People v. Lagroppo

90 A.D. 219, 18 N.Y. Crim. 75, 86 N.Y.S. 116
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 A.D. 219 (People v. Lagroppo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Lagroppo, 90 A.D. 219, 18 N.Y. Crim. 75, 86 N.Y.S. 116 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

It is claimed on behalf of the People that on the 30th day of May, 1902, at about half-past five o’clock in the afternoon Antonio [221]*221Avocato came to his death from wounds inflicted upon his person by the defendant. While there is considerable contradiction in the testimony, yet upon all of the essential features of the case there is little conflict. It was made to appear upon the part of the People that a short time prior to the infliction of the wounds there had been a dispute between the deceased and Antonio Lagroppoj a brother of the defendant, over a game of ball, which the deceased and the three Lagroppo brothers, Luigi, Antonio and Domenico, had been playing in the yard in the rear of premises at 319 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street in the borough of Manhattan. In the course of the dispute Antonio felled the deceased with a blow in his face. The deceased arose and came out into One Hundred and Fifteenth street by passing through the hallway of Ho. 319. As he came out of the hall he was seen by several witnesses running down the street with the three Lagroppo brothers in pursuit, the defendant being first, with Domenico and Antonio second and third respectively. The deceased ran about 100 feet, when the defendant overtook him. What then occurred is the subject of considerable contradictory testimony. There is,, however, no dispute but that at • this place and at the hands of one, or all, of the three brothers, Avocato received the wounds from which he subsequently died. Some of the witnesses testified that when the defendant overtook Avocato, he seized him by the collar, stabbed him and then fell upon him; that the other two brothers fell 'or jumped on top of the men who were down. Other witnesses state that Avocato stumbled and fell; that the defendant threw himself upon him, Was seen to strike him, and that Domenico came with a long stiletto and was seen to strike with that, after he had thrown himself upon the prostrate men. Within a few seconds after the fall the men arose from the street, and it was found that Avocato had received wounds from which he thereafter died. It was also found that the defendant had received two stab wounds, one in each arm near the shoulder. It is testified to by all of the witnesses that the pursuit of Avocato by the three brothers in the street took place. It was claimed, however, that Avocato was the aggressor and that he struck the defendant in the hallway with a knife, inflicting the wounds upon his arms; that he then ran and was pursued by the three brothers, and that the defendant was in the lead. Some of the witnesses testified that, when he was in [222]*222pursuit, the defendant had a knife in his hand; others that he had no knife, but that it was Domenico who had the knife and who did the stabbing; and the defense relied upon the latter statements to acquit the defendant, claiming that there was no proof which would warrant a finding that the wounds were inflicted by the defendant, but that whatever injury was done was done by Domenico. Shortly after the affray, officers found the defendant in a room occupied by him at 321 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street. He was partly undressed, and rags were tied around his wounds. When questioned as to the occurrence and how he got his injuries, he stated that he wás trying to separate the combatants in a fight in which his brothers were engaged and that one of his brothers had stabbed him. A similar declaration was also testified to by a witness, who saw the defendant upon the street immediately after the affray.- One of the police officers subsequently found a knife under a starch box upon the, fire escape of the next house. It was produced upon the trial and was claimed by the People to have been identified as a knife belonging to the defendant, and that the wounds upon Avocato were of such a character as could have been inflicted with this knife. The two brothers Domenico and Antonio escaped and have never been arrested.

There is a distinct hiatus in the proof as to what became of Ayocato immediately after the wounds were inflicted. Two witnesses testified that he got up from the street and went to a drug store at One Hundred and Fifteenth street and First avenue. Of what occurred in the drug store there is no proof. Where Avocato was thereafter taken does not appear. The next that is testified concerning him comes from Elmer B. Dixon, a police officer, who states that some time on the thirtieth day of May, the hour of which he does not give, he saw “the deceased; the dead man” when he was in the station house; that he found the ambulance at the door of the station house; that he jumped on behind with Officer Hollaban and they were driven up to 321 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street. Whether the body was in the police station or in the ambulance, or what was done with it, nowhere appears. The next information of the whereabouts of the body is that it was in the morgue at the foot of East Twenty-sixth street in the city and county of Hew York. How it got there is not disclosed. By reason of this failure to produce evi[223]*223dence, counsel for the appellant is enabled to- address this, court in serious argument that the proof is insufficient in identification of the body found at the morgue with Antonio Avocato, who was stabbed in the affray. The argument is clearly justified from the state of the record in this respect. ' The defendant was indicted for the crime of murder in the first degree; it, therefore, became incumbent upon the People to establish by direct evidence the corpus delicti. It is made up of two component parts — death as the result and the criminal agency of another as the means. One of these component parts must be established by direct proof. One being established by such proof, the other can be made out by circumstantial evidence. (Ruloff v. People, 18 N. Y. 179; People v. Bennett, 49 id. 137.)

It appeared that wounds were inflicted upon Avocato at the time of the affray, yet it did not appear what the specific nature and character of those wounds were, or whether they were sufficient to produce death. All the proof upon that subject is that Avocato was stabbed in the body; that when the persons removed themselves from his body he rose to his feet and walked away, whether with or without assistance does not clearly appear. As to where or when he died there is not a syllable of proof. We do not find it necessary in view of the disposition which we make of the questions presented by this appeal to determine whether the direct testimony is sufficient to show that death resulted from the criminal act of the defendant committed at the time of the affray. There is some direct evidence to establish such fact. Upon this subject, however, we express no opinion.

The People to sustain this judgment rely upon the sufficiency of the proof to establish that the body found at the morgue was the dead body of Avocato, who was wounded in the affray The proof upon this subject is given by Joseph Trapani, an undertaker, who, it is claimed by the People, buried the body of Avocato. He testified that he had known Antonio Avocato three or four years before the 30th of May, 1902; that he saw him on the morning of that day; that he next received an order from his wife to bury the body; but could not remember whether he received the order on the first of June. Thereupon he went to the coroner and obtained a permit to remove the body, which he called that of Antonio Avo[224]*224cato, to his home, 2131 First avenue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.D. 219, 18 N.Y. Crim. 75, 86 N.Y.S. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lagroppo-nyappdiv-1904.