People v. Samuels

96 N.E.2d 757, 302 N.Y. 163
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 96 N.E.2d 757 (People v. Samuels) 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. Samuels, 96 N.E.2d 757, 302 N.Y. 163 (N.Y. 1951).

Opinion

Froessel, J.

Defendant-appellant, twenty-seven years old, is under sentence of death, upon a conviction for murder in the first degree. He was indicted for killing one Friedel Frank by beating and strangling her on or about June 2, 1948, and upon the record before us it is manifest that he did so. His defense was predicated principally on the theory of insanity.

Shortly after midnight on June 2,1948, tenants at 3750 Broadway, New York City, heard a “ screech ” or scream ” in the areaway. One of the tenants saw a woman lying on the floor in the vestibule, and a man in a tan or light brown suit walking out of the court. The woman was later identified as Miss Friedel Frank, who lived at the aforesaid premises. She died shortly after of a fractured skull, strangulation, and other serious injuries.

Defendant was taken into custody on June 8, 1948, at his home, a short distance from the scene of the crime. According to testimony of members of his family, he was acting “ very unusual ”, “ very queerly ” and “ strange ” on that evening; he cut up pictures, turned on the phonograph very loud ” and told his eighteen-year-old sister that she might not be going to school the next day. Thereupon, defendant’s father reported defendant to a police officer stationed nearby, and the latter accompanied the father to the apartment occupied by defendant and his family.

According to this police officer’s testimony, when he entered the apartment the radio was playing “ so loud you could not hear yourself think or talk defendant was “ twitching his eyes and lips up and down, and puffing his pipe very fast ”. After some conversation, defendant stated that he had something very important to tell the officer, something that would make a big man out of him, and then he said: “ ‘ I am the one that you are looking for. I am the ape man. I am the one that killed a woman on Broadway and 156th Street. ’ ” Thereupon the officer placed him under arrest.

At the police station, defendant first stated that he killed Miss Frank, and later denied it. He was then taken to his home, where he produced a number of articles which were subsequently identified as the property of Miss Frank. Later that same night, defendant narrated a detailed story of the commission of the crime and the events preceding and following, a reiteration of [167]*167which is unnecessary here. In the course of the narration, defendant stated he was wearing a tan suit on the night of June 2d. He also disclosed that he found a bracelet in Miss Frank’s pocketbook; later, a part of this bracelet was recovered by the police.

On June 9th, defendant made two formal statements to the assistant district attorney, which corresponded with the statement he had made to the detective the preceding evening. In the first of these two statements, defendant said he had ‘ had a few drinks ” and was staggering ” just before the attack. He thereupon re-enacted the crime at the scene thereof. The detective to whom he made his statement on June 8th described him as “ rational ” during his questioning and during the time the assistant district attorney took the first statement from him.

On the same day these formal statements were made, defendant was committed to Bellevue Hospital for psychiatric examination by order of the Magistrate’s Court. Thereafter and following the report of the director of the psychopathic division of the department of hospitals, the Court of General Sessions, New York County, on July 19, 1948, ordered that defendant be formally examined in accordance with the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure to determine the question of his sanity. The two psychiatrists designated found that defendant was “ in such a state of idiocy, imbecility, or insanity, as to be incapable of understanding the charge against him or the proceedings, or of making his defense ”, whereupon the court approved and confirmed their report on August 6, 1948, suspended the trial of the indictment until defendant became sane, and committed him to Matteawan State Hospital.

Nearly fifteen months later, and on October 24, 1949, the court ordered defendant transferred from Matteawan to stand trial, its superintendent having certified that he was no longer incapable of understanding the charge, following a visit to the hospital by two representatives of the District Attorney’s office. They testified that defendant told them he had feigned insanity at Bellevue, although that hospital’s records expressly showed that defendant insisted he was sane. The trial commenced on February 6, 1950.

It is contended on behalf of defendant (1) that he was insane at the time of the commission of the crime; (2) that he was [168]*168insane at the time he made his so-called confessions, and (3) that reversible errors were committed in allowing the hospital records in evidence in their entirety and in their use, and that other errors were committed.

The evidence as to defendant’s sanity consists chiefly of the . testimony of the members, of his family; the testimony of the psychiatrists, and the Bellevue and Matteawan hospital records, both of which were admitted in evidence for the limited purpose of “ facilitating the questioning of the experts ” but were not to be exhibited to the jury ‘ ‘ unless the defendant should desire otherwise.”

Defendant’s mother and two sisters testified at length as to numerous acts of unusual behavior by defendant at various times since his childhood, which we need not here review. Among other things, they stated that defendant entered the Navy at the age of seventeen or eighteen and was discharged after about six months of service; thereafter he was drafted into the Army, and when he returned home after three years of service he was very sick ” with headaches; he had prescriptions from the doctor, stayed in bed two or three weeks “ sick with something ’ ’, and used headache tablets all the time; upon his return from the Army in 1946, he disappeared for two or three days, going to Governor’s Island Hospital. His explanation was that he felt sick ”; thereafter he was “ extremely nervous he just went to pieces and he could not control himself. He * * * just blacked out altogether.” On several occasions he drank iodine, and asked to be taken to Bellevue. Their evidence with respect to his peculiar behavior over a long period was not insubstantial.

Much of the testimony of the psychiatrists was elicited at a preliminary hearing during the trial to determine whether defendant’s confessions should be admitted in evidence. The People called three physicians. Dr. Lichtenstein, medical assistant to the District Attorney in charge of legal medicine and psychiatry, testified that he examined defendant on June 9, 1948, for an hour and a half, that he was present at the formal hearing at Bellevue and participated therein; and, based on his observations and examinations of defendant and his examination of the Bellevue Hospital record, it was his opinion that defendant was not suffering from any form of schizophrenia or [169]*169any form of insanity “ at any time ”, Dr. Bellinger, one of three psychiatrists (the other two did not testify) appointed by the court in November, 1949, stated he examined defendant on December 9 and 16, 1949; and, based upon his examination and upon defendant’s statements to the District Attorney and the Bellevue Hospital record, it was his opinion that defendant was of sound mind on June 8,1948, and did not suffer from any form of insanity on June 8th, 9th, or thereafter. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.E.2d 757, 302 N.Y. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-samuels-ny-1951.