People v. . Ferraro

55 N.E. 931, 161 N.Y. 365, 14 N.Y. Crim. 266, 15 E.H. Smith 365, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1445
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 55 N.E. 931 (People v. . Ferraro) 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. . Ferraro, 55 N.E. 931, 161 N.Y. 365, 14 N.Y. Crim. 266, 15 E.H. Smith 365, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1445 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinion

VANN, J.

This appeal is from a judgment convicting the defendant of the crime of murder in the first degree, committed, as alleged, in the borough of Brooklyn on the 4th of September, 1898, by cutting the throat of Luciano Musacchio with a razor. Both the accused and the deceased were natives of Italy, but the former had been in this country for seventeen years, and the latter for twelve or thirteen, prior to the homicide. They were well acquainted, and distantly related, but it does not appear that they had seen much of each other for some time prior to the occasion in question. On the afternoon of Sunday, September 4, 1898, Musacchio and three Italian friends were drinking beer in a little yard at the rear of a building known as “ 46 Front Street, Brooklyn.” After a while the defendant and three of his friends, also Italians, came in, shook hands all around, and drank beer by themselves at. another place in the same yard. The eight men were thus occupied for several hours, and the two groups apparently had little to say to each other. It does not appear how much beer was consumed by the defendant and his friends, but during the afternoon the deceased and his friends each drank about a pint, although, according to the evidence, no one of them was apparently under its influence. Shortly after the defendant came in, Blonda, one of the three who were drinking with the deceased, invited him to drink with them, but he answered, “ No; we „ drink by ourselves, and you drink by yourselves.” There was some conversation between the defendant and the deceased, but the witnesses differ in stating their recollection of it. Blonda testified that the defendant said to the deceased, “You give me a dollar, and you go all around saying you give me a dollar,” and the deceased replied, “ I did not say anything alxmt the dollar.” The defendant then said, “ Whenever I get a dollar, I will give it to you 5 ” and the deceased answered, “ I do not *268 want it.” Thereupon the defendant took the deceased, who was much larger than himself, by the hand, and tried to pull him out of the yard; but he got away, and told him to let him go, saying, “An older man than you are, and a relation as you are, I will give you a slap,” or “you deserve to be slapped.” The defendant answered, “.With reason, slap me ten times,” and then turning to Diodati, one of those who were with the deceased, said, “I have always something to say with you.” Diodati, in narrating the same conversation, says that the defendant spoke about a letter that he wrote to the deceased from Philadelphia while he was in prison, asking for a loan of five dollars, .and said that the deceased had refused to let him have it, saying: “You have two brothers. Why don't they send it to you?” The defendant then took the deceased by the wrist and tried to pull him away. Eight afterwards he said to Diodati, “You also talk, Diodati;” and the deceased answered: “ That man ain’t doing anything. He is attending to his business. Did you come here to raise trouble ? ” The defendant replied, “ You have four eyes, and I have six eyes.” On his cross-examination Diodati stated that the defendant threatened him (the witness) and said: “You are in the gang. You take some friends with you, don’t you ”—and that the deceased said to the defendant that he had better go, or else he would put him out After this conversation the witnesses agree- substantially as to what occurred. Later in the afternoon the deceased and two of his friends (one having left before) started to leave the yard, went up the steps at the rear of the house, and passed through the hall to the front of the building. He was behind his two friends, and the defendant followed him, and when they . reached the front steps was close to him. As they were about to descend the steps the defendant drew a razor from an inside pocket of his coat or vest, and, putting his left hand on the shoulder of the deceased, with the razor in his right hand, he cut his throat with a single stroke. Musacchio at once fell, saying, according to the statement of one of the witnesses, “ Oh, my Grod! they killed me; ” and of another, “ You kill me! What did you do that for? ’’—and died almost immediately.

The defendant struck at him with the razor three times,—once, at ) *269 least, after he was down. The ambulance surgeon, who promptly examined the body before it had been moved, found three cuts,— one over the mastoid process, which went down to the bone, but not in the neighborhood of “ any vessels or structures sufficient to cause death.” The second was a superficial cut on the neck, not at all serious, and the third, on the right side of the throat, severed the carotid artery and internal jugular vein, and in the opinion of the ambulance surgeon, corroborated by that of the coroner’s physician, caused death from hemorrhage. The latter also stated that in his opinion these wounds could not have been caused by one stroke. The witness Diodati says^ the defendant chased him with the razor in one hand shortly after Musacchio fell. Mazzio, who kept the grocery at 46 Front street, did not see the defendant strike the deceased, but saw him standing two or three feet from the body, waving a razor very rapidly; aud, as he started to come toward the witness, Mazzio told him not to come near him. Barroni, who sat on the bottom step talking with some boys, said that he heard tramping on the top step, and, looking up, saw “ them stepping around, and I got up, and I saw Ferraro have one hand on his shoulder and cut him with the other hand.” Very soon the defendant ran down Front street, followed by an excited crowd, some of whom threw stones at him. The arresting officer found him on Dock street, about 300 feet from Front; and in his right hand, which was covered with blood, he held a bloody razor, and would not give it up until compelled to. He was taken before Chief MacKellar at police headquarters, and, according to the recollection of two policemen who were present,, the chief asked the defendant, “ Why did you kill that man ? ” and he answered, “ Because he is no good.” When asked, “ What were you arrested the other time for, and what were you in jail the other time for? ” he said, in substance, that he worked for a boss in Philadelphia who would not pay him, and he assaulted him, and served four-and-a half years in prison for it. According to the recollection of Chief MacKellar, the defendant, when asked, “ What did you do that for ? ” answered, “I no talk,” and was then told that he need not talk if he did not wish to. The chief stated the conversation in relation to *270 the assault in Philadelphia and the imprisonment therefor the same as the other officers. Other witnesses were sworn for the people, and further details given, but this is the substance of the testimony in chief for the prosecution.

The defense called no witness who gave a different version of the homicide or the circumstances surrounding it, except one who said that he was drinking with the group surrounding the deceased in the rear of 46 Front street, and that there was no trouble or quarrel of any kind in his presence. Several witnesses, who had known the defendant for some time, testified to strange acts and incoherent conversation on his part prior to the homicide.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.E. 931, 161 N.Y. 365, 14 N.Y. Crim. 266, 15 E.H. Smith 365, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ferraro-ny-1900.