People v. . Gilbert

92 N.E. 85, 199 N.Y. 10, 24 N.Y. Crim. 480, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1208
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 85 (People v. . Gilbert) 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. . Gilbert, 92 N.E. 85, 199 N.Y. 10, 24 N.Y. Crim. 480, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1208 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Vann, J.:

Upon, the trial it was conceded that Viola Hughes was killed by the discharge of a self-cocking revolver held by the defendant in his right hand. The People claim that the shooting was deliberate and premeditated, while the defendant claims it was accidental and involuntary. The previous relations of the parties, their feelings and actions toward each other and the circumstances immediately surrounding the homicide become important in the effort to discover whether it was an accident or a crime.

On the 22nd of August, 1909, the date of the tragedy, the defendant, a colored man of previous good character, was unmarried and twenty-nine years of age, while Viola Hughes, the deceased, a colored woman, was twenty-two years of age and also unmarried. He was much attached to her and paid her marked attention for several months. They were engaged to he married, and the 26th of August, 1909, had been agreed upon as the date when the marriage was to take place. Their relations were friendly and intimate until the night of August 2nd, 1909, when they had a quarrel, as he told the district attorney after his arrest. According to his statement, she asked him if he was going to take her to a picnic to be held the next' day, and he said that was his intention. He continued: “ She-wanted to know who I was going to dance with and I said the ■ first dance with her and then with somebody else, and she goV mad and drew a knife.” They both attended the picnic on the day following this interview, but were not seen together, although, as he testified, they met during the evening in the park.

Up to this time he had seen her almost every night for three *484 or four months, but he never saw her alone again, although ■on two occasions they met in the presence of others, once about a week before the tragedy at a family party in the house of Frank Brooks, when games were played by all present, and once on the night before the tragedy, as will be noticed hereafter. On the first occasion, after leaving the house, the defendant lingered about for some time. A peculiar noise was heard outside about twenty minutes after he left, and Frank Brooks “ set the dog at it,” and, following the dog, saw the defendant a short distance from the house, and he said he had broken hi® suspenders. Brooks returned to the house and the .defendant went on toward home.

Viola had been employed for more than a year as a domestic in the family of a physician in Olean, but about the time of the picnic she took a vacation and was visiting a young colored girl named Florence Brooks, the daughter of Frank Brooks, who lived in a suburb of the city. Many years before Brooks had married a sister of the defendant, but he had not lived with her for eight or ten years. Their three children, Florence, Manzella and Christina, together with David Pierce, •-a boarder who was engaged to be married to Florence, comprised the family of Brooks at the time of the homicide. During the three weeks that Viola was visiting at the Brooks’ house the defendant called to see her eleven times, but she avoided him on each occasion. During this period, Charles ■Gayton, a young colored man who was a nephew of the defendant, took her out boating or fishing several times on the Alleghany river near which Brooks lived. Although Gayton’e attentions to Viola were not very marked, they made the defendant jealous and he watched them carefully. On the evening of August 19th, three days before the tragedy, he entered the Brooks house with Frank Brooks and found Gayton inside apparently alone, but as he testified, he “believed at that time *485 fhat Viola had skipped upstairs and that she had been with Gayton in the room downstairs.” On the night before the tragedy the defendant started for the Brooks house, and meeting Viola with Florence Brooks and David Pierce turned and walked back with Pierce, the two girls going ahead. They stopped at the post office for a moment while Florence went in to mail a letter and the girls then went to a show. While they were standing there the defendant, as he testified, told Viola that he would meet her at that place at about ten o’clock and go home with her after the show, and she said she would wait for him. She did not wait for him, however, but walked home with Florence. The defendant was told by a boy that the-girls had gone home with Gayton and he went after them more than a mile to the Brooks house, reaching there at about eleven o’clock but did not gain admittance. Frank Brook© came home and finding him on the front porch crying, asked him what was the matter and he said that Viola would not talk to him and that he had never done anything to the girl. This conversation, however, which was sworn to by Brooks, was denied by the defendant when a witness on the stand.

The next day was Sunday, August 22nd, the date of the tragedy. About noon that day the defendant took a revolver from the bed of Mrs. Middleton, his aunt, with whom he lived, but did not tell her that he had taken it and he had never taken it before. It was a ¡self-cocking revolver, known as a thirty-two short, with five chambers, of which four were loaded. He took no other cartridges with him, but he tried to find more. He was not in the habit of carrying a revolver, although he-had sometimes used one to hunt woodchucks, but he usually-hunted them with a Winchester rifle. After taking the revolver he went to the tannery where he was employed, a short-distance from the Brooks house, and remained there for more than half an hour, walking around as if uneasy but, as he said. *486 for exercise. He then went to the Brooks house, but all of the family were absent. Shortly before he reached there Manilla Brooks had left the house and locked the front door, the back door being bolted on the inside. Viola was alone upstairs. Manzella went to the house of Mrs. Simmons, a near neighbor, and while there she and the members of the Simmons family for some reason watched the defendant. They saw him go to the Brooks house at about one o’clock. He went to the front door, knocked and tried the door but did not get in. He •ran his hand along the casing above the door as if feeling for a key. He walked around the house several times, looked in the windows on the first floor, and stepping back looked up to the windows on the second floor and finally sat down under a tree, a short distance in front of the porch. Mrs. Simmon® went •over to the pump near the Brooks house for water, but the defendant, who knew her well and was but a few feet from her, did not speak to her. He testified that he saw Viola once through a window upstairs and thought that Guyton was in there with her. About four o’clock Elorence came home, sat down on the porch and the defendant visited with her talking pleasantly for about fifteen minutes. He told her that he had come to take Viola out riding. In a short time, Brooks' and Pierce, who had been blackberrying together, returned and after awhile the front door was unlocked and some members of the family went in, but the defendant did not enter the house for more than an hour.

The Brooks house faced north and the front door opened into .a hall, the dining room being on the right hand and the parlor on the left. The hall, about five feet wide in front, was narrowed by a stairway to two feet eight inches at the rear. There was no entrance to the stairway from the hall, but there was one from the kitchen immediately at the rear of the hall.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 85, 199 N.Y. 10, 24 N.Y. Crim. 480, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gilbert-ny-1910.