People v. . Jones

86 N.E. 810, 194 N.Y. 83, 23 N.Y. Crim. 178, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1260
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 810 (People v. . Jones) 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. . Jones, 86 N.E. 810, 194 N.Y. 83, 23 N.Y. Crim. 178, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1260 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.:

The defendant has been charged with and convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree because, as alleged, he shot one Bunn on Sunday, September 1, 1907, in the town of Plempstead.

We are asked to reverse the judgment upon the usual grounds of insufficiency of evidence and errors of the trial judge in the conduct of the trial. The first contention that the evidence was insufficient relates to the People’s case not only upon the general issue of deliberate and premeditated killing, but also upon the special issue of the defendant’s responsibility raised by the plea of insanity.

While the appeal involves a consideration in detail of the weight and sufficiency of evidence we were not for some reason aided by any oral argument of counsel for the defendant. We doubt not, however, that our personal examination of the record, aided in some degree by the printed brief, has defined all of the questions available to the defendant upon this appeal and suggested all of the arguments to be made thereon in his behalf.

Assuming for the present that he was responsible for his acts, we entertain no doubt that the testimony very conclusively proved that he was guilty of the crime of which he has been convicted.

Witnesses who seem to have been reputable, and with the exception of a brother of the deceased, who gave cumulative evidence upon minor points, entirely disinterested, by their uncontradicted testimony fully established amongst others the following facts:

The defendant, who was a colored man, and the deceased, *180 who apparently also was a colored man, for some time had been acquainted and fellow-employees in a livery stable in the village of Hempstead. During the forenoon of the day of the alleged murder the two men became involved in an altercation. In the afternoon the defendant purchased a revolver and cartridges, and subsequently on being asked who had struck him, replied, “Bunn,” and then showing a revolver, said, “I will fix him.” Later, although not on duty that day, he went to the livery stable where he and the deceased were employed, and subsequently another person in the stable hearing a pistol shot looked out and saw the defendant with a revolver in his hand pointed toward the feet of Bunn, who was standing some little distance away and facing him. When this person asked, “Jones, what are you doing?” the latter replied, “I dare you to come here, too.” . This witness then fled, and, as he was fleeing, heard a second pistol shot from the direction where the men were, and when he returned in 15 or 20 minutes found Bunn lying on the ground either then dead or shortly thereafter dying as the result of a pistol shot received in the breast. The defendant forthwith fled, and that evening was seen getting off a car at .Queens. At first, when questioned by a police officer, who apparently was on the lookout for him under a police alarm, he denied his identity and former whereabouts, giving a fictitious name and a false account of his movements. Subsequently, however, he admitted to this officer his identity, and that he had shot the deceased, claiming first as the reason therefor some grudge and afterwards giving the explanation of a fight. He also admitted the ownership, and identity of the revolver and cartridges which he had left in the toilet room of a hotel at Queens. The defendant again to this same witness on the following day repeated the claim of a grudge as the explanation of his killing the deceased, and he also admitted to other witnesses that he had shot the deceased, the admission in one case being coupled with the claim that he had to defend himself as the latter had a razor, there being, *181 however, no other evidence of the possession by the deceased of any such weapon. In addition to the general trend of the evidence -as bearing upon that subject, it specifically appeared that the defendant within a few hours both before and after the alleged murder seemed to be entirely normal and self-possessed.

The statement of the undisputed facts thus testified to by the witnesses for the prosecution carries with it its own argument. In our judgment the jury were entirely justified in believing the evidence which was presented to them in behalf of the People on this branch of the case, and thus believing it and barring the special defense of insanity, they not only were warranted in reaching the conclusion which they did as to the guilt of the defendant, but practically were prohibited from taking any other rational view. The motive of revenge was present in the defendant’s mind; he deliberately prepared to satisfy this motive by purchasing a revolver and cartridges, and he expressly indicated his purpose to satisfy it by his statement of an intent to’ “fix” the deceased; his attitude as doscribed'by the witness Jackson in facing the deceased with a revolver in his hand and the interval which occurred between the first shot, which was apparently harmless, and the second shot, which was fatal, his flight and his subsequent confessions and acts establish that he deliberately and remorselessly carried out his purpose.

But it was pleaded on the trial and is now urged that the defendant was insane and, therefore, not to be charged with legal responsibility for these acts which in the ordinary person would import the highest degree of criminal intent, and on the trial his counsel endeavored to elicit some evidence in sup- , port of this plea. His efforts were very unsuccessful. In view of his lack of success in securing the admission of evidence, we have studied all the more carefully not only the evidence which was admitted but also that which was stricken out and even the suggestions of counsel about what he thought *182 he might be allowed to prove, for the purpose of determining not only whether this defense was established, but also whether there seemed to be any reasonable possibility of its being established on another trial. This study of the record, however, fails to disclose any such evidence or probability of evidence as requires a reversal of the judgment on this question.

The most important testimony on behalf of the defendant was given by a sister, and her evidence as well as that of other witnesses from whom the counsel succeeded in eliciting any testimony was to the effect that the defendant on various occasions, entirely or mostly occurring some time before the homicide, made apparently unprovoked assaults on members of his family and others, and that on such occasions especially his appearance was excited and abnormal, frequent reference being made in his sister’s testimony to his “glary and stary eyes.” A physician gave an account of an examination made of the defendant at the time of the trial, but aside from the-witness’ conclusion that the defendant was suffering from loss of memory, a symptom which, even if present, was manifestly a thing of easy simulation, there is scarcely anything in his history of the examination calculated even to attract attention in a consideration of the present question. Lastly, two experts on hypothetical questions, embracing facts testified to by the sister and other lay witnesses, expressed -a, rather inconclusive opinion that the defendant was or might be insane.

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People v. Jones
115 N.Y.S. 800 (New York Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 810, 194 N.Y. 83, 23 N.Y. Crim. 178, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jones-ny-1909.