People v. . Kemmler

24 N.E. 9, 119 N.Y. 580, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 198, 74 Sickels 580, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1126
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 9 (People v. . Kemmler) 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. . Kemmler, 24 N.E. 9, 119 N.Y. 580, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 198, 74 Sickels 580, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1126 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

(Tray, J.

The defendant was indicted for the killing of Matilda Ziegler and, after a trial at the Erie county Court of Oyer and Terminer, he was found guilty of murder in the first degree. He was thereupon sentenced to suffer the punishment of death, to be inflicted by the application of electricity, as provided by the Code of Criminal Procedure. The killing by the defendant was conclusively proved. Ho attempt was even made to dispute that fact, as established by his admissions to several persons and by the circumstantial proof; but the defense relied upon was the mental irresponsibility of the prisoner, which was attempted to be shown to be the result of the effect of the habitual use of alcoholic stimulants, and of hereditary taints of drunkenness in the father and of consumption in the mother. The deceased was the paramour of the defendant. They had eloped from Philadelphia, where she had left her husband and he his wife. They were residing together in Buffalo, and the deceased came to her death as the result of repeated blows upon her head and body from a hatchet in the defendant’s hands. Ho justification, or excuse, for the act of killing was attempted by him, and in the brief of his counsel none is offered. We are led by the evidence to infer that jealousy of the deceased and domestic broils, stimulated, *582 I should judge, by his constant drunkenness, furnished the motive for this brutal crime. But whether we can attribute the commission of the act to some certain motive, or mot, is wholly immaterial. The fact of the deliberate killing and the absence of any palliative proofs leave the defendant liable for the legal consequences of his acts; unless from the evidence it could be found that his mind was so enfeebled as to render him an irresponsible member of human society. A consideration of the case leaves the mind unembarassed in reaching the conclusion that the defendant was possessed of sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature of his act and to distinguish right from wrong.

The record before us discloses the commission of the crime early in the morning of March 29, 1888. The defendant, under the assumed name of John Hort, was a huckster of market produce, and had a wagon which he kept in a barn in the rear of his residence. Upon that morning he was about the barn, giving orders to his employes and attending to his horses and to various matters. He was quite sober, and presented no unusual appearance. The deceased came out from the house to the barn and asked for some eggs, which defendant got for her from his wagon. He went into the house after her and then attacked her by blows of a hatchet; the noise of which was heard by some of the witnesses, and by one witness in an adjoining room, in addition to the hacking noise, was heard the scream'of the woman. The defendant was then seen coming out of the house, wiping blood from his hands. The woman was found upon her arms and knees on the floor, swaying to and fro, with blood upon and about her. She was removed to a hospital and the next, day died from the wounds she had received upon her head, which counted over twenty in number. The defendant, tO' inquiries from persons who saw him immediately after the occurrence, said he had killed her and would “ take the rope for it; ” or, “ I want to hang, I want the rope.”

The evidence shows that the defendant and deceased had, at, times, quarreled, because of his drinking, and she had threat *583 ened to return to Philadelphia. A man, named DeBella, was employed by defendant in his business and was on intimate terms with him and the deceased, in the sense of being an inmate of the family and a companion in the defendant’s carouses. It was testified that the defendant, subsequently to the murder, said that he was jealous of DeBella, and he may have questioned the relations between his wife and him.

Many witnesses were examined by his counsel with respect to the defendant’s habits of life, and one, a medical expert, gave his testimony as to the effects of the continued use of alcohol upon the human system. As to the first class of witnesses, their evidence amounted to nothing more than to establish the fact that the defendant was a hard and habitual drinker and was frequently intoxicated. These witnesses were mostly the companions of his sprees, or the witnesses of his drunken debauches. The medical witness had examined the prisoner in the morning before he gave his evidence and his opinion was that he was a man of weak intellect, of imperfect brain development and more or less incapacitated to appreciate what transpires before him. These conditions, he thought, were indicated by the prisoner’s physical appearance and the conversation he had with him. He also, upon a hypothetical question, gave evidence that such a mind would be unsound and incapable of discriminating "as to the quality of his act. But the hypothetical question did not state the exact case of the prisoner, as developed by all of the evidence respecting his life and habits and by those circumstances which give truthful color and semblance to human life and conduct. It dealt with probabilities and not with realities. Expert evidence is only, it seems to me, entitled to much importance in arriving at a judgment, when fairly given by one properly accredited to give it, through his experience, study and scientific eminence, and upon a hypothesis which shall be true in the relation of its parts to the whole case which is the subject of inquiry. The frequent spectacle of scientific experts differing in their opinions upon a case, according to the side upon which retained, tends much to discredit such testimony, or to impair its force and useful *584 ness, and inclines us to prefer the formation of an opinion upon the real facts, when the case is not one beyond the penetration and grasp of the ordinary mind. Here we have, as against this expert’s evidence for the prisoner, that of two physicians, more or less qualified to pronounce upon the question of insanity from the physical appearance of the subject, to the effect that there was nothing in the prisoner’s physical make-up, upon which an opinion of the prisoner’s unsoundness of mind could be based. They expressed the opinion that he was able to distinguish between right and wrong and that his conduct, on the fatal morning, and subsequently, displayed a consciousness of the nature and quality of his act. But, beyond that kind of evidence, we have ample testimony of a more satisfactory kind, from those who knew him and who were constantly in the habit of seeing and of transacting business with him. From that evidence the defendant appears to have had a sufficient amount of intelligence and sagacity to conduct his business affairs with a measurable degree of success. All the facts respecting his habits of life, the conduct of his affairs, his appearance and actions before, at the time of and subsequent to the com-1 mission of the criminal act, were before the jury and we cannot say that there was any absolute, or positive, or preponderating evidence of unsoundness, or enfeeblement, of mind to warrant our interfering with the verdict.

We are asked to review some exceptions. It was argued that the court erred in permitting the testimony of witnesses as to the quarrels between the defendant and deceased; as to conversations between them, and as to statements of the defendant to others in relation to the desire of the deceased to return to Philadelphia.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 9, 119 N.Y. 580, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 198, 74 Sickels 580, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kemmler-ny-1890.