People v. . Kinney

95 N.E. 756, 202 N.Y. 389, 26 N.Y. Crim. 143, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1027
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 N.E. 756 (People v. . Kinney) 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. . Kinney, 95 N.E. 756, 202 N.Y. 389, 26 N.Y. Crim. 143, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1027 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinions

Hiscock, J.:

The appellant has been cenvicted of murder in the first degree for the alleged killing of one Bouvia at a small hamlet called Jericho, in the county of Clinton, December 29, 1909.

The theory of the prosecution, and in accordance with which the appellant must have been found guilty, was and is that the latter arose very early on the morning of the day in question, *146 went some distance to the house where the deceased lived alone in a sparsely-settled locality, laid in wait and shot him as he came out of his house, thereafter dragged the dead body back .into the house, procured the money which furnished the motive for the crime, locked the house and went away. The crime was not discovered until three or four days thereafter, when the apjpellant was promptly charged therewith and arrested.

There were no eye-witnesses of the crime, but the testimony offered by the People consisted of alleged confessions and of various items of circumstantial evidence. The legitimate evidence which was offered and received was quite sufficient to .-sustain the judgment of conviction if the trial had been fairly -conducted. We find, however, that substantial errors were committed of a nature calculated seriously to affect the rights of the appellant, and which, therefore, we are unwilling to disregard. Some of the alleged errors are so inconsequential and so "unlikely to arise on another trial that I shall not discuss them, referring simply to those which are more important and which might be repeated.

As I have said, the alleged motive for the murder was that .of robbery, and it, therefore, became important for the People to show that the deceased had money, that the appellant knew .of it, and, if possible, to identify some of the bills found on appellant after the murder with those earlier in the possession of the deceased.

One Spinks was allowed to testify to a conversation occurring with the deceased on the day before the homicide, when the appellant was not present, tending to show that the former had money in his possession. Of course, this evidence was .absolutely incompetent, and while the presence of other testimony tending to show the same fact might be made an excuse for overlooking this error if it were the only one, such situation made it all the less excusable to crowd in objectionable testimony.

*147 One Trudeau, called by the People, testified that nearly a. month before the homicide he paid to the deceased certain bills-which corresponded with those possessed by appellant after the homicide. This evidence manifestly was of substantial importance. The witness was subjected to an ordinary cross-examination in the attempt to impeach his memory as to the denomination of the bills, and, therefore, the reliability of his testimony. Thereupon, on the re-direct examination, the court allowed in evidence in corroboration of him an affidavit made by him several days after the homicide in proceedings in no wise connected with appellant that he had made to the deceased the payment of bills detailed in the direct examination. It is sufficient to state somewhat dogmatically that this evidence was utterly incompetent for this is so baldly the law that there is no chance for debate or discussion. It is doubtless true that there are some very exceptional circumstances under which the evidence of a witness may be corroborated and relieved from suspicion by proving something which he had said or done on a prior occasion. But those few cases are so wholly dissimilar from this one that there is no opportunity to find any similarity which would make them a precedent or authority for what was done on this trial.

On the day of appellant’s arrest and some considerable time thereafter he was taken to the office of the chief of police in the -courthouse. There was in the building a toilet room which was never locked, which was used by all the people occupying the building and was also accessible to so much of the public as frequented the building, and this must have included a large number of people inasmuch as there were various court rooms therein. A deputy sheriff testified that a few moments after the appellant had visited this room he found stuck between a pipe and the wall in plain sight a hunch of keys. A bunch of keys more or less satisfactorily identified as the one thus found, w"3 produced upon the trial and received in evidence over the " - *148 pellant’s objection. It was testified in connection therewith that three of the six keys thus found unlocked doors in the house occupied by the deceased at the time of the homicide, some of them at least outside doors. There was not the slightest bit of proof to connect appellant with the possession of the keys except, the mere fact that they had been found in a public toilet room a short time after he had been there. I regard this evidence as one of the most damning pieces of testimony found in the People’s case, and if it was incompetent its admission was certainly a grievous error.

As I said at the commencement, the body of the deceased after he had been presumably killed on the outside, was dragged back into the house and the doors locked. The presence on .this ; bunch of three keys out of six which fitted doors in the small house where deceased lived established an apparent relationship between the keys and the house too unusual to be readily overlooked as a mere coincidence. If then the jury found, as they were permitted to, that appellant had these keys in his possession after the homicide, they could scarcely fail to draw the plain conclusion that he it was who had locked up the doors after the deceased had been murdered and dragged back into the house. After this there would be little need for the People to go further in their line of proof. Scant room was left for the play of any uncertainty or speculation with the inquiry who it was that was busily engaged around the scene of the murder immediately after the victim had been killed. So then we come to the question whether this evidence was made competent. Clearly it was not. We have the sole facts that the appellant had been in a public and much-frequented toilet room, and that thereafter a bunch of keys was found there in plain sight where any one might have placed them. For all that is disclosed they may have been there for three or four days before the appellant was arrested. Hot only might some one else have placed them there but the appellant during the day had *149 lad opportunities for getting rid of the keys if they were actually in his possession. I do not lose sight of the fact that a brutal murder had been committed apparently from the meanest motives, and that in the interest of justice the People should be allowed to introduce any evidence which legally served to fix the identity of the murderer. If there had been anything which logically and fairly tended to connect the appellant with the deposit of these keys where they were found, it would have been the duty of the trial court to receive them and of this court to affirm such action. It was not indispensable to show by direct testimony their possession by him before they were found or to establish conclusively that they were not present in the toilet room the very last moment before he went in there.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.E. 756, 202 N.Y. 389, 26 N.Y. Crim. 143, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kinney-ny-1911.