People v. . Van Wormer

67 N.E. 299, 175 N.Y. 188, 17 N.Y. Crim. 359, 13 Bedell 188, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 967
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 299 (People v. . Van Wormer) 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. . Van Wormer, 67 N.E. 299, 175 N.Y. 188, 17 N.Y. Crim. 359, 13 Bedell 188, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 967 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

*360 Cullen, J.:

The three appellants, with one Harvey Bruce, were indicted for murder in the first degree in having feloniously, willfully and with malice aforethought, and with a deliberate and premeditated design to effect his death, killed Peter A. Hallenbeek on the 24th of December, 1901. The case seems to have been tried with that degree of care which should mark every capital prosecution, not less in justice to a defendant, whose life is at stake than to the People, who are interested that in case of the guilt of the accused there shall be no miscarriage of justice on account of failure to comply with the rules of law. The result is that the record before us is quite free from even controvertible questions, the rulings of the trial court which have been challenged on this appeal being well sustained both by principle and by authority. As the learned counsel for the appellant® contends that the evievidence was insufficient to warrant a verdict of murder in tho first degree, it is necessary to narrate the occurrence, but that narration need be but of the briefest character, since one or two pivotal facts conclusively prove the crime and its degree.

The deceased was a. farmer, aged fifty-five years, who resided on his farm, some three miles southeast of the city of Hudson. The appellants were the nephews of his wife, and aged respectively twenty, twenty-two and twenty-six years. Their father was dead, and at the time of the commission of the crime they resided ivith their stepmother at Kinderhook, about twelve miles northeasterly from Hudson. They had formerly lived on a farm in the vicinity of that of the deceased. On this farm the deceased held a mortgage1, which he foreclosed, and after the sale, and in the September before the murder, the appellants, with their stepmother, had moved toi Kinderhook. One of the appellants expressed hostility to the deceased on account of this foreclosure and threatened “ to get even with ■him,” and to one witness stated he would kill him. . The co-defendant,, Harvey Bruce, was their . cousin, who had been *361 spending some time in the home of the appellants at Iiinderhook. The family of the deceased consisted of himself, his wife, his mother, a brother, Charles Hallenbeck, and his wife and a hired man. These persons resided at the farm house. On Christmas eve, 1901, the brother, with his wife- and the hired man, attended some festivities in the church about a mile distant, leaving the deceased, with his wife and mother, in the house. About half-past seven o’clock the deceased and his wife were in the sitting-room, the former reading. His mother, a woman of eighty, had just gone upstairs to her room. A knock was heard at the kitchen door and the deceased arose, went into the kitchen and opened the door. According to the testimony of the wife- four men, with masks on and with revolvers in their hands, entered and commenced to shoot at her husband. She went into the kitchen and, being frightened, rushed away through her bedroom and upstairs to the attic, where she and the mother of the deceased barricaded the doors. She testified that the men shot at her as she ran away. Mr. Elting, a farmer, residing about three hundred yards away, heard the noise of the firing and saw a wagon driven rapidly down the road. At once he went over to the Elallenbeek house, found the kitchen door open and a light burning brightly. He called for the deceased, but got no- reply. He then went to another neighbor, Mr. Betts, and both entered the Hallenbeck house. They found Peter A. Hallenbeck lying dead on the kitchen floor, the clothing on his arm burning. They put out this fire and called to the mother and wife of the deceased, who-, recognizing their voices, came downstairs. Then word of the tragedy Avas sent -to the people at the church, who, in some numbers, shortly appeared upon the scene. ' Word was also sent to the sheriff and coroner of the county and the chief of police at Hudson. Wha.t directed suspicion to the defendants and what circumstances tended to identify them as the persons who had shot the deceased it is unnecessary to narrate, *362 for though all at first deoiled any complicity in the transaction^, Bruce, one of the party, turned informer, and upon the trial was a witness for the prosecution. Each of the appellants went • on the stand in his own behalf and admitted that hei was one of the persons who shot the deceased.- Their statements are substantially the same. It is that- they drove from Kinderhoolt to the Hallenbeck house, a distance of some fifteen miles, “ to have some fun with him (the deceased) ; to- scare him;” that solely with this intent and without any design to- injure the deceased, when they arrived at the barn they put on the masks-, they turned their coats inside out, and each with a revolver io his hand went to the kitchen- do-or; that when, the deceased opened the door he seized the appellant Burton Van Wonner by the throat, struck him in the face; that in the scuffle Burton’s revolver was discharged and then a general fusilade ensued; that deceased went for a gun which lay on a rack in the kitr chen, and thereupon they ran away. Bruce, the informer, testified that as they drove home two of them boasted of how they had shot the deceased. But it is not necessary to rely on Bruce’s statements. It is sufficient to say that there were eight, if not nine, bullet wounds on. the body of the deceased; that six bullets were taken from the body and two left in it, not being removed because they were seated deep in the tissues. Bullets or bullet marks were found in every room on the first floor, the kitchen, the sitting-room and the bedroom of the deceased and his wife. Altogether there appears to have been . eighteen bullets or bullet marks found in or on the deceased . or in the Avails and ceilings of the house. The revolvers Avere of different calibres and bullets from each of them Avere found . in the body of the deceased. The gun. belonging to the deceased . was found lying across his chest, but neither barrel had been „• discharged. In the light- of the wounds on the deceased and , the number of -shots fired, it seems to us.wholly unnecessary to • . discuss...the sufficiency of the, evidence to warrant the jury, in *363 finding that the murder was deliberate and premeditated. In view of these facts, the story of the appellants, that their expedition was simply a boyish prank to frighten the deceased* surpasses human credulity. It is difficult, if not impossible, to see how any conscientious jury could have found a verdict other than that rendered.

It is necessary to notice only two exceptions taken on the trial. The appellants objected to the competency of their co-defendant Bruce as a witness for the prosecution on the ground that he was jointly indicted with them, and that the indictment against him was still pending, not having been disposed of either by acquittal or nolle prosequi or by conviction or plea of guilty. At common law a party to the record was not a competent witness either on his own behalf or on behalf of a co-defendant. But the weight of authority is to the effect that he is a competent witness for the prosecution against his co-defendants, provided he himself is not on trial at the time. Mr. Greenleaf (1 Evidence, sec. 379) states the rule to be: “ The admission of accomplices, as witnesses for the government, is justified by the necessity of the case, it being often impossible to bring the principal offenders to justice without them.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 299, 175 N.Y. 188, 17 N.Y. Crim. 359, 13 Bedell 188, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-van-wormer-ny-1903.