People v. Lewis

282 A.D. 267, 123 N.Y.S.2d 81
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 282 A.D. 267 (People v. Lewis) 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. Lewis, 282 A.D. 267, 123 N.Y.S.2d 81 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Bergan, J.

The indictment in a few words accuses defendant of manslaughter in the first degree. It charges that on January 14,1951, in “ the heat of passion ” he shot and killed Alice Bose McKittrick with a revolver. It negatives justification or excuse for the described homicide.

Defendant was the owner of a rooming house and grill in Schenectady. The proof on the trial indicates he had been intimate with the deceased woman and the homicide occurred in an apartment in defendant’s premises. The jury could readily have found that defendant and deceased had a dispute just before the shooting and that defendant fired five shots from a revolver. Four bullets had entered the body of deceased; one had missed her.

On the question of the number of shots; the use of the pistol by defendant to shoot the deceased; and the shooting itself as a cause of her death, the proof is very strong. This proof consists of an admission by defendant to the act of homicide made to police immediately thereafter; a full proof by the medical examiner to entry of bullets into the body as a cause of death; on physical production of the gun, the exploded chambers, and the recovery of some, of the bullets from the body.

Indeed, when the record is considered as a whole, the homicide is admitted without dispute by defendant’s own testimony on the trial in which he related in detail the shooting by him of the deceased, but justified it on his own fear of an attack by her.

Defendant’s explanation of events, expressed with a pretty fair consistency both in his statement to the police immediately after the crime and in his testimony on the trial, was that the deceased made accusations of infidelity against defendant; told defendant several times she was going to kill him; and taking a small baseball bat in one hand and defendant’s own straight, razor in the other, started toward him. He was then, he said, lying on a bed and when the deceased got to a place in front of the foot of the bed defendant took a revolver from within a [269]*269dressing gown he wore and began shooting, continuing until he had fired five shots.

From this it is argued by appellant that the record would not have justified an affirmative finding by the jury on one element essential to the crime of manslaughter first degree, i.e., that it was committed in “ the heat of passion ”. If all the proof is taken in an aspect most favorable to the People, the argument proceeds, it might justify the finding of an unexcused homicide with a dangerous weapon, but not homicide in the heat of passion.

The conclusion is pressed on us from this reasoning that since heat of passion is a state of mind manifested by some physical action, there is no proof in this record to warrant the jury in finding this shooting was thus actuated. The only proof on either the actual state of mind of the defendant or on his actions from which his state of mind could be inferred, it is argued, is his own account of events and to the extent this shows a state of mind it shows fear, but that even if the jury rejected the fear there would still be no basis for finding the homicide was in the heat of passion whatever might be said of it. From this argument appellant suggests that the crime charged has not been proved.

The * in the heat of passion ’ ’ language which the Legislature used in defining the crime of manslaughter first degree in one of its forms (Penal Law, § 1050, subd. 2) must be read with the contextual language describing types of homicide of greater magnitude in the same statute (art. 94). It is the “ deliberate and premeditated design ” to kill which makes out murder in the first degree in one of its forms. (§ 1044, subd. 1.)^ By long and consistent judicial definition juries were instructed that a homicide in the heat of passion was not to be deemed deliberate and premeditated in design.

The consistency of the pattern is to be observed as we descend the scale in severity. The “ design ” to cause the death, but the absence of deliberation and premeditation becomes murder in the second degree (§ 1046). The absence of all three, design, premeditation, and deliberation, but the presence of heat of passion ”, becomes one form of manslaughter first degree:

The words “ in the heat of passion ” do not necessarily require the manifestation of a violent rage. It is principally a state of mind in which there is an absence of design to cause death and an absence of a deliberate implementation of such a design. The words seem to us to be used in the sense of a sudden urge and in the sense of spontaneous action. The pattern [270]*270of legislative intent is. to be seen by continuing down the scale of homicide to read, as one definition of manslaughter in the second degree, a homicide “ in the heat of passion ” but without the dangerous weapon (§ 1052, subd. 2). One by one the components which in the beginning went to define murder are seen to have been eliminated.

All this becomes somewhat clearer when one turns to the cases which have been addressed to the subject. In 1859 the Albany General Term had before it an appeal from a conviction had for murder in the first degree at the Oyer and Terminer for Albany County. (Wilson v. People, 4 Parker Cr. Rep. 619.) Defendant and deceased were canal men; they had had an argument over the movement of their respective canal boats at Waterford and the proof was that defendant had seized an ax or hatchet, striking the deceased on the head; that he fell into the river, and due to the effects of the blow he drowned although defendant tried to rescue him.

At Oyer and Terminer defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree, but the General Term reversed. The court addressed itself to the “heat of passion” provision of the statute and it regarded the instructions of the trial judge on the subject pursuant to which the jury had reached the higher form of homicide, as erroneous (pp. 646, 647).

The trial judge had charged that the ‘ ‘ heat of passion ’ ’ homicide meant a reciprocated quarrel in which the person killed is immediately concerned and “ not all on one side ”. But the General Term felt that the acts, and even the words alone, of the decedent could arouse the mind of the accused to the “ heat of passion ” which the jury could have considered in the facts of that case as warranting a lesser degree of homicide than murder. Thus it is to be seen that a quarrel between the accused and the deceased was not necessary to justify finding the homicide in the * ‘ heat of passion ’ ’. That it could be aroused by mere talk or irritation was the necessary result of the reversal at General Term.

In People v. Risico (191 App. Div. 355 [1920]), defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and in the charge to the jury the court defined manslaughter in the first degree, but omitted to include in his definition that it was committed “ in the heat of passion ”. The judgment was affirmed, and Black-mar, J., was of opinion that the “ heat of passion ” expression was inserted in the statute ‘ ‘ as the expression of a condition of mind which prevents the inference of an intent to kill from the [271]*271use of a dangerous weapon ” (p. 358). The omission in the charge was not felt to be harmful to defendant because it would have permitted in that case the finding of manslaughter, a lower degree of crime, without finding that the homicide was in the heat of passion.

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Bluebook (online)
282 A.D. 267, 123 N.Y.S.2d 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lewis-nyappdiv-1953.