People v. Voelker

220 A.D. 528, 221 N.Y.S. 760, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9355
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 220 A.D. 528 (People v. Voelker) 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. Voelker, 220 A.D. 528, 221 N.Y.S. 760, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9355 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Sears, J.

The defendant has been convicted of the crime of manslaughter in the second degree and sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment in a State’s prison. The indictment is in the common-law form for murder in the first degree for the killing of Nellie [530]*530McCarthy. The proof adduced on behalf of the People was directed toward the establishment of murder in the first degree as defined in the 2d subdivision of section 1044 of the Penal Law, namely, the killing of a human being By an act imminently dangerous to others, and evincing a depraved mind, regardless of human fife, although without a premeditated design to effect the death of any individual.”

A brief outline of the facts is as follows: Nellie McCarthy died on the morning of Sunday, July 25, 1926, from wood alcohol poisoning. The defendant’s connection with her death depends on a chain of events. On Tuesday or Wednesday, July twentieth or twenty-first, the defendant, who was engaged in the business of selling alcohol and other intoxicants surreptitiously, sold to another person named Maischoss, who was in the same business, five gallons of what purported to be grain alcohol but what was in fact a substance known as methanol, a synthetic wood alcohol, unquestionably poisonous. Maischoss mixed some of the liquid with other materials— flavoring, glycerine, magnesia and water — to concoct what he called gin, and put it into bottles which had Gordon gin labels on them. On Friday evening Maischoss sold a quart of this gin to Charles Murphy. Murphy stopped to get this at Maischoss’ home. At that time Murphy was one of a party of five, including, beside himself, Nellie McCarthy (the deceased), a woman named McGovern, who lived in the same apartment with the deceased, and two men, one of whom was named Lennon, and the other of whom is unidentified in the record. They were on their way by automobile to some point on the shore of Lake Erie where they intended to go in bathing. Previous to starting on this bathing trip, Mrs. McCarthy, Lennon and Murphy had eaten supper together at the McCarthy apartment and had all three drunk at least a small quantity from a bottle labeled gin which Lennon had got at Maischoss’ home on Thursday night. According to Maischoss’ testimony he had no gin at that time except such as he had made up from the alcohol purchased by him from the defendant. On Friday evening when the party reached the lake shore, Mrs. McCarthy, Lennon and Murphy went in bathing. Miss McGovern and the third man did not. The bottle which Murphy had purchased from Maischoss was left in the back of the motor car while the bathers were away. When the bathers returned to the car Murphy noticed that the bottle had been opened and a small quantity of the contents was gone. Murphy then took a small drink of the contents of this bottle. Murphy testified that at that time he was sure Mrs. McCarthy drank some of its contents. The party returned to the McCarthy apartment and the bottle of gin [531]*531was brought in and put on the kitchen table. The unidentified man soon left. Miss McGovern went to her room and to bed. She had not drunk any of the gin at any time. Murphy soon became dopey, stunned,” as he expressed it, lay down and did not awake until Saturday afternoon. Miss McGovern found Mrs. McCarthy, Lennon and Murphy apparently sleeping on Saturday morning when she got up and came out of her room. She soon left the apartment to go to her work. When she returned about one o’clock in the afternoon she said that Mrs. McCarthy looked very badly; * * * she had deep rings right down on her cheeks;” that she was all black,” and that she had large, puffy eyes and a starey glare.” Miss McGovern left the apartment at about twenty minutes to three o’clock. When Murphy awoke in the afternoon Lennon and Mrs. McCarthy were very sick — vomiting frequently. At about six o’clock on that afternoon Murphy went for a doctor. He returned and took Lennon to the hospital and had the hospital send an ambulance for Mrs. McCarthy. She was brought to the hospital and died before half past two o’clock in the morning of Sunday, July twenty-fifth. Lennon also died. An autopsy performed upon Mrs. McCarthy’s body showed the presence of wood alcohol in the stomach and bladder contents. A bottle labeled Gordon gin was found by the police in the McCarthy apartment on Sunday morning at about twelve-thirty o’clock. It still held a very small quantity of liquid which on analysis proved to contain wood alcohol. The police also found there at the same time an empty bottle labeled London Gin — Burnett’s.

The outline of this portion of the case is sufficient to show that the jury were warranted in finding that the wood alcohol which Mrs. McCarthy drank and which caused her death was part of that which Maischoss purchased from the defendant on Tuesday or Wednesday, July twentieth or twenty-first.

We now turn to the facts relating to the defendant’s acquisition of the alcohol sold to Maischoss, to his knowledge of its character, and to his acts upon learning of its poisonous quality. On Sunday, July eighteenth, a man named Sapowitch came to the defendant’s home and sold to the defendant ten drums of 110 gallons each of what Sapowitch then stated to the defendant to be German grain alcohol. The defendant himself testified that at the time of the purchase he was not only assured by Sapowitch that the product was German grain alcohol, but that Sapowitch had with him what he claimed was a sample and also a chemist’s certificate that the liquid analyzed did not contain wood alcohol and was “ O. K.” Defendant before purchasing diluted some of the sample with water, smelled and tasted it and testified that it smelled perfect.” [532]*532Sapowitch at this time gave defendant the chemist’s certificate. The defendant asserted on the witness stand that he had made previous purchases from Sapowitch and believed him trustworthy. It appears without dispute that what was afterwards claimed by Sapowitch to have been a sample of this liquid was delivered to a firm of chemists for analysis on Saturday, July seventeenth, and that the chemists on that day had issued a certificate to the effect that the sample did not contain wood alcohol. The certificate ended with the words, “ This is O. K.” This is the certificate which Sapowitch handed to the defendant at the time the purchase was made by the defendant. The chemists when sworn upon the trial admitted the issuance of this certificate but gave evidence to the effect that the certificate was incorrect and that the sample did actually contain wood alcohol. The liquid purchased by the defendant was delivered to him on Monday, July nineteenth. It came in metal drums. He at once had a large part of it poured from the drums into five-gallon containers. He was in and out of the place where this was being done while the change of containers was being made. He evidently began at once to dispense the liquid in various quantities to customers. The sale to Maischoss was on Tuesday or Wednesday. It is his claim that complaints from customers that the alcohol did not smell right came to him on Tuesday evening. One customer of defendant’s that night returned some of the alcohol that he had bought earlier in the day. On Wednesday morning the defendant took a quantity of the liquid to the same chemists who had given the previous certificate of analysis and asked to have another test made. This was done while he waited. The chemists told him after the test was made that the liquid was unfit for use and gave him a written certificate to the effect that it contained wood alcohol in large quantities.

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Bluebook (online)
220 A.D. 528, 221 N.Y.S. 760, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-voelker-nyappdiv-1927.