People v. Lamb

2 Abb. Pr. 148, 2 Keyes 360
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 Abb. Pr. 148 (People v. Lamb) 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. Lamb, 2 Abb. Pr. 148, 2 Keyes 360 (N.Y. 1866).

Opinion

Davies, Ch. J.

The prisoner was indicted and convicted in the Hew York General Sessions for the murder of his wife, Joanna Lamb. The prisoner and his wife occupied a room in Sixth avenue, in that city, and at the time of the homicide there were present in the room the prisoner and his wife, Ann Kennedy, Mary Riley, Bridget Curtis, and a little girl named Joanna Clifford, who was the daughter of the deceased by a former husband, and then aged about eight years. The prisoner and his wife, according to the testimony of Kennedy, came together into the room about six or seven o’clock in the evening. The first thing the witness observed was that the prisoner applied a vile epithet to the deceased, and then made at her with his fist. The prisoner was prevented from assaulting his wife by the witness and another woman, or rather the assault intended for her was inflicted upon the witness. The prisoner then took a stick and attempted to hit his wife, but was prevented by the woman Riley. He then struck the deceased with his fist; soon the prisoner had a knife in his hand. The witness then left the room to procure some water for the deceased, which she said she wanted, and on her return she met the prisoner going out; he passed her. She found the deceased in the room, all covered with blood. Mary Riley, the little girl, and Bridget Curtis were there in the room with deceased. She testified that at this time the deceased made no attempt to strike the prisoner. She identified the knife as that of the prisoner, and there was no question made but that the prisoner inflicted the fatal wound, of which the deceased died. Mary Riley testified that the deceased came in about two minutes before the prisoner, and her statement of what occurred up to the time Ann Kennedy left the room was similar to that made by her. The prisoner, according to the witnesses’ statements, got his two hands on her chest and pitched her over against the bed, and she fell between the bed and the stove; when she arose the deceased was bleeding, and the witness said to the prisoner, “You murderer, you killed your wife.” .He made no reply, but stooped down, tied his shoes and walked out. She [150]*150also testified that the deceased did not go near the prisoner at all, but he ran at her. On this night she never saw the deceased raise hand or foot against the prisoner. Bridget Curtis, the other person present in the room, as testified to by the other witnesses, was in bed, and she says asleep, and the noise of the tussle awoke her. When she awoke the deceased was bleeding, lying on the floor. The prisoner was then in the room, and did not remain, but went out.

Joanna Clifford, the other person present, testified to the same facts as the other witnesses, as to the conduct of the prisoner, and Ms assault of the deceased; and added that after he knocked Mrs. Riley down he came alongside of the deceased and stabbed her in the neck with a black-handled pocket knife; he stabbed her once; the witness was sitting on her lap at the time he stabbed the deceased.

For the defence, Mary Driscol was called, who testified that she was in this room on the evening of the homicide, and that the prisoner went out and as he went out, the deceased then flung the lid of an iron kettle after him at the door, and he came back and made a blow at her with Ms hands. She after-wards testified, that at the time she threw the lid at him, he came back in fifteen minutes and sat in the chair. The little girl, Joanna Clifford, testified that she went for officer O’Day, and he testified that when he went to the prisoner’s he found Ann Kennedy, Mrs. Riley, and Bridget Curtis there, and the little girl was there. He also testified that he did not see Mary Driscol there, and Ann Kennedy and Mary Riley both swear that Mary Driscol was not there that evening. And the same inference may be drawn from the testimony of Bridget Curtis and the little girl Joanna. I think the jury might have been warranted in finding that Mary Driscol was not present at the time of the homicide ; and even if she was, that her testimony as to any provocation having been offered by the deceased, or any assault made upon the prisoner by her, or any attempted or threatened, was wholly unsupported by any evidence, or any corroborating circumstances. The jury might well say there was not a scintilla of evidence to sustain the theory of the prisoner’s defence : namely: that when the prisoner struck the blows, which caused her death, he had reasonable ground to apprehend a design on the part of his wife to do him some great [151]*151personal injury or bodily harm, and that therefore, he believed there was imminent danger of such design being accomplished.

I cannot discover, from a very careful examination of the testimony in this case, any ground upon which such theory rests. Assuming, for the sake of the argument, that Mary Driscol was present at the time of the occurrence, and that her statement of what transpired is to be credited, then this defence is equally baseless. For, according to this statement, the only ground he had to apprehend a design on the part of his wife to do him some great personal injury or bodily harm, and from which he could believe there was imminent danger of such design being-accomplished, was the circumstance, that as he was leaving the room in which the deceased was, she threw the lid of an iron kettle after him at the door. Now there was no evidence that he knew or saw this thing thrown after him, but the strong inference is that he knew nothing about it. He was going out of the room, and it was flung after him, at the door; or as I understand it, as he was passing out the door. There is no evidence it attracted his attention in any way, or that it hit him, or came near hitting him. It was not a weapon, in the hands of a woman, thus thrown, of a very deadly character, or if he had seen it or known of its being thrown, much calculated to excite an apprehension in his mind that his wife intended to do him some great personal injury or bodily harm. As it does not appear that he knew anything about it, it is an obvious and material inference that no such apprehension was excited or had any existence. Again, this occurrence was at least, according to Mary Driscol’s statement, fifteen minutes before the altercation aróse in which he inflicted the fatal wound upon the deceased. During that period he had sufficient time to cool; and as no renewed attempt was made, either by threats or acts, to inflict any injury upon him, it is not seen how this circumstance can be invoked to aid the prisoner in establishing the existence of any such apprehension at the time of the homicide. It cannot be pretended that any previous apprehension can afford any justification. It must be an apprehension existing at the time the prisoner struck the blow.

It becomes now necessary to examine-the particular evidence offered by the counsel for the prisoner, and excluded. The prisoner called a witness, not present at the time of the homi[152]*152cide, to speak of the general character of the deceased. Good character on the part of the prisoner has always been admitted, as it tends, when established, strongly to show that the accused could not have been guilty of the crime charged; and such good character is a leading element in establishing the innocence of the party accused. But it is certainly novel, in the administration of criminal justice, that the bad general character of the person slain can either tend to show that the party charged is not guilty of the homicide, or in any sense mitigate the crime of taking life.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Abb. Pr. 148, 2 Keyes 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lamb-ny-1866.