People v. Thomas

240 A.D. 101, 269 N.Y.S. 143, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10592

This text of 240 A.D. 101 (People v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Thomas, 240 A.D. 101, 269 N.Y.S. 143, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10592 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Townley, J.

The defendant was convicted of manslaughter in the second degree. The charge upon which he was tried was that between three and four o’clock on the morning of January 1, 1932, he had stabbed his wife with a bread knife in an apartment which they occupied in the city of New York. The wound which resulted in the death of the decedent was about an inch wide, about six inches deep and had completely severed the femoral artery, a large artery in the leg. There was no one present at the time the wound was inflicted excepting the deceased and her husband, the defendant. The claim made by the prosecution was that the decedent’s wound was inflicted by the husband. The defense claimed that the wound was self-inflicted and that she had committed suicide.

The police were summoned to the defendant’s apartment by a telephone call made by defendant. When they arrived they found the decedent on the floor in the kitchen with a stab wound in the right groin and with considerable blood on the floor near the body. There was an ordinary bread knife lying on the floor with the point toward the deceased and the handle towards the door leading into the public hall. There was no one in the apartment at the time the police arrived. Later investigation showed the existence of bloody footmarks leading upstairs from the apartment to the roof of the building. These footmarks were found to continue down the stairs of the adjoining building to the second floor when they became so faint as to be no longer traceable. The defendant returned to the apartment about five or ten minutes after the arrival of the police. He admitted that he had been there at the time the wound was inflicted but said he had nothing to do with it. He said that he had come home at about three o’clock and started to undress in the kitchen, that his wife had come in from the bedroom, had complained of the hour and asked where he had been. He told her that it was none of her business. Continuing, he testified, While I was bending down taking my overalls off, she fell over like that. * * * I seen her fall, and I looked back and I seen all the blood. * * * I knelt down alongside of her and said, My God, what have you done, and kissed her. * * * Then I went to the telephone, called the ambulance and police.”

When the defendant returned to the apartment, it was noticed that there was blood coming from his left arm and on examination it was discovered that he had two cuts on it. The police testified [103]*103that he told them he did not know where or how these cuts had been received and he testified to the same effect when he was examined as a witness. The medical examiner, however, testified as follows: “ I asked him how he got those wounds. * * * He said that he had a quarrel with his wife and that she attempted to stab him and then stabbed herself.” Defendant testified that he had no recollection of what happened after he saw his wife lying on the floor and left the apartment, until he came to in the street in the neighborhood of Dyckman street, which was about a block from the apartment where he lived.

The defendant, who was about thirty-six years old, had married the decedent in September preceding her death, and there was testimony in the record indicating that there had been frequent quarrels. According to the testimony of decedent’s mother, after a quarrel on Christmas preceding the death, the defendant had said (apparently not in the hearing of his wife), I am going to kill you yet.” Defendant had an excellent war record. Although a German by birth, he had served in the American army during the war, had twice been decorated by the French with a Croix de Guerre, and had been regularly employed as a chauffeur driving a truck for a construction company for some time prior to the alleged crime. He had no criminal record and had never been in trouble prior to the charge which is involved in this proceeding. There was independent testimony that about six weeks before her death, after a quarrel with defendant, the deceased had threatened to commit suicide. The defendant took the stand and testified that he had nothing to do with the death of his wife and denied even seeing the knife before she fell.

There was, therefore, presented a case where the only evidence of the guilt of the defendant was circumstantial in character. As against the circumstances relied on by the prosecution, there were the good character of the defendant, his war record, his direct testimony, the fact that he put in a call for the police and an ambulance, the fact that the medical examiner conceded that the wound could have been self-inflicted, and the deceased’s threat against herself.

It is claimed on this appeal that the circumstances presented were wholly insufficient to meet the requirements of the rule laid down by the cases as to circumstantial evidence. We believe that there was sufficient proof in this case to justify submission of the question of the defendant’s guilt to the jury. The defendant, however, was entitled to a fair submission of the issue tendered free from interference or expression of opinion by the justice presiding at the trial. The record demonstrates that this was not accorded [104]*104him and that the conduct and the remarks of the court in connection therewith were highly prejudicial to the defendant’s rights.

During the summing up, there was some controversy with respect to the statements made by defendant’s counsel. In the course of this, the court said: “ The Court: There is no evidence of suicide. There is not a single witness said she committed suicide. Mr. Garlock [defendant’s counsel]: The defendant took the stand and said she sunk to the floor in a pool of blood. The Court: Yes, but he did not say that she stuck the knife into herself. Mr. Garlock: I say it is reasonable to assume. The Court: You are assuming something not in evidence. Mr. Cohen [District Attorney]: There is no evidence of that.” By this statement the court in effect told the jury that there was no evidence to support the only defense which the defendant had to the crime charged.

There was testimony in the record that the decedent had died of a knife wound of the character above indicated. The testimony of the defendant was that there was no one present excepting himself and the woman at the time she fell on the floor in a pool of blood and that he had not touched her. If this testimony be true, the only possible inference is that the wound which concededly caused her death was self-inflicted. It was highly prejudicial for the court under those conditions to indicate in the presence of the jury that there was no testimony at all to support the defense. The court, in its main charge on that subject, said: “ Every killing is a homicide, and this killing was either manslaughter in the first degree or in the second degree, or else it was suicide on the part of the deceased, according to the allegations made by counsel, and the theory of the defense.” (Italics ours.) At another point in its charge the court said: “It is suggested by the defendant’s counsel and by the defendant that this woman must have killed herself. Now, there is no presumption that the woman killed herself.” (Italics ours.) Further references in the court’s charge to the subject of suicide are plainly of a character tending to indicate to the jury that there was nothing more substantial to support the defense of suicide than the allegations made by counsel and the suggestions made by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
240 A.D. 101, 269 N.Y.S. 143, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-thomas-nyappdiv-1934.