People v. . Rogers

85 N.E. 135, 192 N.Y. 331, 22 N.Y. Crim. 376, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 884
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 85 N.E. 135 (People v. . Rogers) 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. . Rogers, 85 N.E. 135, 192 N.Y. 331, 22 N.Y. Crim. 376, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 884 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

The defendant was indicted on the 16th day of January, 1906, for the crime of murder in the first degree, committed by shooting Fred B. Onley with a revolver, in the town of Wallkill, Orange county, on the 6th day of October, 1905. ITe was arraigned on May 11, 1907, when he pleaded not guilty. Subsequently he added to this plea a specification that at the time of the commission of the crime in question he did not have sufficient intelligence and self-control to understand the nature and quality of the acts committed by him and to refrain from the commission of said acts and that at said time he ivas mentally incapable and in a state of insanity. The trial began on the 21st day of October, 1907, at a Trial Term of the Supreme Court in Orange county, and ended on the 28tli with a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. From the judgment rendered upon this verdict the defendant has appealed to this court.

*380 The scene of the homicide of which the defendant was accused was the Onley farm, which is situated on a highway in the town of Wallkill, about three miles north of the city of Middletown. There were living at this farm, just previous to the homicide, five persons: Fred E. Onley, a bachelor, aged about 60 years; Willis Onley, his brother, a widower, who was some years younger; Mrs. Georgia Ingerick, who had recently entered upon the duties of a housekeeper for the two brothers, in consequence of the decease of Willis Onley’s wife; Lulu Ingerick, a girl about 15 years old at the time of the trial, a daughter of Mrs. Ingerick; and Alice Ingerick, another daughter, nine years of age.

At eight o’clock on the morning of October 6th, 1905, Lulu Ingerick left the Onley farm to spend the day in Middletown. At that time all the members of the household were alive and well. When she returned at about half-past five o’clock on the afternoon of the same day her little sister lay dead in the cellar of the farm house with her head crushed by some blunt instrument; her mother lay insensible in the horse barn back of the house, her face bruised and bloody and her body partly covered with straw or hay; and the two Onley brothers (as was subsequently ascertained) lay dead in a piece of woods to the north of the house, both manifestly having been shot to death by means of a revolver. The condition of things at the house and also the condition of the clothing of the Onley brothers indicated that the perpetrator of the crime was actuated by purposes of plunder. The bedding on the beds had been torn out of place; a drawer had been pulled out of a bureau and thrown down on the floor; in the attic was a valise which had been cut open, and there were other signs of disorder. The pockets of the Onleys were found turned inside out and emptied of their contents, and the watches which they were known to have carried were missing. Mrs. Ingerick was in such a physical condition as to be unable to give any explanation as to how she came to be where she was *381 found; she remembered only that at about noon a stranger had r-ome to the farm saying that some one was hurt up in the fields, and had asked her for a basin of water and a cloth. She got a cloth in accordance with his request, and went to the well near the wagon house for a pail of water, but at that point her recollection ceased. She could remember nothing that had happened afterward on that day.

The defendant lived with his wife and children in the city of Middletown. He left home at seven o’clock on the morning of October 6th, 1905, and never returned. He was arrested in Los Angeles, California, in April, 1907; and was brought to Hew York by the sheriff of Orange county, a deputy sheriff, and the chief of police of the city of Middletown. In the course of the railway journey he made a series of oral statements to these officers in relation to the homicides at the Onley farm, and, finally, at their instance, signed the following confession, which substantially embodied what he had previously stated by word of mouth:

“ On Erie Train Hear Corey, Pa., En Route from Los .

Angeles, Cal., to Orange Co., H. Y.

“ To whom it may concern.

I, Charles II. Rogers, do hereby make the following statement relative to the circumstances in connection with the deaths of Willis and Fred Onley and Alice Ingerick, which occurred on October 6, 1905.

On the morning of Oct. 6, 1905, I left my home at 5 Oak Street, Middletown, H. Y., at some time between seven and eight o’clock a. m., going up Washington Street to South and then out West Main to Hanford Street; on reaching the cornel of Hanford Street and West Main Street I hoarded a trolley car hound for the State Hospital. Then I alighted at the corner oi Lake Avenue and Olivo Street and took to the Erie tracks and walked westward until I arrived at a point on the said Eric .Road known as Hogback.’ I left said track at a point just east *382 of the overhead bridge leading to the Fish Farm, passing through a piece of woods owned by one Fora Corwin. 1 walked through said woods and crossed the highway leading to the Fish and Onley farms at a point near the top of the hill and between said bridge and where my parents, Hr. and Mrs. Henry Rogers, reside. After doing so I passed on to a piece of woods owned by said Fora Corwin west of said highway. I continued on through Frank Fish’s woods, also through another piece of woods owned by Mr. Horace Beaks. Then I crossed over the hill to the Onley farm. This was about 9 o’clock a. m. I saw Willis Onley in the barn yard. I asked him when Fred would get back from taking the milk. He said, ' I don’t know, but he ought to be back pretty soon.’ I remained there in the barnyard and talked with Willis until Fred returned about fifteen or twenty minutes later. I asked them to go to the woods with me to help get a man. I passed myself off as a detective. The three of us got in the milk wagon that Fred had just drove in with and went up to the woods driving to the corner of the field by the woods. While Willis held the team Fred went down into the woods with me. I shot Fred, but I don’t remember how many times. • Willis came down on hearing the shots and passed about one hundred and fifty feet by me when I shot Willis once. Then I went through the pockets of the men and secured two watches and sixteen dollars in cash. A pockctbook which I took from Fred’s body after taking out the contents, I hid the pockctbook in the stone wall where AYillis stopped with the team in the corner of the open lot. Then I drove the team back down to the house, where I unhitched the horses and put them in the barn. After doing so I went in and told Mrs. Ingerick that 'Fred had been kicked by a horse. Airs. Ingerick returned to the barn with me and went in the horse stables. I followed her into the far end of the said stables and when her back was turned I struck her over the head with the iron gas pipe which I had previously hidden in the weeds. After I struck her I covered her up in the *383 horse stall with hay. I then went to the house, and as I entered saw Alice Ingerick in the kitchen and I sent her down cellar to close the outside cellar door. I followed her down cellar, and when she arrived about half way across the cellar I struck her ever the head with the same pipe I had struck Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.E. 135, 192 N.Y. 331, 22 N.Y. Crim. 376, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rogers-ny-1908.