People v. . Hinksman

85 N.E. 676, 192 N.Y. 421, 22 N.Y. Crim. 585, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 893
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 29, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 85 N.E. 676 (People v. . Hinksman) 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. . Hinksman, 85 N.E. 676, 192 N.Y. 421, 22 N.Y. Crim. 585, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 893 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinions

Weriter, J.

The defendant appeals from a judgment convicting him of the crime of murder in the first degree. The charge set forth in the indictment is that on the 30th day of 27ovember, 1905, the defendant did feloniously with premeditation and deliberation shoot Samuel Hinksman with a shot gun, inflicting wounds from which the victim died on the following day.

*588 The deceased was a colored laboring man who lived in the village of Speonk and town of Southampton in the county of. Suffolk. He had been twice married. The first wife had died, and the second was not living with him. At the time of the homicide the family consisted of the deceased, his son, the defendant, then about twenty years of age, Annie, a young daughter, and Ella Brown the housekeeper. All of these persons were in the house except the defendant when a shot was fired from the outside, which penetrated the house through a kitchen window in the range of which the deceased was standing. Epon hearing the shot Ella Brown went to the kitchen where she found the deceased unconscious on the floor from the effect of one or more gunshot wounds in his head. She at once went to the door which formed the entrance to the house, and shouted “ murder ” three times, and then returned to the kitchen where the daughter was wailing over the apparently lifeless body of her father. After taking her from the room Ella Brown again went to the entrance door and again cried, “ Murder, murder, murder, someone help me.” At this juncture the defendant approached the house and, according to the witness Brown inquired, Is Pop shot ? ” to which she replied, “Your father, your father, your father.” The defendant’s version of the affair is that upon nearing the house he heard Ella Brown crying out murder and as he ran toward her she exclaimed, “ Some one has shot your Pop,” and that he then inquired, “ Is Pop shot ? ” The two went into the house. The woman testified that the defendant saw his father prone and bleeding but offered no assistance except to suggest that he would go out and get help. The defendant’s own story is to the effect that he assisted in placing his father upon -a couch; that he then went out among the neighbors for help; and that during the night he waited upon his father to some extent. The wounded man lingered unconscious until the following day, when he died. As there ivere no eye-witnesses to the shooting, the authorities spent several days in developing the antecedent and *589 attendant circumstances, with the result that the defendant was arrested and charged with the murder of his father. The cir-: cumstances uncovered in the investigation were relied upon by the prosecution to support the theory that the defendant shot his father in order to obtain complete possession of the homestead, where he wished to live with the young woman whom he was intending to marry, and as an incident of this theory it was claimed that the father’s matrimonial complications, and the young man’s intentions, had led to quarrels which, with other misunderstandings, had created bitter feeling between the father and son.

The evidence tended to show that the defendant, when engaged as a laborer or farm hand, did not live at the house with his father, but only when he was out of worlc. The Hinksman homestead was a small house upon an acre or less of land. Although there was no evidence as to the actual ownership of these premises, it is to be inferred that the title to the land was in an uncle of the defendant, and the house had been bought or built with money belonging to the defendant’s mother. After her death the defendant’s father had remarried but, as already stated, the second wife was not a member >of his household at the time when he was killed. The defendant was engaged to be married to a young woman who lived in a neighboring town and was anxious to bring her to the Hinksman home, but the father objected. The young man is said to have taken legal counsel as to his rights in the matter, claiming that he was as much entitled to live there with a wife as the father and his wife. Just-how much of trouble arose over this does not clearly appear, but there was evidence enough to have warranted the jury in finding there was some ill will between the father and son which may have been due primarily to the difference of opinion upon this subject and was somewhat accentuated by other misunderstandings.

Passing for the moment some intermediate events which led the authorities to suspect the defendant of this crime, the record *590 discloses that the defendant had been in or about the house, dui': ing the greater part of the day of the homicide. In the forenoon he had gone to the village doctor for medicine for Ella Brown, and also for some wine and liquor for the Thanksgiving-dinner, which was partaken of at about two o’clock in the afternoon. Later in the day the defendant and his father laid a carpet, and the latter found some fault with the former for the manner in which it was done. Soon after eight o’clock in the evening the defendant went from the house, stating that he was going to the doctor’s in Eastport to get some medicine for his sister, and Ella Brown told him he need not go, for it was then too late. The defendant went to Eastport hut did not call at the doctor’s office, for the reason, as he explained on the witness stand, that he found it was too late when he got there. lie went to a saloon, however, where he inquired for one French, a friend of his, stating that he had an appointment to meet him there. This statement was challenged hy French as false, for he testified that there had been no such appointment. At twenty minutes after nine the defendant left the saloon for his homo which was about a mile and a half distant. His first visible appearance at the house was just after Ella Brown had raised the cry of murder, and this circumstance, coupled with the defendant’s apparently purposeless visit to Eastport, and supplemented hy the fact that the distance between that hamlet and the Ilinksnaan house could easily he covered hy an ordinary walker in less than forty minutes, created suspicions against the defendant which led to a search for further evidence.

This search brought to light a number of circumstances of significance, the first of which is that the defendant denied having heard any shots, although his sudden áppearance after Ella Brown’s outcry was proof positive that he must have been in close proximity to the house when the shot was fired. Taking into account the fact that it was a cold, clear night, and that a witness -living three and a half miles distant had heard a shot in *591 the direction of the Hinksman house just before ten o’clock, the defendant’s denial was, to say the least, not calculated to strengthen the presumption of his innocence. Investigation led to the discovery that the weapon from which the shot had been fired had been loaded with bicycle ball bearings, consisting of cylindrical steel balls about a quarter of an inch in diameter, of which some fifteen or sixteen were extracted from the kitchen walls. The defendant admitted that he had been the owner of an old bicycle from which the ball bearings had been removed, and some of which he had exhibited on at least one occasion previous to the homicide.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.E. 676, 192 N.Y. 421, 22 N.Y. Crim. 585, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hinksman-ny-1908.