People v. . Rimieri

72 N.E. 1002, 180 N.Y. 163, 18 Bedell 163, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1308
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 1002 (People v. . Rimieri) 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. . Rimieri, 72 N.E. 1002, 180 N.Y. 163, 18 Bedell 163, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1308 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

Werner, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of the crime of murder in the first degree. The defendant' assails the judgment on various grounds, several of which relate to the probative weight and effect of the evidence pre- • sented on behalf of the prosecution, so that a brief outline of the facts is necessary.

The substance of the specification in the indictment is, that in the borough of Brooklyn, Yew York, on the 1st day of October, 1903, the defendant shot and killed one Jacko Pinto, with the deliberate and premeditated design to effect his death. The shooting by the defendant, and Pinto’s subsequent death in consequence thereof, are facts as to which there is no issue, for they were established by uncontroverted evidence as well as by the admissions of the defendant. The latter claimed, however, that he acted in self-defense, and upon that branch of the case the evidence was conflicting. The defendant and Pinto were both Italians and junk dealers, living within a few doors of each other on Frost street, in the borough of Brooklyn. Several days before the homicide, Pinto and the defendant had an altercation over some old bottles, in the course of which the former struck and wounded the latter. The theory of the prosecution was that the defendant, smarting under the indignity and injury thus inflicted upon him, armed himself, lay in wait for Pinto, and fired the fatal shot when *166 the latter came within range. In support of this theory evidence was adduced tending to show that on the evening of the homicide, Pinto and his wife and child were going from his place of business to his home which was on the opposite side of the samé' street. The wife and child were several paces in advance of Pinto when the defendant came out from an area adjoining the house where he lived, drew a revolver and fired. Pinto sank to the ground and the defendant fled. The'latter, after running a short distance, was captured and placed under arrest. The revolver with which the deed was committed, with one chamber emptied, was found in his possession, together with a knife or dagger. While the eyewitnesses to the affair, sworn for the prosecution, differed as to some of the details, they all testified in substance that the defendant was the aggressor and that Pinto was not armed. The story, as told by the defendant and his witnesses, tended to show that Pinto was armed with an axe with which he pursued and threatened to attack the defendant, and that the latter did not shoot until he was in danger of bodily injury. The defendant sought to account for his being armed by explaining that after the altercation with Pinto several days before that, he was in fear of his life and procured for his defense the weapons found upon his person when arrested.

The issue of fact created by these differing narrations of the homicide was submitted to the jury under a very careful and impartial charge and the result, as already stated, was a verdict of murder in the first degree. After a searching examination of the record we are convinced that it is beyond our province to interfere with this verdict, either on the ground that it is not supported by the evidence, or that it is against- the weight of evidence. There is evidence which warranted the jury in finding that the shooting of Pinto by the defendant was willful, deliberate and premeditated, and, as all the other facts of the homicide are beyond dispute, we cannot disturb the judgment pronounced upon the defendant, unless one or more of the alleged errors in rulings assigned by the defendant are of sufficient gravity to justify such action.

*167 When Mrs. Pinto, the widow of the murdered man, was on the witness stand, she was asked by the district attorney if she had any children and she answered in the affirmative. She was then asked how many, and she answered, I have one child and I am now pregnant.” The record discloses that there was an objection as immaterial,” and the court ruled that the evidence should be allowed to stand. Subsequently, and just before the case of the prosecution was rested, the district attorney recalled Mrs. Pinto, who had brought her child into court, and the latter was offered and received in evidence without objection. The defendant now relies upon these incidents of the trial as sufficient grounds for reversal of the judgment. Referring to the testimony of Mrs. Pinto as to her pregnancy, it is enough to say that it was not called for in the question of the district attorney, and while the court might with propriety have stricken it from the record, it was entirely harmless, and could not by any possibility have been prejudicial to the defendant. The introduction in evidence of the living child was an unusual and an unnecessary thing, the only justification for which rests in the district attorney’s claim that the cross-examination of the witnesses for the prosecution indicated that the defense would deny the presence of the child at the homicide and, since it was probable that there would be some conflict of testimony as to whether Pinto crossed the street in pursuit of the child, which had escaped from the custody of the mother, or whether Pinto belligerently went in search of the defendant, it was proper to fortify the evidence of the prosecution by showing, not only that there was a child, but that it was of such tender age that its attempt to cross the street would arouse the anxiety of the parents and cause them to follow it. The contention of the district attorney in this behalf is not without support in the record, but.still we do not perceive the necessity for introducing the child in evidence. But, when the whole episode is sifted, the question still remains, how could it possibly have harmed the defendant ? To hold that a jury, sitting in judgment in a case involving a human life, could be influenced *168 by such an incident, to render a verdict not warranted by the evidence, would be an unjust imputation upon a system that, with all its faults, has never been open to the criticism of undue severity.

It appeared from the evidence adduced on behalf of the prosecution, that in the altercation between the defendant and Pinto, which occurred several days before the homicide, the latter sustained a scalp wound. Pinto’s wife was a witness to the altercation and saw the wound. Upon the trial she gave her version of the affair, which was competent upon the question of motive and, 'in that connection, she stated that her husband went to Saint Catharine’s Hospital to have the wound sewed up. Another witness named Mazzini saw the wound during the interval between the altercation and the homicide. A policeman named Snow, who ivas in charge of the neighboring precinct station on the evening of the altercation, testified that a man who gave his name as Pinto called at the station and exhibited a scalp wound and that he sent Pinto to the hospital to have the wound attended to. McCauley, another policeman, testified to taking Pinto to the hospital in a patrol wagon. Upon the cross-examination of these witnesses, defendant’s counsel elicited statements as -to what Pinto had said about his wound and the circumstances under which it was inflicted. While evidence of this character would have been incompetent if called for by the district attorney and objected to by the defendant’s counsel, it cannot successfully be assigned as error when adduced on behalf of the defendant.

Upon the cross-examination of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 1002, 180 N.Y. 163, 18 Bedell 163, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rimieri-ny-1904.