People v. Soper

153 N.E. 433, 243 N.Y. 320, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 755
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 433 (People v. Soper) 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. Soper, 153 N.E. 433, 243 N.Y. 320, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 755 (N.Y. 1926).

Opinions

Lehman, J.

The defendant has been convicted of murder in the first degree. The victim of the crime, of which she has been found guilty, was her own husband, William Henry Soper. He was shot with a revolver and instantly killed, shortly before noon on May 28, 1925. At the time of his death the defendant’s husband was a farmer. He was also a deputy sheriff of Essex county. The defendant notified the sheriff’s office that her husband had been shot and she also telephoned for a physician. *322 She told them and others that her husband was shot by a strange man who had called at the house and asked for Henry Soper, the deputy sheriff. The body of the murdered man rested upon a couch in the kitchen. Death was caused by two bullet wounds in the top of the head. The bullets were shot from a pistol held not over three inches away. From the position of the body it is quite evident that the murdered man had fallen asleep before he was shot. At the trial the defendant testified, in effect, that her husband had returned to the house, after finishing some planting in the fields. She was at the time preparing the midday meal. Her husband washed up and then reclined on the couch. He took up a book and adjusted his spectacles for reading, but fell asleep. A stranger came to the door and asked for Henry Soper, the deputy sheriff.” The defendant directed him to the kitchen where her husband was lying but thinking that his business with her husband concerned her husband’s official duties as deputy sheriff, she did not accompany him. A moment later she heard shots and the stranger hurried from the house and drove away in an automobile he had left when he came to the house. She had told substantially the same story from the time she notified the sheriff’s office, though one witness testified that, at the time she gave the notification, she said that her husband had come to the door when the stranger called and was shot down there. Concededly when the murder occurred no witness was present. No witness could testify directly that the defendant committed the murder. Conviction rests upon circumstantial evidence. The wounds could not have been self-inflicted. Death was instantaneous and the person who committed the murder must have carried away the revolver from which the bullets were shot, for no revolver was found near the body. There can be no doubt that this person was either the defendant or the alleged stranger upon whom the defend- . ant seeks to fasten the .crime. Jf .her .story about this *323 stranger is false, all hypotheses except the defendant’s guilt are excluded.

The defendant at the time of the murder was a woman forty-nine years of age. She had lived all her life in the same neighborhood. The defendant married the deceased in January, 1923. Both had been married before, the defendant twice, and both had children by earlier marriages. The defendant had always borne a good reputation in the community. The testimony is uncontradicted that she and her husband were on good terms; that she accompanied him sometimes when he was driving .about on his official business as deputy sheriff and that together they visited their neighbors, attended church (entertainments and took part in the usual social life of the rural community in which they lived. Neighbors saw them together on the very day of the murder and /apparently noted nothing unusual in their demeanor and there is no reason to doubt that when her husband came home that day she was engaged in housewifely duties preparing a meal for him. Men and women of good reputation who have lived in manner that seemed exemplary to the world at large do sometimes commit heinous crimes. The force impelling to wrong which overcomes the inhibitions of a lifetime is not always capable of analysis or explanation or indeed discernible. Motives that are unsuspected or apparently trivial may have potent influence. It is possible that this defendant living apparently in friendly relations with her husband may yet have formed the deliberate plan of killing her husband while he lay helpless in sleep, in the fancied security of his own home, but the jury’s verdict must rest not merely upon the possibility that the defendant may haye committed the crime but upon proof which removes any reasonable doubt that she did commit it. Where the proof relied upon is, as in this case, circumstantial, the presence or absence of apparent motives and the friendliness of the relations of the parties are circumstances *324 which may greatly diminish or increase the force of other evidence tending to show guilt. Extended analysis of the testimony of all the witnesses produced by both sides at the trial would serve no purpose. We shall summarize it only to the extent necessary for the statement of those considerations which in our opinion require that the defendant should have a new trial.

Promptly after the defendant gave notice that her husband had been shot, the district attorney and members of the State Police began an investigation at the defendant’s house. They discovered there a revolver. The revolver belonged to the deceased. It was in the pocket of a coat of deceased hanging in a bedroom. It contained three cartridges that had been discharged. One of these cartridges showed evidence of having been fired some time before, two showed evidence of recent discharge. The defendant was questioned at length in the presence of a large number of officers who expressed belief in her guilt. She volunteered an explanation for the presence of the exploded cartridges in the revolver. It may be conceded that this explanation is improbable, nevertheless it is not impossible. It is said that the defendant’s story of the presence of the stranger is on its face so improbable that its falsity is manifest; that persons in position to see a stranger coming and going from the decedent’s house testified that there was no such stranger; that at times the defendant’s story varied; that her demeanor showed consciousness of guilt and that she tried to conceal the existence of the revolver from the officers of the law. In great part the inferences which the prosecution asks us to draw from such circumstances rest upon conflicting testimony and disputed facts. In part the inferences are doubtful, even though conflict in the testimony be resolved against the defendant. Proof of attempt to conceal the weapon is vague if not illusory. If the defendant’s story at times varied and even that is doubtful, the variations might be explained by the stress *325 under which the defendant must have labored when she told the stories. At most we may say that cumulatively the circumstances might permit the jury to draw some inference against the defendant. Such inference would certainly be far from conclusive as to the defendant’s guilt unless supplemented by proof that the fatal shots were actually fired from the revolver found in the coat of the deceased.

The trial judge charged the jury that they must determine whether or not the bullets in the body of the deceased came from his own revolver. That is the basis of the case of the People. If they did not then there is a failure in proof and defendant is entitled to an acquittal.” The bullets found in the body of the deceased were fired from a revolver of the same calibre as the revolver which was found. Of course, there are many revolvers made of the same calibre.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 433, 243 N.Y. 320, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-soper-ny-1926.