People v. Sweeney

4 N.Y. Crim. 275
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N.Y. Crim. 275 (People v. Sweeney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Sweeney, 4 N.Y. Crim. 275 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The defendant was jointly indicted with Peter Smith, and by the indictment he was charged with the crime of murder in the first degree, for shooting John Hannan on the 7th of April, 1885. The evidence established the fact that Hannan was a night watchman at what was called a dumping place, on the wharf at the foot of Thirty-eighth street in the city of New York He was at the time sitting upon a bench in a shanty near the place where the dumping was done, and Eichard Tracy, a witness for the prosecution, was with Mm there at that time. That has not only been shown by his own evidence, but the fact was stated in.the same way by the defendant in the course of Ms testimony on Ms own behalf given upon the trial While these two persons were in the shanty the defendant and Peter Smith, indicted with him, [277]*277entered the building, and when standing near Hannan, who was partially asleep, Smith discharged a pistol which he had in his hand, and the bullet entered the head of Hannan, above one of his eyes. Hannan lived until the eleventh of the month, when he died from the effects of the wound caused by the bullet. After the shooting Hannan was removed to the Bellevue hospital, where he remained until his decease. On Wednesday, the 8th of April, and the day following the shooting, his mother visited him at the hospital, and on the following day Mary Breslan, his step-sister, in like manner paid him a visit. During these visits conversations took place with the deceased, in which he made statements concerning the shooting, which were received in evidence as dying declarations. This evidence it has been urged, in support of the appeal, was improperly and unlawfully received. The objection presented to the evidence is that the statements repeated by the witnesses did not sufficiently appear to have been made in the belief of either immediate or impending death To permit evidence of this nature to be received upon a criminal trial against a person charged with the offense of murder, the law requires that it shah first be made to appear that the conviction or belief has been produced in the mind of the person making the statements that his death is near at hand, and that all hope or expectation of recovery shall appear to have ceased to exist. This subject was considered in Reg. v. Reany (26 L. J. M. C. 44). There the person whose statement was received in evidence said to the witness: “ I have seen Booker, the surgeon, to-day, and he has given me some little hope that I am better, but I don’t myself think that I shall ultimately recover,” and added that he should not recover. And from this and the evidence as to his condition, the conclusion was drawn by Pollock, 0. B., that “ the man was suffering from a mortal injury, and he was perfectly conscious of it; ” and that was deemed to be all that the law required to allow the dying declaration of the injured person to be received The same rule prevailed in Rex v. Mosley (1 Lewin C. C. 99), and Maine v. People (9 Hun, 113), followed this conclusion. The rule is there stated to be that “ the person making the statement must have lost all [278]*278hope of recovery; must have believed that she was about to die. It must have been made under the apprehension of near approaching death” Id. 115, 116. In Brotherton v. People (75 N. Y. 159), the deceased man had stated that he would not recover, and on the day following he was told by his physician that he must die. And as it appeared that such was his belief, •the declaration made by him was considered to be legal evidence.

In the cases referred to in support of the objection it appeared that all hope of recovery had not ceased to exist when the declarations were made, which the courts held not to be admissible. In People v. Robinson (2 Park. 236), the person whose statements were in controversy was encouraged by the medical attendant to believe and hope that he would recover. The facts were quite similar in Rex v. Van Butchell (3 Car. & P. 629). While in Rex v. Jenkins (11 Cox C. C. 250; 1 Law Rep. [Crown Cases reserved] 187), the statements of the person were rejected for the reason that her' declaration was that she had no hope at present of her recovery. Whether this expression did not show at the time an entire absence of hope or expectation of recovery it is not necessary now to discuss. The person making the statement was then in fact in a dying condition, and died on the following day, and the rule was very strictly applied which excluded the declarations made by her inculpating the prisoner as the author of her condition. In Rex v. Crockett (4 Car. & P. 545); Rex v. Hayward (6 Id. 157); Rex v. Spilsbury (7 Id. 187); Reg. v. Megson (9 Id. 418), the persons whose statements were offered had not. abandoned all hope of recovery. And that is true as to the other cases referred to in support of this objection. But in the case now before the court, it is quite evident, from the conversation which took place, that Hannan had abandoned all hope of his recovery, and was in the expectation of immediate death at the time when the statements received in evidence were made by him. The first, which was made to his mother, took the form of the following conversation: He said to her, “ ‘Mother, will you take me home? the Bellevue people are good enough, but they can do nothing for me.’ I said, ‘Johnny, the doctors don’t think so; the doctors think you will get better.’ He replied, ‘ Don’t you believe [279]*279what the doctors tell you; I never will get well’ He says, 1 Mother, raise me up.’ I did so. He says, ‘Mother, kiss me; kiss me, mother, because I am going to die. The bullet that Peter Smith put in my head is in it now, and it will soon fetch me and leave you without your only son.’ I said, ‘ Johnny, this is hard.’ ‘Yes, mother, it is hard, but we can’t help it now; I won’t last long.’ ” These statements did prove, as he had received in this manner a mortal wound, that the conviction had settled upon his mind that he was about to die and had no hope whatever of his recovery.

The statements made to his step-sister on the following day were equally decisive. She testified that while she was with him in the hospital he moaned and she stood up, and he said, “ ‘Mamie, raise me up.’ I raised him up in my arms, and he says, ‘Kiss me,’ and I kissed him, and he said, ‘Kiss me good-bye, Mamie;’ and I said, ‘Johnny, don’t say that, you ain’t going to die.’ He said, ‘Kiss me, Mamie, good-bye.’ ” She further stated that when she said to him you are not going to die, he said, “Yes, I am, Mamie; I can never get better.” On her cross-examination this language was repeated by her. She testified that in answer to her statement to him, “you are not going to die,” his reply was: “ He told me to kiss him goodbye, that he was going to die.” His language she said was: “ Kiss me good-bye, I am going to die.” And again: “Kiss me good-bye, because I am going to die.” These responses by him fully proved that at this time he had no hope whatever of recovery. The request made to her to kiss him good-bye, indicated his conviction to be that he was about to depart from her forever. It was urged, in the course of the argument, as a reason for rejecting this construction of what he said, that she was about to leave the hospital, and that the request to Mss him good-bye, was on account of that expected departure. But this proposition is not maintained by the evidence, for her statement was that she had not told him that she was going away soon, or going to leave the hospital.

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The People v. . Lyon
1 N.E. 673 (New York Court of Appeals, 1885)
The People v. . Hovey
92 N.Y. 554 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Fassett v. . Smith
23 N.Y. 252 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)
Foster v. . the People
50 N.Y. 598 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Brotherton v. . the People
75 N.Y. 159 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Thorne v. . Turck
94 N.Y. 90 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Gordon v. . the People
33 N.Y. 501 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y. Crim. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sweeney-nysupct-1886.