People v. . Conklin

67 N.E. 624, 175 N.Y. 333, 17 N.Y. Crim. 414, 13 Bedell 333, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 984
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 624 (People v. . Conklin) 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. . Conklin, 67 N.E. 624, 175 N.Y. 333, 17 N.Y. Crim. 414, 13 Bedell 333, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 984 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

The defendant was convicted of the murder of his wife in- the tenement-house where they lived, Ho-. 447 West Sixteenth street, between Hinth and Tenth avenues, in the city o-f Hew York. The rooms which the deceased and the defendant occupied consisted of a shop- in the front, in which the wife conducted a candy store- and ice cream saloon, a room back of that, a bed room behind it, and beyond that a kitchen extending to the rear of the house. In this rear room the deceased received four pistol shot wounds on the- 9th day of June, 1902, which produced her death on the same day. The indictment charged and the jury found that these wounds were inflicted by the defendant with the deliberate and premeditated design to effect the death of his wife. The autopsy disclosed four wo-unds., one passing through the right hand entering at the- base of the thumb- at the back of the hand, another passing through the windpipe entering at the left of the neck; the third entering the breast on the left side and crossing the body and coming out above- the- right nipple; the fourth entering an- inch to- the left o-f the spine, just below the- scapula, and taking a downward course into the lef-t pleural cavity.

Ho witness, unless it be the defendant himself, saw the shooting or heard the report o-f the pistol. The claim of the de *417 fendant was that, his wife committed suicide and on the witness stand he denied in general terms that he killed her. When the police officer reached the house after the homicide the defendant handed him a pistol, saying, “ That is what she did it with.” The revolver was produced at the trial, and it was shown that when handed to the officer by the defendant at least four of the cartridges had been discharged. There was really no proof in the case that would authorize the jury to find that the deceased had taken her own life. On the other hand, the proof, although almost entirely circumstantial, tended to show that the defendant was the author of the crime.

The defendant and his wife had been married about six years prior to the homicide. Their whole married life was one of turmoil, strife and violence. The evidence tended to show that during that period the defendant had been arrested more than once for assaulting or abandoning his wife. He had not only assaulted her, but threatened on several occasions to take her life, -and these threats continued down to the very day of the homicide. It would be tedious to describe these quarrels with much detail. It is sufficient to say that they reveal a most unhappy relation of husband and wife, and on the part of the husband frequent explosions of bitter passion accompanied by violence of a brutal character. HisJ feelings towards the deceased were evidently those of hatred, which extended to- all her family. This strained and unnatural relation of the parties, it is claimed by the prosecution, constituted the motive for the crime. It is a fair conclusion from all the evidence that the defendant and the deceased were alone in, the house when the shooting occurred. In a very short time after this a woman- who- lived near by entered the room and finding the body of the deceased lying prostrate upon the floor attempted to raise her upi and by questions to ascertain what was the matter and what had happened. The only answer that she was able to draw from the deceased *418 was, “ Get the priest for I am dying.” The defendant was present while this woman was attempting to raise up the body of the deceased, and she was sworn at the trial and testified to statements made then and there by the- defendant to the effect that he had fired the shots that entered the body of the deceased. The pistol from which the shots were fired was found in the possession of the defendant, but he claimed that it was handed to him by one of the women who were in the room immediately after the shooting. The defendant did not gO' to his usual work ■that day, but slept late and then visited one or more of the saloons in the neighborhood. The father of the deceased lived in the same apartments with his daughter, and there was some proof tending to show that the defendant attempted to have him ejected the evening before the homicide, but at the request of the daughter he remained. He was a laborer and went to his work the morning when the shooting occurred and saw nothing of it. The younger brother and sister of the deceased were with her during most of the day that the shooting occurred, but they left before the shooting, and the testimony tended to' show that one or both of them were sent away by 'the defendant.

The life of the deceased was insured by two. policies in the Prudential Insurance Company, one dated October 22, 1900', and the other September 2, 1901, payable to her personal representatives. The policies represented comparatively small amounts, and, although 'the defendant attempted to collect them after the death of the wife, these facts do not seem to have been regarded of much importance at the trial. There was another fact established by the proof which is more important, and that is the fact that the deceased was right handed, always using the right hand to write, sew and knit, and generally in all her movements when necessary to use the hands. The wounds found upon her body after death were all inflicted on the left side, thus showing, as is claimed, that the wounds could not have been self-inflicted. Without further relating the numerous facts *419 and circumstances that are claimed to have some hearing, direct or remote, upon the issues in the case, it is quite sufficient to sa.y that the case was for the jury upon the facts. The evidence was sufficient to justify the verdict, and this court cannot, without departing from its appropriate jurisdiction and functions, interfere with the facts as determined by the jury.

The record contains numerous exceptions taken by the learned counsel for the defendant in the course of the trial. Most of them are of no- importance and need not be referred to. A few of them call for an answer or explanation and two- or three present questions of a more serious character. In the selection of the jury the learned counsel for the defendant interposed a challenge to the panel or the array, which was overruled. The challenge was based upon the claim that the special jury law was unconstitutional and that the panel was drawn by a person who was not the commissioner. The first proposition is untenable, since the question has been decided the other way. (People v. Dunn, 157 N. Y. 528; People v. Hall, 169 N. Y. 184.) The commissioner was at least an officer de facto and the panel drawn by him was regular. (People v. Petrea, 92 N. Y. 128, 143; People v. Youngs, 151 N. Y. 210, 218.) The circumstance that another person was subsequently declared entitled to the office does not affect the validity of the official acts of the incumbent for the time being. (Matter of Allison v. Welde, 172 N. Y. 421.)

The defendant’s counsel propounded certain questions to individual jurors upon. a. challenge for principal cause, which were objected to by the district, attorney, and the objection, being sustained by the court, an exception was. taken. The questions were substantially the same in every case. The juror was asked whether he knew that in law 'the accused in a criminal case was to be presumed innocent until proved guilty, and that the proof in a criminal case must be stronger in order to convict than- in a civil case involving like issues.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 624, 175 N.Y. 333, 17 N.Y. Crim. 414, 13 Bedell 333, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-conklin-ny-1903.