People v. . Coleman

91 N.E. 368, 198 N.Y. 166, 24 N.Y. Crim. 399, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1518
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 N.E. 368 (People v. . Coleman) 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. . Coleman, 91 N.E. 368, 198 N.Y. 166, 24 N.Y. Crim. 399, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1518 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Werner, J.:

There is little to say of the history of the homicide for which the defendant was indicted, tried and convicted, except that it is the oft-repeated and too familiar story of drunkenness, jealousy and murder. On the 29th -day of December, 1908, the defendant killed his wife in their apartment at No. 36 West 136th street in the Borough of Manhattan, in the city of New York. The defendant was twenty-five years of age, his wife was two years younger, and they had been married but little more than -a year. He was a cook in the railroad dining car service, and she worked for various housekeepers and in laundries as she had opportunity. Their married life had not been happy. His duties necessitated much absence from home and *401 she sought companionship among the men and women of her class, composed largely of single persons who frequented so-called negro social clubs and dance halls. The defendant was jealous of his wife, frequently remonstrated with her for associating too freely with other men, and greatly aggravated his real and fancied grievances by over-indulgence in drink, thus accentuating a hereditary predisposition to indigestion and consequent irritability and depression. At the time of the homicide this unfortunate pair shared their apartment with a woman named Womac, who testified that the defendant and his wife had frequently quarreled, that he had several times threatened to kill her, and that he had made such a threat on the preceding Sunday. On Monday morning, the day before the homicide, the couple had an altercation. The defendant left the apartment for the ostensible purpose of drawing his pay from the railroad company by which he was employed, returned between four and five o’clock in the afternoon, asked the Womac woman where the girls were, referring to his wife and his sister, and receiving an unsatisfactory reply he slapped the woman in the face. He had been drinking heavily during that day and when he went to bed he was in a state of nervousness bordering on frenzy. Passing to the fateful Tuesday, it appears from defendant’s own statement that he drank half a pint of liquor before he left the house in the morning; his wife went out to work, and he started for Jersey City to get his pay. He took four or five drinks before reaching Jersey City, and a number, how many he does not remember, after he left there and before he returned to the apartment. On his way back he stopped in 9th avenue at a pawnbroker’s and bought a revolver, for the purpose, as he says, of blowing out his brains. Then he proceeded to a saloon where he took a number of drinks. He next appeared in the apartment house where his brother lived in 118th street. Between twelve and one o’clock noon, he was *402 found, by Mrs. Goode and Mrs. Larkin, upon the stairs in a drunken stupor. Recognizing him, these women notified his brother who came and attempted to pull the defendant up stairs. This aroused the latter, who drew his revolver and threatened to shoot his brother. In the melee the weapon became caught in the lining of defendant’s coat, some of the shells dropped out, and it was finally taken away from him. The defendant was. in a very ugly framrne of mind, but was finally pacified and taken to his brother’s apartment, where he asked that his wife be sent for. Meanwhile his brother J ohn questioned him about the revolver and he replied that he had bought it to shoot Carrie, his wife. The latter, having -arrived at the brother’s apartment, went in to her husband, who said to her that he had been waiting on the stairs to kill J ohn and his wife and added, “ I am going to blow your brains out too.”

According to the testimony of those who witnessed this scene, the defendant had then become sufficiently sobered to go home with his wife. His own story is that on the way they stopped to get some butter; that his wife called him a vile name and told him he was crazy; that she asked him to walk behind her as she did not wish people to see her with a “ hard looking laboring man like him; ” that they met a young man who accosted her. and when the defendant remonstrated with her for not introducing him to the young man, she replied, “ Oh hell, he is a sport, and does not want to meet a hard looking laboring man like you.” The -couple arrived at their apartment between five and six o’clock in the afternoon, where they found the Womac woman and three young men named Mason, Clark and Ohisholm. The defendant and his wife at once proceeded to their bedroom from whence the Womac woman heard sounds of quarreling. Mason and Clark testified that they heard the wife exclaim “stop” -and “murder.” At this juncture the Womac woman left the apartment, the defendant came into- *403 the room where the three men were seated, asked them to play cards, bnt they declined, and in -a few minutes departed.

This outline of preliminary facts brings us now to the thresh-hold of the homicide. The defendant and his wife were alone in the apartment. About half an hour after Mason, Clark and Ohisholm had gone out, the Womac woman returned. The first thing to attract her attention was the odor of gas. She called and received no reply. Prom the direction of the Coleman bedroom she heard “ a choking like trying to get breath.” She went into the hall and found a man named Lemond, who looked in, saw what had happened, and at once called a policeman. The latter entered and found the deceased lying on the bed with a knife protruding from the right side of her neck and a “ smoothing ” iron lying on the bed. A message for an ambulance brought an innnediate response. Dr. Bennett, who was in charge of it, discovered faint signs of life, and removed the knife from the woman, but as the victim- died before he could arrange to take her to the hospital, he withdrew and left the case to the coroner. That official arrived soon after, found life extinct, and later made -an autopsy. This disclosed that the victim’s head had been crushed on the right side over the ear; the fractured area being about the size of an open hand and so marked that the brain protruded. There were two separate and disconnected stab wounds on the neck; one on the right side and the other below the lobe of the left ear; also four lesser stab wounds on the back of the right hand and five on the back of the left hand. The fracture of the skull was probably the result of several distinct blows, and the stab wounds in the neck could not have been made by one incision. That the deceased had been brutally murdered was, of course, the only rational conclusion to be drawn from the circumstances. The record does not disclose whether the stab wounds in the neck were sufficient to have caused death, or whether they were inflicted *404 before or after the skull was crushed. That is a matter of no importance, however, since it was conclusively established that the fracture of the skull was of such a character as to have caused death even if there had heen no other wounds.

When the body of the deceased was found in the condition ■described the defendant was missing. He was the last person seen with her while she was alive, and he was gone when her dead body was found. His own story reveals his subsequent movements. He left the apartment, got half a pint of whisky, went to the house of a friend on 37th street, remained there all night, got more whisky in the morning, shaved off his mustache and borrowed a pair of glasses from his friend for the purpose of disguising himself.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Brown
195 N.E.2d 293 (New York Court of Appeals, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 N.E. 368, 198 N.Y. 166, 24 N.Y. Crim. 399, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-coleman-ny-1910.