People v. . Ford

93 N.E. 509, 200 N.Y. 209, 25 N.Y. Crim. 234, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1435
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 N.E. 509 (People v. . Ford) 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. . Ford, 93 N.E. 509, 200 N.Y. 209, 25 N.Y. Crim. 234, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1435 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

*236 Gray, J.:

The defendant was charged with the crime of murder in the first degree, committed upon Oaptora Ashe by striking and cutting her with a razor. Her death by violent means was not disputed; but the defendant denied that he was guilty. The trial, which followed upon his indictment, resulted in a verdict of guilty and the defendant now appeals to this court. Oaptora Ashe, for whose murder the defendant has been held responsible, had been known as Katie Ashe, or Ford. The evidence is such as to leave it somewhat in doubt whether she was his wife or mistress; but it is more probable upon his evidence, as well as that of other witnesses, that she stood in the latter relation to him. In the evening of March 27th, 1909, the deceased came to the hospital at Brown’s Station, in Ulster county, and died within twenty or twenty-five minutes after her admission. Upon her person were found five wounds, which had been inflicted by a sharp instrument. One wound extended from a point behind the left ear, at the mastoid portion of the skull, downwards and across the throat, for over five inches, severing all of the blood vessels and muscles down to the bone. Another wound was from above the left eye down to the ear; another was from above the right eye to, and through, the right ear; another was upon the right forearm and another upon and across the left shoulder. The first wound was sufficient to cause death.

The evidence connecting the defendant with the commission of the crime charged was, wholly, circumstantial; but the nature of the facts disclosed and the order of succession of events, preceding and following the homicide, were such as to compel the conclusion that the verdict of the jury was fully justified. However reluctant the mind to concludé upon such evidence, ordinarily, there was, in this case, no such weakness in any link of the chain of circumstances, which, by affecting its strength, would warrant the entertaining of a reasonable *237 doubt of the defendant’s guilt. The defendant and the deceased were colored persons and came from New York to Ulster county; where Ford found employment under the contractors who were constructing the dams and reservoirs for the new aqueduct. On Saturday, March 27, 1909, the defendant was discharged from his employment. He and the deceased were then residing at Brown’s Station, in a house occupied by a colored couple named Parish. In the afternoon of that day, he quarrelled with the deceased upon her demand for a pair of shoes and for some money; denying that he had drawn his wages. Refusing to pay Parish what was due for their lodging, he was told to leave. When, that evening, about to do so, the deceased told him that she did not want to go with him, that “ she did not belong to him and that she did not want to go with him any further.” She was heard to say to him “ Go on, Sam, and leave me alone. I don’t want to go. I am barefooted and I have no shoes, and I’m hungry and tired of following you. I’m not your wife.” He said that she must go and taking her by the arm, he pulled, or led, her out. This occurred a few minutes after eight o’clock. They proceeded a short distance to the neighboring house of another colored couple, named Cunningham; where he asked to be lodged for the night. When admitted, the deceased, at first, was unwilling to enter with the defendant; but, finally, consented to do so, saying: In the morning I will go back to New York and that will settle it all.” Within a few minutes, the deceased came out of the room prepared for them; saying that she was not going to stay and insisting upon leaving the house. The defendant wished the Cunninghams to keep her in the house; but they refused and the defendant, who had previously locked the door, was obliged by them to open it. The defendant, first, left the house and, as he did so, the deceased quickly closed and locked the door upon him. She wanted to go out by another, the back, door and, possibly had she been permitted to do so, *238 she had escaped the tragedy in which she lost her .life. The Cunninghams made her leave by the front door. Within fifteen or twenty minutes from the time they left, the Cunning-hams, as did other witnesses residing in the neighborhood, heard screams, seemingly, from some point on the road to the hospital. The hospital was distant about a quarter of a mile and residents of houses along the road heard, and were awakened by, these screams. The wife of one of them testified to the coming of the deceased to their door and to her calling for her and asking that her husband should go with her, that she was hurt; ” but he was ill in bed. The next morning, the witness found a “ lot of blood ” on the stones in front of the door. The deceased went on to the hospital. As she entered, she was bleeding profusely and, falling into a chair, became unconscious within five minutes, and, within twenty or twenty-five minutes, was dead. Sunday morning a watchman and a police officer followed up the traces of blood from the hospital to a point upon the road, where the ground was much disturbed by the trampling of feet and was splashed with blood. One of them picked up from the muddy ground a thin piece of steel, peculiar in shape and with an edge. On Monday, a suit case of the defendant, which he had with him when leaving the Cunninghams’ house, was found in some bushes, along their fence. After noon of the day after the homicide, the defendant was arrested, at a point on the Ulster and Delaware railroad, some thirty, or more, miles from Brown’s Station, and was taken to the office of a justice of the peace at Margaretville; where, his person being searched, there was found, among other things, a blue handled razor with a piece broken from the blade. A smear, or discoloration, upon the blade, subsequent chemical tests showed to be from human blood. Spots upon the hat of the defendant, also, upon subsequent tests, proved to be human blood. The piece of steel, which had been picked up from the road at Brown’s Station, *239 fitted with exactness into the broken portion of the razor blade. At the time of his arrest, he, at first, gave a false name; denied that he had come from Brown’s Station, and said that he had broken his razor in mending his shoe, and that the blood came upon it while he was doing so. The person, who arrested him, had done so at the request of, and upon the description by, the sheriff, given through the telephone. The next morning he was taken to Kingston; where the indictment was found against him. The record does not disclose that there was any prior arraignment of the defendant and nothing seems to have taken place at the office of the justice of the peace beyond the search of his person. After being taken into custody, in conversation with the man, who arrested him, and with the driver of the vehicle, in which he was driven to Margaretville, the defendant admitted that he had been at Brown’s Station. He stated to them that he had had trouble with a woman there, who was not his wife; that he had walked from Brown’s Station, starting about nine o’clock the night before, and that he was going to the coal fields of Pennsylvania. It was shown that he left Brown’s Station with nine dollars of his wages owing to him. Witnesses testified to quarrels between the defendant and the deceased; to his maltreatment of her and to threats against her life. On the Sunday morning previous to the homicide, the defendant had asked Mrs.

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153 N.E. 433 (New York Court of Appeals, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.E. 509, 200 N.Y. 209, 25 N.Y. Crim. 234, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ford-ny-1910.