People v. Lumsden

141 A.D. 158, 25 N.Y. Crim. 219, 125 N.Y.S. 1079, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3836
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 141 A.D. 158 (People v. Lumsden) 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. Lumsden, 141 A.D. 158, 25 N.Y. Crim. 219, 125 N.Y.S. 1079, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3836 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Clarke, J.:

The appellant was indicted for murder in the first degree for shooting one Harry B. Suydam with a pistol on December 19,1908. Two shots were fired, causing a perforating wound in each breast, from the effect of which Suydam died on 'the twenty-first. Appellant was thirty-one years of age. He had lived for thirty years in Raleigh, F. 0., and Birmingham, Ala. He had been a player in an orchéstra and had served in the Spanish war ás a private and as a member of the band in the First Forth Carolina Yolunteer Infantry. He had invented a “ massage vibrator,” although the patents had not been issued therefor.

In April, 1908, he was introduced to Suydam, who was a curb broker in the city of Few York, by one Jacob, with whom he was having negotiations in connection with this invention. A corporation was formed under the laws of the State of Few Jersey of which, at first, the appellant was made president and Jacob the treasurer. Thereafter he resigned and Jacob was made president and Suydam treasurer. Appellant assigned his rights under the patent applied for to the company. On or about June 22, 1908, he delivered to Jacob and Suydam 750 shares of his stock in the corporation for the purpose of being used as collateral for a loan and received therefor demand notes signed by Jacob for $650, the agreement being that $1,250 should be borrowed, from which he was to be paid $650, the balance to be used in the business of the company.

The appellant stated that the loan was negotiated, but that he was not paid the sum due on said notes. He demanded payment several times, threatened to take the matter to the district attorney and to the manager of the Curb, and began a suit in the Municipal Court. After the service of the summons he saw, Suydam on or about October 10, 1908, told him that he had seen several people in trying to straighten out the company and had failed to do so. “ Suydam said, c I see you have brought that action.’ 1 said, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘ Well,- you stand a hell of a chance of getting á judgment.’ [160]*160Tsaid, ‘'I..WÍ11 see the district attorney if it becomes necessary and in any • event I will collect iny money.’ " Suydam said, ‘ If you ever come around here again with those notes you will get yourself in one hell of a fix.’ ”

On Thursday, December -seventeenth, he borrowed a ■ revolver from a friend, telling him that he was going down to Broad street to meet a man who' owed him money and he had made several threats. His own .revolver was then in pawn, and he did not-have the two dollars and eighty cents necessary to redeem it. On Friday morning he.took out pf his trunk a box of 'cartridges which he' said he had procured some time before ,in Birmingham, Ala., which fitted the borrowed pistol as well as his own;. loaded the five chambers of the revolver and put seven loose cartridges in his vest pocket. He wrote oh said day two letters, one to a savings bank in Raleigh : “I enclose $50.75 in payment of note, due January 15,-1909, with interest,” and .the other to a national bánk at the same place, “ enclosed find money order for $400 in payment, of note which falls due on January 7,1909.” • These'letters were found on him after the homicide, and he testified that he had no funds with which to meet those notes,' and that he wrote the letters expecting to get the money from Suydam, place.it in the letters and send it to the banks. On Saturday morning, December nineteenth, he went to Suyd'am’s' office,. which, was located on the first floor of No. 39 Broad- street, overlooking the curb market on said street, at about ten minutes of ten.

There, were present in the office at the time Mr. Collins, a man sixtyfoiir years of age/whose only connection with Suydam was that he rented him desk room; Meyér, an office boy of seventeen years of age, and Downs, Süydam’s.clerk, a young man twenty-five years of age. Suydam'.sat at his desk at the window in the front of the office.. As appellant came in Suydam turned round'in his chair and bade him “ Good morning.” Appellant answered, “ Good morning.” Suydam asked him if he would have a seat. He replied: “ I don’t wish to sit-; I wish to speak to you a minute outside.”

The two immediately stepped into the hall and had five minutes’ conversation. For what occurred there we only have appellant’s tesimony. He said he showed Suydam the notes and asked him, for the money.. “I did .not tell him that! had written those letters.- * * . * I did not tell him I had to have the money. I made no [161]*161statement whatever to him as to my pecuniary condition or that I needed the money. * *' * Q. And of course you made no threats against him ? A. No, sir. I told him that if he did not pay I would go to the district attorney. That was the only threat I made. * * * Q. Did-you tell him you had a revolver ?'■ A. I told him I was prepared in case he attempted to do anything. At the time that I made this statement to him he had said, ‘Yon .remember what I 'told y ou the last, time you were down here ? ’ And that was, that I would be in a hell of a fix. He did not say whether that would.be a legal fix, financial fix, or what kind of fix. Q. And all he said to you then was to remember what he last said to you ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And yon told him that you were prepared? A. Yes, sir. Q. What were you prepared for ? A. I was prepared to protect myself in case I was attacked. I had no reason to believe I was going to be attacked, except as I have stated to this jury. I didn’t know' whether or not Suydam was armed. To the best of my knowledge and belief, he was not. To the best, of my knowledge .and belief Meyer, Collins and Downs were- not armed- * * -x- y not tell Suydam in. the hall that I had a revolver in my pocket, and did not show it to him while, there. I followed him back into the office. It was outside in the hall that he told me lie would pay me the money when the market opened. * * * He said, ‘ Come into the office and wait until the market opens and I will get the money for yon.’ ”,

'After returning to the office, they went over to the' window and Suydam stood with, one-foot on a: chair and leaning'his head on his hand. Appellant stood with his hands in his overcoat pockets. There was a little conversation about a machine. Suydam said he had- sent one to a certain person to be fixed and appellant said, “ Did you?” About five minutes of ten Downs came over to the window to see if the crowd was in • the street. He said it was three minutes to ten. “ I am going down to get the opening.” Suydam said, “ Do you know about that order ? ” Downs said: “ Which order? ” and walked: towards him. Thereupon Suydam said : “ For God’s sake help me, George, he is going to shoot; get that gun,” and threw his arms around appellant’s shoulders with his hands at the back. Downs jumped to the back of appellant who whiided his pis[162]*162tol out of his overcoat pocket where he had been holding it in his hand, ais he testified, and before they could get hold of his hand he turned it in and fired twice, hitting Suydam under the right nipple and under the left nipple. Thereupon a scuffle took place; they all fell to the floor, Collins jumped in shook-the,pistol out of appellant’s hand, Downs got it' and then threatened to kill him; Meyer had been ordered to get an officer who ran in; Collins took. the pistol away from Downs; appellant was arrested, and Suydam was taken to the hospital in an ambulance.

After the shooting and while still in Suydam’s office, the appellant denied that the gun was his.

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154 A.D. 44 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 A.D. 158, 25 N.Y. Crim. 219, 125 N.Y.S. 1079, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lumsden-nyappdiv-1910.