People v. Fitzsimmons

11 N.Y. Crim. 391, 69 N.Y. St. Rep. 191, 34 N.Y.S. 1102
CourtNew York Court of Sessions
DecidedJuly 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 N.Y. Crim. 391 (People v. Fitzsimmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Fitzsimmons, 11 N.Y. Crim. 391, 69 N.Y. St. Rep. 191, 34 N.Y.S. 1102 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

RCSS, J. (charging jury).

I desire first, gentlemen, to congratulate you upon the apparent approaching close of this case. It has been one of great strain upon you, great inconvenience to you, as well as great strain upon the eminent gentlemen who have represented the people and the defense; and we all are glad,-1 am sure, that you are at the apparent nearing of the determination. I also may state, gentlemen, that you are to be congratulated, and it is to be commended, upon your selection. Out of 150 names drawn from the body of the county of Onondaga, you are the gentlemen only who have passed the ordeal of the examination, and have been selected to stand, impartially and honestly, between the people of the state of Hew York and this defendant,—not because of your superior intelligence over :that of your fellows, but because it appeared to the eminent and watchful counsel upon either side that, if your answers were truthful, you presented nearer, a judicial, fair, and unbiased frame of mind, representative of the truth, and of making fair, logical deductions from the evidence which should be presented to you. You, gentlemen, in this matter are to be the sole judges of the facts, uninfluenced by any thought which you may have of any opinion which the court may entertain; but it is your sworn duty, when you have ascertained these facts, fairly' deducible from the evidence, to apply such deductions fearlessly, whatever may be the result. If I, gentlemen, erroneously state to you the law, the appellate courts will speedily and certainly correct such error; but if you err,—if you make a mis[394]*394■take in your decision, the people of the county of Onondaga and the defendant at this bar are practically helpless. In this matter, gentlemen, the state” of Hew York has no revenges to perpetrate. In this matter, gentlemen, Fitzsimmons has nothing fairly to present to you extraneous to this case, excepting such presentation as is deducible from 'the evidence. The law has thrown around the person of a defendant charged with crime many safeguards, including, with others, the presumption of innocence,—that his guilt must be established beyond a reasonable doubt; and, when the facts are ascertained by you, if there exists such dóub¡t,—if the evidence fails to overthrow such presumption of innocence,—you will acquit; but, if they point with certainty, subject to those rules which I have and shall lay down for your guidance, to his guilt, you will as fearlessly find that fact.

Gentlemen, I incorporate as a part of my charge a direction to you, that you may understand, at the outset in this important matter, your position, from the charge of the eminent criminal lawyer and justice, Mr. Recorder Smythe, in a recent important case. The judge uses the following language:

“Let us look for a moment and see how humane the criminal law is. At times it is very much misrepresented by people who do not understand it. This defendant, like all others occupying the position he does, or even when charged with 'the commission of the lowest grade of crime known to the law, is entitled to have his guilt established to the satisfaction of a jury, of his own selection, practically, by what the jury shall esteem to he competent evidence, satisfactory to them, and which establishes his guilt beyond every reasonable doubt,— not every imaginary doubt, not every unsubstantial doubt, but beyond every reasonable doubt. Twelve men must agree before a verdict can be rendered, either against him or in Ms favor. He is entitled to the benefit of the presumption, which the law extends to him, and to every other man charged with crime, that he is a man of good character, and that he is innocent of the charge preferred against him. The latter presumption continues to exist from the commencement of the case down to the time you render a verdict against him, if you should [395]*395render suoh a verdict. That presumption must be overcome by the prosecution by such evidence as will convince your minds of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. * * * With so many safeguards, and there are many others surrounding this man, surely, where he has had all the advantages and benefits which the law gives him, if the evidence in the case satisfies a jury of his guitt, there should be no hesitation on their part to j say so; if it fails to satisfy them beyond a reasonable doubt, or ' if they entertain a reasonable doubt of his guilt, the law says they must acquit.”

Now, gentlemen, this outlines, in the beginning, the position ■ which you occupy, between the people and this prisoner. You ¡ will remember the occurrence on the night in question, as it has been related to you,—the facts thait occurred in the opera house: That the deceased, Riordan, came to the opera house a little before ten; that, a few hours afterwards, he was taken from there in a dying condition, and, subsequently in the morning, died. You have heard the description of those who were present as to what occurred upon the autopsy. Now, the claim of the people, gentlemen, in brief, is that this man Riordan’s death was caused by a blow struck by the defendant,—struck while engaged in a contention', or fight, as I shall define it further on; or struck while engaged in the commission of an assault and battery, as I shall define it; or without due regard and circumspection, if you should find that the acts were lawful ; that the immediate cause or the necessary cause of this homicide was the acts of the defendant; that the ultimate or ordinary or probable consequence of that act was the death of Riordan; that that act was perpetuated with suoh criminal intent as is necessary under the statute to complete the crime charged. The contention of the defendant is that this was an excusable homicide; that his death was an accident which happened under circumstances which I shall explain to you soon, defined as an excusable homicide; and that these men were engaged in a lawful encounter, simply a contest of power and of skill; and that this was simply one of the circumstances which is liable to follow.

[396]*396Now, gentlemen, it will become your duty to determine, and it is also my duty to explain to you, a,s best I can, the meaning of the term “manslaughter,” and define its meaning in the various degrees. To do this, gentlemen,—and you will bear with me,—is not the work of a moment. I shall have to arrive at this, to make iit intelligent to you, in a measure, by the process of elimination,—by showing to you w'hiat it. does not mean. The crime of manslaughter is the oldest homicide known to the law. Early in the English statutes,—a law from which our law is derived,—manslaughter was the only kind of homicide known; and it was not until the reign of Henry VIII. that distinctions were made. And the first distinction, as a matter of historical interest, was removing what was termed the benefit of clergy from those who had committed a homicide with premeditation and malice aforethought; and here was the first distinction that separates the intentional from the unintentional. Now, gentlemen, in view of the source of our law, in view of the sanctity in which all the English speaking people view human life, it was the undoubted intention of the framers of the present Penal Oo'de, under which you are to act, to include somewhere within its covers, a description of the punishment of every, crime of homicide not excusable or justified.

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Related

People v. Barnes
148 N.W. 400 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. Crim. 391, 69 N.Y. St. Rep. 191, 34 N.Y.S. 1102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fitzsimmons-nysessct-1895.