People v. . Downs

25 N.E. 988, 123 N.Y. 558, 8 N.Y. Crim. 116, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 262, 78 Sickels 558, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1764
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 988 (People v. . Downs) 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. . Downs, 25 N.E. 988, 123 N.Y. 558, 8 N.Y. Crim. 116, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 262, 78 Sickels 558, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1764 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The defendant was convicted of manslaughter in the first degree, but the general term has reversed that conviction for alleged error in the charge to the jury; and from that reversal the people have appealed to this court, insisting that the charge, fairly construed, was correct, and violated no established legal rule. The prosecution proved the corpus delicti, the death of Logan, and the violence which caused it, by direct evidence which was in no respect disputed. His dead body was found upon the premises of the prisoner shot through the heart. The bullet'had penetrated his clothing and entered his breast in a manner indicating that he was facing his antagonist when the shot *118 was fired. The absence from the clothing of the deceased of anything like scorch or stain of powder was claimed to-indicate that the weapon when fired was not in contact with his person, but at some distance from him, greater or less* The bullet was taken from the body. A pistol was found in the prisoner’s room, under his bureau, having 10 chambers, the central one carrying a bullet of 32 calibre, and the nine surrounding it of 22. A discharged shell was found in the central chamber, which the bullet taken from, the body of the deceased fitted, while the 9 smaller cartridges remained undischarged. On- the day of the homicide, at about midnight, the prisoner aroused a neighbor named Morey, and Dr. Harvie, saying to each that he had shot his best friend, or was afraid he had shot his best friend, but giving no explanation of the circumstances; and they, going with him to the house, found Logan lying-dead near the entrance to the summer kitchen. The prisoner was pale and nervous, and on finding Logan dead was-taken with a fit of vomiting, but made no effort to escape, and quietly surrendered himself to the officers who were-summoned and took him into custody. He was entirely sober, and there was no evidence of intoxication. His previous relations with Logan, who was a married man, were those of intimate friendship without anything to mar or disturb it. That was the case made by the prosecution, and it presented to the jury a problem with very slight material for its solution. That Logan met his death from a pistol discharged in the hands of Downs was sufficiently proved, but whether the shot was fired intentionally or accidentally, and, if intentionally, for what reason, did not appear. The-evidence disclosed no possible motive for an intentional homicide, and left the character and grade of the crime, if one had been committed, an unexplained mystery. One circumstance, however, would be sure to attract the attention of ah intelligent jury. They would ask how Logan came to be at the rear of the house, near the entrance to its living rooms, at midnight; and what he was doing there *119 when he should have been at home with his wife and children. The saloon was in the front part of the house opening on to the street. It was closed for the night, and there had been no brawl or quarrel or disturbance there during the evening. The presence of Logan in the rear of the house, at or near midnight, and the absence of any previous quarrel or difficulty, would make it reasonably certain that something due to his presence, and sufficiently grave and serious to account for an intentional or accidental homicide, had actually occurred. What that was we have no means of knowing, except through the explanation given by Downs and his wife. He testifies, in brief, that he was aroused by the noise of a scuffle in the back kitchen ; that he seized the pistol, which lay upon a stand near his bed, and rushed out; that he found Logan and Mrs. Downs on the floor in the act of adultery or rape, according as the woman was consenting or resisting; that he seized Logan, who at once attacked him, and in the struggle the pistol went off ; and that this was after the woman had left the room, and, as she says, while she was at the front door going out for help or escape. She testifies that Logan seized her and threw her down, but does not say whether with her consent, or why she made no outcry. Of course this explanation was open to the criticism of the prosecution and the consideration of the jury. The principal fact sworn to has a strong probability in its favor. It accounts for the presence of Logan, at midnight, on the premises where he had no right to be, and furnishes the needed motive and explanation of the homicide which occurred. Without it we cannot understand the event.; with it we can easily see how it did occur, or how it might have happened. It supplies both motive and occasion. But granting so much, the rest does not necessarily follow, and it was still for the jury to say whether the shooting was accidental or intentional, whether justifiable or excusable, whether with deliberate purpose, or. in the heat of passion, and without intent to kill. It is obvious that in their consideration of these questions very much would depend on *120 the charge of the court as to the burden of proof and the operation and extent of the rule relating to a reasonable doubt. That such doubts might easily arise in many and different directions is quite apparent from the facts to which we have adverted. Take, for example, the prisoner’s statement that the pistol exploded in a fight between him and Logan, and without his conscious act. If that be true, while there was a homicide there was no crime; for the killing would become merely an accident or misadventure. If, now, the burden is upon the prisoner to satisfy the jury of that fact, and unless they are so satisfied they must deem the homicide intentional, a verdict of guilty might easily result. But if that burden is not upon the prisoner, if the jury are fold that it remains with the prosecution,—that if the evidence leaves in their minds a reasonable doubt whether the killing may not have been an accident or misadventure, the prisoner must have the benefit of the doubt, because it goes directly to the vital elements of the people’s case, and leaves it uncertain whether a crime has been committed at all,—the verdict of the jury might be entirely different. A similar result might attend a defence of justifiable homicide, and so the question of the burden of proof and the scope and effect of a reasonable doubt, became in the case at bar of very great importance. We have decided so recently as to make further citation needless, that the rule that in criminal cases the defendant is entitled to the benefit of a reasonable doubt applies not only to the case as made by the prosecution, but to any defence interposed (People v. Riordan, 117 N. Y. 71, 26 St. Rep. 531), and we had earlier held under the statute defining the different classes of homicide that whether it was murder or manslaughter in one of the degrees, or justifiable or excusable, and so no crime at all, depended upon the intention and circumstances of its perpetration, and therefore mere proof of the killing raised no legal implication of the crime of murder (Stokes v. People, 53 N. Y. 177). I think the charge in this case ran counter to these rules, and was calculated to impress upon the jury a *121 conviction that proof of the homicide carried with it a legal implication of crime which shifted the burden of proof upon the prisoner, and required him to satisfy the jury that the killing was either justifiable or excusable, at the peril of a conviction if he should fail in his attempt.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 988, 123 N.Y. 558, 8 N.Y. Crim. 116, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 262, 78 Sickels 558, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-downs-ny-1890.