People v. . Sexton

80 N.E. 396, 187 N.Y. 495, 21 N.Y. Crim. 9, 25 Bedell 495, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 802
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 396 (People v. . Sexton) 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. . Sexton, 80 N.E. 396, 187 N.Y. 495, 21 N.Y. Crim. 9, 25 Bedell 495, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 802 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Werner, J.:

On the 23d day of June, 1903, the dead body of Thomas Mahaney, Jr., was found in a field which was part of a small farm occupied by him, his wife and their children, in the town of Farmington, in the county of Ontario. The deceased had plainly been killed by some person armed with a shotgun loaded ' with Ho. 6 shot, for in his left temple there was a large wound filled with shot of that size, surrounded over a circumference of about two and one-half inches with somewhat scattered perforations caused by the same kind of missiles, many of which had passed through the temporal bone and penetrated the brain. Suspicion pointed to the defendant as the perpetrator of the foul deed. He was arrested and indicted upon the charge of murder in the first degree. His trial and conviction followed and he has now appealed to this court. The case of the prosecution rests wholly upon circumstantial evidence, in which the element of motive is an important factor. The principal question we have to consider is whether the circumstances arrayed against the defendant form so complete and strong a chain of evidence as to exclude beyond a reasonable doubt every hypothesis save that of his guilt. As that necessitates a„ recital of the essential features of the evidence submitted to the jury, it may conduce to clearness and brevity of statement if we begin the narrative with the earliest mention of the relations of the *13 decedent and the defendant toward each other, and then continue it chronologically down to its tragic ending.

The story begins at a period preceding the year 1895 when the decedent, then a youth of eighteen, resided with his parents on a small place near the scene of the homicide, and the defendant and his wife and children lived on the premises which they occupied at the time when the defendant was charged with the commission of this crime. We are not informed as to the character or extent of the relations between these two men at that early period, beyond what may be inferred from their proximity of residence in a rural community. In 1894 the defendant had been convicted of some criminal offense for which he had been sentenced to serve a term of one year in the penitentiary. Upon his release from incarceration at some time in 1895 he returned to his home, and soon thereafter was again arrested at the instance of his wife upon the charge of assault. At the trial upon that charge, which took place before a justice of the peace and a jury, the defendant conducted his own defense and sought to justify or palliate the alleged offense with the countercharge that during his previous incarceration his wife had been guilty of criminal intimacy with young Ma'haney, the deceased, with the result that she was then pregnant, and to prove his assertion he compelled her to rise in the presence of the jury and pointed out her condition. In conversation with one Eush, a farmer by whom the defendant was employed at that time or soon thereafter, the latter told the former that when he came out of the workhouse his wife admitted to him that she was in the family way, and Thomas Mahaney was the father of the child, and he said he was going to kill him, if he didn’t kill him within ten years.” At about that time the defendant also told one Eogers that the deceased was responsible for his wife’s condition; that he had been running everywhere with her during the defendant’s absence, and that he would shoot the s-of a b-.” In the spring of 1898 the defendant applied to McLouth, the *14 justice, for a peace warrant against the deceased, stating that the latter “ abused him and wouldn’t allow him to go in the road; that when he went anywhere he had to go cross lots; he didn’t dare go in the road; he was afraid of him.” Later in the same year the defendant was arrested for an alleged assault upon one Morris Mahaney. At that time he stated to the same justice of the peace “ that Tom (the deceased) was the cause of all that trouble; ” that he had sent Morris over to the defendant’s place to break the windows so that the defendant would commit an assault upon Morris and then be arrested for it.

In January, 1900, the deceased was married to Mary Shea. The young couple at once took up their abode in the city of Rochester and remained away from Farmington until the fall of 1902, when they returned to reside upon the place where the deceased met his death. The record is silent as to this interval of about four years, until the deceased and his wife were about to return to Farmington in October, 1902, When the defendant had a conversation with one Ebert in the fruit evaporating establishment of one Johnson. Ebert stated that it was reported that the deceased was about to return to Farmington, when the defendant said, " By God, if he comes back there I will put him out of the way,” to which Ebert replied, “ You had better keep your hands off from Tom, he’s a pretty good man,” and the defendant rejoined by saying, “ I don’t intend to put my hands on him to put him out of the way.”

About a month before the deceased and his wife went back to-Farmington, the elder Mahaney, father of the deceased, had a talk with the defendant. The latter said, “ I hear Tom is coming back to live in the neighborhood; you tell Tom by God Almighty, if he ever comes to that street again, he won’t last but a little while, and you be sure and tell it to him.” The deceased and his wife returned to Farmington and took up their abode on the place where the former met his death. After *15 they had lived there about four weeks the latter heard the defendant talking in the road. It was near midnight and was dark, so that she could not see him, but she knew his voice. She heard him say, Mahaney, I will lay for you; I will serve twenty years for you; you’re before me,” or that in substance. ■At about this time the defendant went one evening to the house of Mrs. Mahaney, the mother of the deceased. He was intoxicated and, referring to the circumstance that the deceased had been a witness against him upon his trial for assault upon Morris Mahaney, he said he would meet him some day for what he had done.” Then there was an occasion. when the defendant had a conversation at his home with one Hicholson, in which the former is quoted as saying that he would “ take the liver and heart out of that man ” (referring to the deceased) and whittle it away as easily as he could whittle the stick that he held in his hand.” Substantially of the same purport was another conversation between the defendant and the Brodericks, husband and wife, in which the defendant is charged with saying, “ Tom Mahaney is a perjurer and he could take his knife and cut out his heart and chew it.”

Coming down to a period about ten days before the homicide, the wife of the deceased testified that the defendant came home from town one night and his wife came out of the house to assist him in unhitching the horse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.E. 396, 187 N.Y. 495, 21 N.Y. Crim. 9, 25 Bedell 495, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sexton-ny-1907.