People v. Crum

6 N.E.2d 51, 272 N.Y. 348, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 912
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 6 N.E.2d 51 (People v. Crum) 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. Crum, 6 N.E.2d 51, 272 N.Y. 348, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 912 (N.Y. 1936).

Opinions

The Constitution of this State in article VI, section 7, provides that the jurisdiction of *Page 350 the Court of Appeals, except where the judgment is of death, shall be limited to the review of questions of law. "This," said the court in People v. Gaffey (182 N.Y. 257, 259), "enables us to review the facts in capital cases as we always did." A review of the facts means that we shall examine the evidence to determine whether in our judgment it has been sufficient to make out a case of murder beyond a reasonable doubt. We are obliged to weigh the evidence and form a conclusion as to the facts. It is not sufficient, as in most of the cases with us, to find evidence which presents a question of fact; it is necessary to go further before we can affirm a conviction and find that the evidence is of such weight and credibility as to convince us that the jury was justified in finding the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

A reading of this record causes me to hesitate. I am not convinced. I have a reasonable doubt which I shall attempt to explain and which, in my judgment, compels us to reverse this conviction and grant a new trial.

Here are the facts: Grover C. Nielson kept a gasoline station on the Walden-Wallkill road about a mile out of the village of Walden. On Saturday night, December 15, 1934, between the hours of eight and nine o'clock at night, he was shot and killed by some person or persons who apparently robbed him in a holdup. The bullet which caused his death had on it such distinct marks and grooves as readily to enable the identification of the pistol, should it ever be found.

On Sunday night, December 16, 1934, Emil Vyborny, having a gasoline station on Bay View avenue and Sylvan boulevard, near Hackensack, New Jersey, was shot and killed in a holdup, and the bullet which caused his death came from the same pistol as did the bullet killing Nielson. The pistol was found by two boys in King's woods, also called King's bluff, near Weehawken, and was given over by them to the police authorities of New Jersey. The pistol and the two bullets are connected without contradiction and with such detail, explanation and identification *Page 351 as to convince any one of the facts. The ballisticians, Winslow Humphrey of New Jersey and Harry F. Butts of the New York city police department, as well as Col. Roy B. Jones, state fully the reason for their conclusions. Col. Jones was selected by the defendant and appointed by the order of the court, on the defendant's suggestion, as his expert, and he agrees with both Humphrey and Butts that the Nielson and the Vyborny bullets both came from the same pistol.

We, therefore, start this case with these certain facts: Whoever killed Nielson did so with a pistol which was used the next night in killing Vyborny. The conclusion which one would naturally draw in the absence of any explanation would be that it was the same person who killed both.

At this point the story is taken up by Charles Wiese, whose relation to the defendant Crum is that of an accomplice. He turned State's evidence and in substance gave the following testimony: William Crum, the defendant, the witness Charles Wiese and a man named John Favorito were friends and associates. Wiese had known Crum for about six years, having served with him in the Jersey National Guard. Favorito he had known for about sixty days. Crum lived in Leonia, New Jersey, which borders on, or adjoins, Englewood. These three lived in the vicinity of Leonia and Hackensack.

The pistol in question belonged to Favorito, in whose possession it was. Crum stated that he knew a place near Walden in New York State where they could easily get some money, and the three started out in a car on Saturday afternoon, December 15, 1934, to rob Nielson. They drove directly to Walden and parked the car at James street off Ulster avenue, from which place they walked back to the main section of the village where there was a traffic officer in the middle of the street directing traffic. They stood on the corner, the three of them, for half an hour or more, Crum going into a nearby lunch wagon, kept by Stanley Burton, to purchase cigarettes. *Page 352 Wiese smoked some of these cigarettes when Crum came back.

Later they drove toward Nielson's place, Wiese protesting that he did not desire to get into any trouble in New York State. Favorito and Crum got out of the car, while Wiese drove a thousand feet or more away. When he came back Crum and Favorito jumped in the car, Crum demanding the wheel, saying they were in a hurry to get away. Crum also said that when they went in Nielson grabbed for a rifle which was on a chair and he (Crum) said to Favorito, "Let him have it;" that Favorito shot Nielson in the hand. Earlier Crum said that they were going to meet some girls in Walden and needed this money to entertain them, but because of the shooting they had to get back to Jersey. When they arrived at Fort Lee in New Jersey in a dance hall Crum gave Wiese four dollars out of the thirty dollars he said they had taken.

On the next night, says Wiese, the three of them held up Vyborny's place, only this time Crum remained in the car while Wiese and Favorito went into Vyborny's gas station where Favorito shot him. Wiese says Crum was looking in the door as he was obliged to drive some people away, and that when they ran out and got in the car Crum "bawled out" Favorito, saying, "The same thing happened last night in the same place."

On both these occasions it will be noted that Favorito did the shooting. While they were escaping from Vyborny's murder, Favorito gave the gun to Crum who promised to hide it or take care of it. The inference is that it was he, in view of this statement, who threw the gun down King's bluff, where it was found by the boy Clifford Warrington, who gave it to Officer Kessner.

This in outline is the testimony against Crum bringing him into the murder of Nielson. If Wiese's story is to be accepted, Crum is guilty of murder in the first degree; but we pause to reflect that under our law no one can be convicted upon the testimony of an accomplice standing alone and unsupported by other proof. Wiese has given *Page 353 his testimony in much detail, unshaken by cross-examination and without any apparent improbabilities or inherent marks of falsehoods. But who is Wiese? His reputation is bad. He was tried with Favorito and Crum in New Jersey for the murder of Vyborny. Favorito was found guilty and put to death; Wiese received a sentence of twelve to fifteen years, although apparently he was as guilty as Favorito. Crum was acquitted, although Wiese testified against him, refraining, however, from saying anything about the Nielson murder the night before. Wiese had previously had a criminal record, having been convicted of conspiracy, of taking money on two different occasions, and of extorting money on another. Experience has taught the courts to be chary of an accomplice's testimony as there are so many reasons which may lead one to shift to, or share the crime with another.

Thus a witness named Coco, in jail with Wiese in Hackensack, testified that Wiese told him that he had to turn State's evidence against Crum to save his own neck. I place very little reliance on what this witness Coco said; I only refer to it to call attention to the underlying reason and good reason drawn from experience for our statute, section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, reading: "A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice, unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime."

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E.2d 51, 272 N.Y. 348, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crum-ny-1936.