People v. Cellura

284 N.W. 643, 288 Mich. 54, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 483
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1939
DocketDocket No. 93, Calendar No. 39,774.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 643 (People v. Cellura) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Cellura, 284 N.W. 643, 288 Mich. 54, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 483 (Mich. 1939).

Opinions

McAllister, J.

Leo Cellura was indicted jointly with Theodore Pizzino and Angelo Livecchi for the murder of William Cannon on July 3,1930. Pizzino and Livecchi were arrested, tried, and convicted on *59 June 27, 1931. Cellura escaped from the scene of the crime, concealed himself, and remained a fugitive from justice for nearly six years, until June 28,1936, when he surrendered to the police. On June 4,1937, he was convicted by a jury of the crime of murder in the first degree, from which conviction he appeals.

For some years prior to the repeal of the prohibition laws, Leo Cellura had engaged in the transportation of illicit liquors from Canada across the Detroit river to Ecorse. At various times, he had been the part owner of a night club, restaurant, and cabaret, engaged in the unlawful sale of liquor in Detroit and Hamtramck. After prohibition and prior to the day of the homicides, he continued as an operator of a night club and a gambling establishment.

On July 3, 1930, about five o’clock in the afternoon, as Cellura was approaching the entrance of the LaSalle hotel in Detroit, an automobile had drawn up to the curb in front of the hotel entrance. Cellura approached the automobile, and after an exchange of words, drew a gun from his pocket and shot several times through the window at the three occupants of the cai\ 'Cannon and a man named Collins, sitting in the front seat with him, were killed. Mike Stitzel, who was sitting in the back seat, was shot several times, but was later removed to a hospital where he eventually recovered from the gunshot wounds.

Cannon and Collins were criminals. They had a long record of arrests for armed robbery, but they were discharged without trial. Eleven years before, Cannon had served a penitentiary sentence for the crime of breaking- and entering in the nighttime. They made a business of extortion. Stitzel was their accomplice. Their principal practice seems to have *60 been to send Stitzel ont to entrap moral degenerates into incriminating situations, and then for Cannon and Collins to appear wearing- badges of police officers and to extort money from them — to “shake them down’ ’ — by threats of arrest. They had agents in various towns who would communicate with them by telephone whenever any new victims were available.

Cellura lived in the underworld. Among his associates were shady characters and criminals. His friends, engaged in illegal and criminal ventures, were often themselves the victims of kidnapping and extortion by other criminals. One of his partners in the liquor business had been murdered. Cellura always went armed, having secured a legal permit to carry a pistol for protection against highwaymen, kidnappers, and killers.

On the trial he testified in his own defense. He had been told, he said, on numerous occasions by various persons several days before the killings that there were two men looking for him. He claimed that he had been advised by the superintendent of police of the city of Detroit, among others, that there was a plot on the part of certain criminals to abduct him, or in the arg’ot of the underworld, “to take him for a ride. ” On the day before the killings, he claims to have been told by a doorman that there were two men looking for him and that they had a car with a license plate from the State of Illinois. It is the claim of defendant Cellura that as he was approaching the LaSalle hotel he was being followed by three men; that they turned and got into a parked automobile with an Illinois license plate; that they then called to him to come over; that in answer to their call he approached the car and was asked to get inside. .He says that he told them that if they *61 wanted to see him they conld do so in his room in the hotel. He then claims that one of the men referred to him by a vile name and told the other to “cover” him while he forced Cellura into the car; that the two men, Cannon and Collins, sitting in the front seat were armed; that they reached for their pockets where they carried their guns; whereupon defendant, who had approached the car with his right hand in his pocket and believing that they were about to shoot or kidnap him, drew a pistol and fired several times into the car, in self-defense.

Defendant testified that he then escaped from the scene of the killings, and that on the advice of counsel he did not surrender for six years. His previous counsel testified in support of this statement, to the effect that after the killings he was consulted by Cellura; and that he had subsequently discussed the case with the superintendent of police and the prosecuting attorney; that he felt that Cellura could not secure a fair trial at the time, because of public hysteria existing as the result of the killing of Jerry Buckley, who had been murdered in the lobby of the same hotel shortly after the killing of Cannon and Collins, and because of other gangster killings; and that his discussions with the police and the prosecutor were concerned with the circumstances under which Cellura would surrender.

The people claim that the defendant was not in fear of his life, that he did not kill in self-defense, and that he is guilty of premeditated, cold-blooded murder.

Error is assigned on the refusal of the court to permit defendant to introduce evidence of the alleged acts of deceased and his so-called accomplices which bore directly upon their intentions toward defendant. It is claimed that defendant had the right *62 to show certain conversations and statements to prove a plan on the part of deceased to extort money from him, or to abduct and kidnap him. It is admitted that defendant had no knowledge of such plans or conversations, but it is contended that they are part of the res gestae, and that they are competent as proving conspiracy and tending to show which party was the aggressor at the time the homicides occurred.

The claimed error arose on the ruling of the court as to what the deceased Cannon had told Collins about a certain incident in Florida. Stitzel, a hostile witness for the people, on cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, stated that Cannon on the day of the homicides had said that he “was in a hole, that he needed $5,000; that he was in trouble * * * in Miami, Florida.”

Upon further questioning as to what Cannon said about the $5,000, the prosecuting attorney objected on the ground that it was hearsay. At this time Cellura had not testified on his claim of self-defense. The court ruled that the statement and conversations of Cannon, were incompetent, and in passing upon the question said:

“The Court: It would be excluded until some other situation arises that might possibly make it competent. I say it is not competent now. That will leave the door open in case it becomes competent.”

At this point, the prosecuting attorney interjected the following statement:

“If after their defendant takes the stand, it in any way becomes competent, after any other defense witness takes the stand, in case that may be competent, this witness is in Detroit and can be produced again. ’ ’
*63 “The Court:

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Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 643, 288 Mich. 54, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cellura-mich-1939.