People v. Delorio

33 A.D.2d 350, 308 N.Y.S.2d 131, 1970 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5342
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 11, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 A.D.2d 350 (People v. Delorio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Delorio, 33 A.D.2d 350, 308 N.Y.S.2d 131, 1970 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5342 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Cooke, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Madison County, rendered November 7, 1968, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of robbery in the first degree.

During the morning of March 9, 1968, Charles Bauer, a 66-year-old chicken farmer, was found dead in front of the garage on his property off the Schoolheimer Road in the City of Oneida. A button, found near the garage, had been torn from the bib of his overalls. There were tears over the left pocket of his shirt and the button over said pocket was ripped off. Although he customarily carried his wallet in his left shirt pocket, none was found upon his person. He had multiple contusions and lacerations about the face and head, his jaw and two ribs were fractured and there was blood about his face and on his clothes. The Medical Examiner of Madison County, who examined the body and performed an autopsy, testified that Bauer died of a combination of inhalation of blood and cerebral concussion. He was of the opinion that Bauer lived for a while after being injured because he bled and breathed thereafter. He estimated that death occurred between 12 and 18 hours prior to his arrival at 10:20 a.m. on March 9 and the certificate of death, which he filed, indicated an injury at 8:30 p.m. and death at 9:30 p.m. on the day before.

Bauer’s pickup truck was located near the intersection of Canal and Peterboro Streets in Canastota, about 50 feet from Hart’s gas station. In talking to Vincent Tornatore, an employee there, on the afternoon of March 9,1968, Chief Murphy of the Oneida Police noticed Delorio leave the station and start downtown. His hand was swollen and, after Murphy advised him of his constitutional rights, defendant said he had been in a fight at the Ivy Drill the dáy before at about 5:00 p.m.

After going to police headquarters, Murphy advised defendant that the bartender at the Ivy Drill stated there had been no fight there, whereupon Delorio said that plaster fell on his hand from the ceiling of his room at the Hotel Oneida on the night of March 8. In producing a receipt showing lodging at said hotel to support his story, the operator’s license of decedent was found in defendant’s wallet. Murphy knew of his own knowledge that Delorio had no driver’s license of his own. About $21 was located in his possession. Although a quantity of plaster was picked up in the hotel room Delorio occupied, a domestic who had painted the room testified that the ceiling plaster was tight.

Tornatore worked at the station during the. evening of March 8,1968 and, although uncertain of the exact time, estimated that [352]*352he first saw his acquaintance, Delorio, approach the station, heading for the wash rooms from the direction of Canal Street, at approximately 6:45 to 7:45 p.m. Defendant’s hand was swollen, appeared to have blood on it and he said he got in a fight at the Ivy Grill. Tornatore directed him to the ladies’ room where he stayed about five minutes. Delorio said he came to Canastota in a pickup truck which he parked around the corner as a rod was going on it. He showed Tornatore the back of a driver’s license, the conviction stub of which had no marks, and said it was his. After being at the station 10' or 15 minutes, he asked for Tornatore’s father’s truck to go to Graziano’s to get something to eat. Tornatore let him have it and he returned in about 15 or 20 minutes. At about 9:30 he told a customer at the station that he had a truck around the corner with a broken valve and was waiting to get it fixed.

Delorio arrived at the station on March 9 at about 11:00 a.m., asked Tornatore and his boss if they had heard about a killing in Oneida on Schoolheimer Road and requested that the radio be tuned to the Oneida station to see if there were any bulletins. During the afternoon, defendant’s left thumbprint was discovered on the left door of Bauer’s truck and a police officer found Bauer’s wallet in the wastebasket in the ladies’ room of Hart’s station, together with paper tissue containing human bloodstains.

Two Sheriff’s deputies at the Madison County Jail, from which Delorio had been released on March 5, 1968, testified that he came to the jail on the 8th around 7:15 p.m. and, during his 10-to 20-minute stay, pulled some shotgun shells with deer slugs-from his pocket, rubbed his hand and said he had been in a fight.

Occupants -of the Bauer farm found a sawed-off shotgun in a shed on the property some four months after Bauer’s death, identified as belonging to Albert Smith and kept by him at the property of his father-in-law, Priske, located about a mile from the Bauer place. Delorio had been married to Priske’s daughter until an annulment in 1964. A ballistics expert determined that the shotgun shell, which had been picked up near the shed on the Bauer place on March 9, was a reloaded shell and had been fired by this same firearm. Shells found in the Priske home and those in the gun had been reloaded and each displayed identical properties, including powder, slug and wads. Priske found that $20 to $25 in half dollars from a bank kept in a dresser with the shells were also missing and the bank was found to have defendant’s left thumbprint on it. On March 6, 1968 at about 1:30 a.m., Delorio paid for his night’s lodging with 12 fifty cent pieces and registered again before 9:00 p.m. that same day paying his [353]*353room rent in advance with 10 half-dollars. Defendant was released from the Madison County Jail on March 5, 1968 with three cents in his pocket.

Although indicted for murder contrary to subdivision 3 of section 125.25 of the Penal Law and robbery in the first degree contrary to subdivision 1 of section 160.15, the jury returned a verdict of not guilty of murder but guilty of robbery, first degree. Appellant claims inconsistency. The first section above, in defining what is commonly known as a felony murder, provides in part: “A person is guilty of murder when: * * # 3. Acting either alone or with one or more other persons, he commits or attempts to commit robbery * * * and, in the course of and in furtherance of such crime or of immediate flight therefrom, he, or another participant, if there be any, causes the death of a person other than one of the participants.” The latter, in defining robbery in the first degree, reads in part: “A person is guilty of robbery in the first degree when he forcibly steals property and when, in the course of the commission of the crime or of immediate flight therefrom, he or another participant in the crime: 1. Causes serious physical injury to any person who is not a participant in the crime ’ ’. The two counts in the indictment did not have identical elements, so that a finding of guilty on one but not on the other would not be truly repugnant, as opposed to being merely inconsistent (cf. People v. Bullis, 30 A D 2d 470, 472). Even considering the verdicts as inconsistent, the acquittal here on one count does not bar conviction on the other (cf. People v. Hollenbeck, 9 A D 2d 983). Each count in the indictment is to be regarded as a separate indictment and consistency in the verdict is not necessary here (Dunn v. United States, 284 U. S. 390, 393; People ex rel. Troiani v. Fay, 13 A D 2d 999, 1000; see Code Crim. Pro., § 443-a). Moreover, defendant is in no position to urge that the verdict is inconsistent, not having excepted to the court’s charge that defendant could be found guilty of robbery in the first degree and not guilty of murder (People v. Steffens, 12 A D 2d 962, 963;

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.D.2d 350, 308 N.Y.S.2d 131, 1970 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-delorio-nyappdiv-1970.