People v. . Truck

63 N.E. 281, 170 N.Y. 203, 16 N.Y. Crim. 342, 8 Bedell 203, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1058
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 281 (People v. . Truck) 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. . Truck, 63 N.E. 281, 170 N.Y. 203, 16 N.Y. Crim. 342, 8 Bedell 203, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1058 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

*345 Bartlett, J.

The defendant was indicted in the county of Oortland for the crime of murder in the first degree in having caused the death of Frank W. Miller on the 14th day of March, 1899, by inflicting injuries causing his death. The deceased was a bachelor, living alone on his farm in the town of Virgil, Cortland county, and was last seen alive by his mother about six o’clock p. m. on the day of the murder; she resided about half a mile from the house of her'son. The son, returning home, paid his mother a visit, taking supper with her. She testified that he left her house not later than six o’clock and it might have been half-past five; that he gave as a reason for hurrying his departure that he had to do his “ chores.”

About half-past ten that evening, a witness, driving along the highway, about half a mile from the house of the deceased, met a man driving a gray horse hitched to a wagon with yellow running gear, in the direction away from the house; wifi ness recognized the outfit as the property of deceased, but did not identify the man. The witness was well acquainted with deceased, resided in the neighborhood and was familiar with his horses, wagons and stable property.

A half hour later, about eleven o’clock, another witness with his wife, driving along the highway approaching the house of deceased, discovered it to be on fire. He came as near the burning structure as possible, and sought by calling aloud to arouse the deceased. Failing in this, he drove to the house of a neighbor and secured assistance. In the meantime the fire had been observed by neighbors in various directions, and a number of them assembled in the yard, but the house was wrapped in flames and nothing could be done to arrest their progress.

About this time the sides of the house, which was a wooden structure, were burned away so that the spectators could look into the bedroom usually occupied by the deceased. On the floor was a dark object, resembling in shape a human body, which seemed to be wrapped in a "cloth or blanket. The bed *346 room floor finally gave way and this object fell into the cellar. After the fire subsided, this muffled form was removed from the ruins, and upon a careful examination thereof by the coroner and physicians proved to be the partially consumed body of the deceased.

While the fire was in progress- several of the neighbors entered the bam of the deceased and ascertained that the gray horse, wagon with yellow running gear, harness and other articles of personal property were missing. It was also discovered at that time that the cows had not been milked in the early evening, as usual, nor had the stock been bedded and fed. In other words, the deceased had not done his chores ” that night.

The autopsy disclosed that death was caused, not by fire, but by a blow on the back part of the head, fracturing the skull. A large amount of medical testimony bearing upon this fact was given by the People.

It would not be profitable to recount the grewsome facts in ° detail, upon which the physicians based their professional judgment, that the deceased was slain some hours before the breaking out of the fire and at a time when the digestion of the last supper, e-ateh by the victim at his mother’s board, was arrested in its early stages.

The defendant John Truck formerly lived in the neighborhood where this crime was committed, but several years before had taken up his residence in Homer, Cortland county, which is about ten miles from the house of deceased. He was seen on the 13th of March, 1899, near the house of deceased by a number of people, and, also, on the 14th of March, the day of the murder. He called upon deceased on the evening of the 13th and was with him until nearly midnight, and he was seen on the premises a very short time before deceased must have arrived home after leaving the house of his mother. The fact of the defendant having been seen so frequently in this neighborhood during the forty-eight hours prior to the murder, 'and the additional circumstance of *347 the gray horse attached to the wagon of the deceased having been seen driving away from the premises within half an hour before the fire was discovered, led to- fastening suspicion upon the defendant. Thereupon, the officers of the law immediately began investigations, and were soon able to follow the defendant in a northerly direction into Onondaga county, and on the 16th of March, near Tully in that county, he was apprehended, having in his possession the horse, wagon, harness, whip, clothing, watch, watch chain, a jar of butter, and various other articles of personal property taken from the premises of the deceased.

At the trial the- defendant was not sworn, and there was no attempt on the part of the defense to meet this array of facts. The defense was insanity.

The trial of this case lasted some nineteen days, and after the People had proved, with great detail, the facts already briefly narrated, the defendant assumed the affirmative and sought to establish the allegation that the defendant was insane. In the first place a large number of witnesses were sworn, including a sister and several other relatives of the defendant; also a number of farmers for whom he had worked at different times during the last ten or fifteen years before the trial, showing him to be a man of varying moods and great eccentricity. This class of evidence, which was very lengthy, disclosed that the defendant had received two injuries upon his head in boyhood, and that his conduct throughout life had been such as to occasion remark, and led all these witnesses to answer the general question as to how his actions impressed them as being rational or irrational, that they deemed them irrational.

The defense also swore two distinguished experts, Dr. William A. White and Dr. Henry T. Dana, who, after personal examinations of the defendant, and in answer to two hypothetical questions, one of which embraced the history of the defendant as to his moods, eccentricities and general conduct, *348 and the other set forth the facts proved by the People to have occurred within forty-eight hours, more or less, of the murder, gave it as their opinion that he was insane and did not know the nature or quality of the act he committed, or that the act was wrong at the time he killed deceased.

The People, in answer to the defendant’s proof on the question of insanity, swore a large number of witnesses who were familiar with the defendant in one way or another, covering a period of ten or fifteen years prior to the homicide, all of whom testified in substance that while he was to some extent peculiar, eccentric and moody, they did not deem his actions generally as irrational.

The People also placed upon the witness stand two distinguished experts upon insanity, Dr. Henry E. Allison, who had been connected with the Willard State Hospital or Asylum for the Insane, and afterwards was medical superintendent at the State Asylum for Insane Criminals at Auburn, and later was with the institution called the Matteawan State Hospital, to which were removed all of the insane criminals from Auburn.

Also, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 281, 170 N.Y. 203, 16 N.Y. Crim. 342, 8 Bedell 203, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-truck-ny-1902.