in which they were taken.

I. Hpon the cross-examination of Mary Powers, the sister *285 of the defendant, who was a witness for the People, after she had testified that when her father died the defendant was a baby about eighteen months or two years old, she was asked by the defendant’s counsel: “Was he put in an institution shortly after your father’s death ?” To this question Mr. Martin, the assistant district attorney, who was conducting the case for the prosecution, objected on the ground that it was incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant, saying: “What happened to him when he was three years old has no bearing on this case.” The court sustained the objection and defendant’s counsel excepted. There was no error in this ruling. The fact which the question sought to prove, that the defendant was placed in an institution in infancy, could hardly tend in any way to establish his insanity, which, as has already been pointed out, was and is the only defense suggested by his counsel.

II. The same witness proceeded to testify on cross-examination that it seemed to her that the defendant was at home two or three years after her fáther’s death, she could not tell just how long, and she was then asked whether he was at any time in an orphan asylum. Mr. Martin interposed an objection on the ground that the question was incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant; that the fact sought to be proved would be no excuse or justification for the crime, adding: “If counsel would state his reasons for asking these questions I might consent to some of them, but they are incompetent.” In response to this suggestion counsel for the defendant, submitted “that the defense has a right to show lack of motherly care, the lack of opportunities for the man to differentiate between right and wrong; we will show that for sixteen years out of his twenty-two years of life he has been in institutions, and we believe this perfectly legal and material.” The assistant district attorney replied: “If he seeks to prove that this man is insane that is not the proper -way to prove it; the mere fact *286 that a man has been in a State institution has no bearing'whatever on this case; lack of motherly care has nothing to do with this case; the question is, when he went there to do that, was he sane or insane?” The objection was then sustained by the court and an exception was .taken. The court might well have permitted the question to be answered. The whole previous career of a man, in its general aspects at least, may throw some light on his mental condition at the time when he is alleged to have committed a criminal offense, and when' insanity is relied upon as a defense in his behalf. Xo harm could have come to the defendant, however, from this ruling; for when he took the-witness stand himself he was allowed to narrate as fully as he desired his various experiences in the institutions of which he had been an inmate, after he was old enough to have any recollection on the subject.

III. It is true that the defendant’s testimony to the effect that when he was eighteen months old he ivas put in a. nursery was stricken out on the motion of the assistant district attorney, and this ruling is the subject of the third exception in the case. It is a little difficult to perceive why the motion was made; such extreme technicality as was invoked by a number of the objections on the part of the prosecutor in this, case does not conduce to the security of judgments of conviction ; but the ruling may be sustained on the ground that the witness could not have remembered what happened to him when lie was only eighteen months old.

IV. On the direct examination of the defendant he testified that he did not hear a word from his mother at any time while he was at Xapanoch. This statement was stricken out upon the motion of the assistant district attorney and the defendant’s counsel excepted. Xo harm was done by this action of the court. Of course, the fact that the defendant had not heard from his mother while he was the inmate of a reformatory institution could not be considered for a moment as an *287 excuse for bis crime. There was no suggestion that he had in fact heard from her and that he was acting under an insane delusion to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 805, 194 N.Y. 448, 23 N.Y. Crim. 282, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-carlin-ny-1909.