People v. . Schmidt

61 N.E. 907, 168 N.Y. 568, 16 N.Y. Crim. 111, 6 Bedell 568, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 908
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 907 (People v. . Schmidt) 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. . Schmidt, 61 N.E. 907, 168 N.Y. 568, 16 N.Y. Crim. 111, 6 Bedell 568, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 908 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Cullen, J.

The appellant was indicted for murder in the first degree in having killed William Hilderbrandt at the town of Claverack, in the county of Columbia,, on September 12, 1893. The defendant, a man of some fifty years of age a,t the time of the crime, was a native of Polish Prussia, coming to- this country about the year 1882, and from that time he had worked here as a mason or plasterer and at farm labor. His knowledge of English was imperfect, and he seems to ha-ve been able to understand the language better than he could speak it. For some years previous to 1891, he had been engaged working on a farm in Cblumbia county. In February of that year he married Dora Hilderbrandt, also a German. She was the mother *113 of the deceased, William Hilderbrandt, a lad of nineteen or twenty years, who- at the time of her marriage was still in Germany, the woman having left her family there when she came to this country in 1891. ¡From the marriage to the commission of the homicide the defendant and his wife lived during a part of the time in Columbia county, and at other times in Hew Jersey and Maryland. In June, 1893, while the defendant was living in Greeneville, Hew Jersey, he purchased, partly or wholly at his own expense, a ticket from Germany to this country, which was sent to the deceased, and on which the latter obtained his passage to- Hew York. On his arrival he went to live with his mother and stepfather. In August, the defendant, with his wife and his stepson, the deceased, returned to Columbia county, moved into a small tenant house in the town of Ghent and again entered upon farm work. He also did some trapping of small fur-bearing animals. On the day of the homicide the defendant and the deceased had been working in the fields. They returned home at the close of the afternoon carrying a woodchuck which had been caught in a trap-. Wesley Stickles, who lived immediately across the road from the den fendant, had some conversation with them at the time. After-wards, between six and seven o’clock, he saw them leave the house together and walk along the road towards Philmont. This is the last time Hilderbrandt was seen alive. The only witness as to what occurred immediately prior to their departure was the defendant’s wife. She testified that when the two- men were home at noon the defendant said that he wanted to go to Philmont to- get some meat, to which she replied that she didn’t want meat, that they had meat enough in the house. After supper the defendant asked the deceased if he wanted to go- to Philmont with him (the defendant). This seems to have been substantially all the conversation between them. About nine o’clock that evening the defendant returned home aloné. The testimony of his statements- to his wife as to- what had become of the deceased was excluded, on the defendant’s objection that they were privileged communications. Their nature can be *114 readily inferred, however, from what transpired the next day. On that day Schmidt and his wife went to- a friend named Steitz, a hotel keeper in the town of Ghent. In the conversation which ensued between the parties, the defendant’s wife, the mother of the deceased, told Steitz that her son had been arrested and taken away, and asked him to go- with them to Hudson to find o-ut where her boy was. Steitz asked how she knew the deceased had been arrested. To this the defendant replied: We went to Philmont after some meat and when we went in the butcher* shop there was some fello-ws standing outside; when we came out they followed us up the railroad track and there we had a fight. It was a hard fight, my clothes were all bloody; and then some men came and they arrested Willie and I run away.”

Meanwhile, on the afternoon of Wednesday, September 13, the erew on a freight train on the Harlem railroad, while running through the town of 0laverack, noticed the body of a man lying on a culvert passing under the roadbed. The culvert was about a mile distant from Philmont. On its return trip the next morning, Thursday, the. train was stopped in the vicinity of this culvert and there was found the body of the deceased. Death had occurred many hours before-. The skull had been fractured and an indentation made in the head large, enough to receive an orange. There had been great loss of blood. At this point the railro-ad ran on a bank about eighteen feet above the grade or level of the culvert. Grass grew on the slopes to a distance of some four feet from the rails. At the foot of the slope, hut between the rails and the mouth of the culvert, there was a low fence. At the edge of the grass towards the rails a large pocket or jackknife was found. The knife was closed. The fence was partially broken down and smaller spots of blood were discovered between this point and that at which the body lay. A few feet from the body was found a hammea*, which was identified as belonging to the defendant. The bo-dy was removed to Philmont, anld an autopsy showed that the wound on the head was the cause of death-. The defendant was ar *115 rested at his home and was being taken to the county jail in Hudson, when, owing to the negligence of the officers, he succeeded in escaping from custody and was not recaptured till June, 1898, when he came to the residence of one St-aats, in Columbia county, for whom he had formerly worked. In conversation he told Staats that he struck the hoy with the hammer, but claimed that there had been trouble between them and that he had acted in self-defense. While confined in the county jail awaiting his trial he had conversation with two of his keepers. To one of the keepers he said that he had killed the deceased “ because the boy was in bed with his mother, -my wife,” though on another occasion he told him that he had trouble with the hoy when setting the trap, and the hoy threatened to hit him with a corn hook; to the other, that he hit the deceased in the head with a hammer, and the reason for it was “ the boy was sleeping with his wife and he (the defendant) had to- sleep- in ai corner of the- house.”

Such are the outlines of the case made by the prosecution. The defence rested on the evidence o-f the defendant himself. He testified that on the evening of the homicide he went with the deceased, not to purchase meat, but to- set traps, taking with him a hammer to- drive- stakes to' which the traps were to he fastened; that while passing along the railroad track he noticed the culvert and thought its mouth would he a good place to set a trap-; that the deceased asked to be permitted to set one of the traps; that the'defendant gave him one; that the deceased caught his fingers in the trap and asked the defendant to open it so as to get his fingers out; that the defendant opened the trap, the deceased extricated his fingers and thereupon struck the defendant with his fist, saying, “ I will give it to- you now; ” that the defendant staggered and then the deceased said, I will give you more,” put his hand in his pocket and drew out a corn hook or a knife and that thereupon the defendant struck him with the hammer on the head. On further examination he admitted telling his wife that her son had been arrested, hut gave a reason for the statement that he *116 was afraid to tell the truth. He testified that he did not mean to kill the deceased; that after he had struck the deceased he moved him to the side of the culvert and that when he left him there the deceased was still living.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 907, 168 N.Y. 568, 16 N.Y. Crim. 111, 6 Bedell 568, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-schmidt-ny-1901.