People v. May

9 A.D.2d 508, 195 N.Y.S.2d 792, 1960 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11959
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 28, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 9 A.D.2d 508 (People v. May) 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. May, 9 A.D.2d 508, 195 N.Y.S.2d 792, 1960 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11959 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

Bebgan, J.

In a melee which began as a street argument and a fist-fight on Prospect Avenue in The Bronx, George Marshall was stabbed by Samuel Montgomery and died within a short time. Appellant Robert May, who was present and took part in the fist-fight, has been convicted of murder, second degree, on the legal theory that he was a principal in commission of the murder.

To attach responsibility for murder second degree to appellant for the killing of Marshall, it would be necessary for the People to establish that May knew in advance that in such a fist-fight as this Montgomery would use his knife to kill; or that he knew in the course of the fist-fight that Montgomery was in the act of using the weapon to kill and when this knowledge came home to him, he chose to continue in the fight rather than get out of it.

Accepting that version of the facts shown by the record which best supports the People’s case, it will be seen that both Montgomery and appellant May carried knives on the night of the homicide and that on the same evening, and shortly before the crime, they had a conversation with a third person, Russell Corley, about circumstances in which they would use the weapons. Corley and May were 17 years old; Montgomery, 16.

According to admissions later made to a detective concerning this conversation, May said: “ If anybody bothers me or gives me any trouble I am going to give it to them ” and Montgomery said that he would give it to them too; they both said that if anyone molested them ‘ ‘ they will get hurt ’ ’.

On “ coming down the block ” toward the scene of the crime May told his companions that 11 somebody was going to get it if they mess with me tonight ”. In a stenographically recorded statement to the District Attorney he said he meant by that ‘ ‘ if somebody put their hands on me, if anybody say anything, or hit me I would use that knife”; and that Montgomery said 1 ‘ the same thing ’ ’; but May, asked to be more specific, did not remember just what Montgomery did say.

The essential facts leading to the actual crime were that Montgomery, Corley and May were together on Prospect Avenue when they saw Marshall and Richard Vaughn," who were boys about the same age. Vaughn testified that Corley asked him a question as to where he lived, and the answer being apparently unsatisfactory, Corley struck Vaughn.

[511]*511Vaughn saw Montgomery take a knife out of his shirt and Vaughn ran away; as he ran, he turned and saw Marshall, Montgomery, Corley and May on the ground close together. May’s statement to the police was that he punched Marshall and Marshall fell, but that the first he knew Montgomery had stabbed Marshall was not until he saw blood and then saw a knife in Montgomery’s hand. Corley’s statement to the police was that he had hit Vaughn and then hit Marshall when he was on the ground. Autopsy demonstrated four stab wounds to have been made in Marshall’s body.

Upon the trial of the indictment charging all three assailants with murder, first degree, Montgomery and May were convicted of murder, second degree, and Corley was acquitted.

The People’s trial theory of May’s responsibility for Montgomery’s act of homicide was that an intent to kill had been formed by defendant May acting in concert with Montgomery and Corley at the time the three assailants approached Vaughn and Marshall; that the purpose by the three defendants to use a dangerous weapon to effect death began at that point. This theory is suggested both in the opening statement of the District Attorney and in his summation on the trial.

In this court the People argue that the record justifies a finding that ‘ ‘ the design to kill was formed at the instant of the killing ’ ’ by Montgomery and that appellant May, having an ‘ ‘ understanding ’ ’ with Montgomery that they would ‘ ‘ use their knives if anyone gave them any trouble ”, saw the blood and ££ noticed Montgomery was striking blows with a knife in his hand ’ ’ and that May neither protested nor abandoned the enterprise £ until the homicide had been committed ’ ’.

Since an intent to kill is the indispensable condition of murder, to convict May of murder, second degree, the People would have the burden of showing beyond a reasonable doubt that more than an assault was intended by May when he participated in the fight even though the eventual outcome Avas a homicide by another of the participants.

To sustain a conviction for murder, the People must show that May intended to kill AAdien he entered into the street fight; and that this intent was expressed by participation in the fight Avith the knoAvledgc that Montgomery Avould use his knife to kill. The evidence does not fairly establish such an intent before the fist-fight started; or as the three assailants approached Vaughn and Marshall; nor would the record sustain a theory implicit in the People’s case that May continued in the fight after he kneAv Montgomery was using the knife to kill,

[512]*512The proof is equivocal on when May saw Montgomery use the knife and the People’s proof of May’s statement to the police is, as it has been noted, that he did not know Montgomery was using the knife until I saw the blood and saw a knife.”

Unless it were established he knew beforehand that in this fight Montgomery would use a knife to kill he could not be convicted of murder unless he continued in the fight with intent to kill after he had knowledge of the use of the knife for that purpose. Mere failure to stop Montgomery would not spell out a murder. And if, as the People say on appeal, the intent by Montgomery to kill was formed at the ‘ ‘ instant ’ ’ of the killing, the record does not show adequate opportunity by May thereafter to become aware of such an instantly formed purpose by Montgomery or that he acted on it toward consummating the homicide.

And the proof is insufficient to establish an intention by May to kill formed before the street fight began or' just as it began. The three defendants did not know the two boys with whom they began to fight; no motivation to kill is shown. An argument on captious grounds with strangers, ripening into a fistfight, would not be expected by all participants to burgeon out into a murder, even if the participants are armed with knives, unless some prearranged agreement to kill existed.

The acquittal of Corley and the conviction of May are inconsistent. Corley knew everything that May knew about Montgomery’s possession of a knife. He, himself, initiated the fist-fight by first striking Vaughn; admitted that he continued in it by striking Marshall after he was on the ground and certainly had, in every respect, as much opportunity to see Montgomery take out his knife and stab Marshall and as much time then “ to abandon the enterprise ” as May had.

The difficulties in proving intent to commit a murder attributable to the main actor and binding on all conspirators in a plan to commit another crime, a robbery, for example, where one of them kills a victim, were found in practice to have been so great that they were met by a statute (Penal Law, § 1044, subd. 2), which defines as murder in the first degree an act causing the death of another while engaged in committing a felony without design to effect death.

In a nonfelony murder the concerted purpose to kill must clearly be aimed in the direction of the homicide and not some other act; and an agreement to murder must be shown to exclude other reasonable inferences. (People v. Weiss, 290 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.D.2d 508, 195 N.Y.S.2d 792, 1960 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-may-nyappdiv-1960.