People v. . Wenzel

82 N.E. 130, 189 N.Y. 275, 27 Bedell 275, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 940
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 130 (People v. . Wenzel) 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. . Wenzel, 82 N.E. 130, 189 N.Y. 275, 27 Bedell 275, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 940 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Haight, J.

John Wenzel, the defendant, at the time of the trial, according to his own testimony, was thirty-three years of age, five feet eleven inches tall, weighing one hundred and eighty-four pounds, and had always been in good physical condition. He was born and brought up in Brooklyn within a short distance of the place where the homicide took place. In 1892 he enlisted in the navy as a coal passer, served in that capacity for the term for which he was enlisted and was honorably discharged. In April, 1898, he enlisted in the military service of the United States and was dismissed after serving two years and ten months. In December, 1902, he enlisted in the United States marine service, but was dismissed therefrom after a service of twenty-three months. The decedent, George Spatz, kept a saloon at the corner of Marcy avenue and Hopkins street; was married and had two children. The defendant began visiting the saloon of Spatz in 1899 and thereafter became a frequent customer, making the saloon, as he expressed it, his “ hanging-out place.” In February, 1905, he was arrested, charged with the crime of burglary, and upon his plea of guilty was sentenced to the penitentiary, from which place he was discharged on the last day of April, 1906. He relates three occasions on which he had had some trifling disputes with Spatz before he was sent to the penitentiary, but states that he never harbored any ill-feeling towards him. On Monday evening, April 30, 1906, after *278 his discharge from the penitentiary, between ten and eleven o’clock he visted Spatz’s saloon and found there Edwin Maher and Charles Blank engaged in playing a game of cards. He asked for a drink which was refused, Spatz saying to "him, “You have got enough now,” and that he wanted him to get out. At this point the testimony of Maher and Blank widely differ from that of the defendant as to what took place; that of Maher and Blank being to the effect that the defendant undertook to draw a poistol from his pocket, they jumped up, interfered, struck him with their fists, knocked him down and put him out on the street; that of the defendant, to the effect that Spatz provided them with clubs and that the three attacked him with clubs, knocking him down, beating him, and that thereupon Mrs. Spatz interfered and saved him from being killed. After he had been put out of Spatz’s place he spent the remainder of the night in neighboring saloons, and early the next morning returned to Spatz’s place in company with one John Patterson, and, as he says, he asked Spatz why he had beaten him so the night before, to which Spatz replied, you get out of here or you will get another. To this he replied, in substance, that he had no fear of getting another beating then, for the reason that Spatz’s people of the night before were not there. He again asked Spatz to tell him why he got the beating, and Spatz told him he would not. He subsequently went home, arriving there about eight o’clock. The evidence tends to show that he was badly bruised, and consequently remained home until Friday afternoon and then went to the cemetery with his mother and sister. He returned home with them that night and remained until Saturday afternoon. He then went down to near the ferry, intending to visit some of his friends on the Kearsarge on which he had previously served. On the way down he met O’Neill and had a talk with him, and then he purchased a revolver and some cartridges. Fie then went to Venus Hall on Flushing avenue and entered the toilet room and tried to load his revolver with the cartridges, but finding them too large he returned and exchanged *279 them for others that would fit, then put them in his revolver and again started for the neighborhood in which he had had his previous trouble, taking Andrew ¡Nelson and Michael Donlan with him. They visited several places and finally brought up at Spatz’s saloon some time during Saturday evening. He says that he wanted to see Spatz in order to find out where Maher and his other associate were, who were looking for him to beat him again, that he understood that Maher was carrying a gun and that he was going to take it from him. Then, as he tells us, Spatz went to the end of the bar, took out three clubs, handed one to each of two young men who were standing there and told them to take the clubs and they would clean “ this bunch out.” The defendant then told the young men not to take the clubs because this was none of their argument, and one of them replied, “ all right.” Thereupon Mrs. Spatz came into the room and asked what the trouble was, and he said to her that he wanted Spatz to keep the bunch away from him; that he heard they were going up to his house to kill him; that he had a mother there about seventy-six years old, and if she ever saw anything of the kind she would drop dead. He thanked Mrs. Spatz for saving his life on Monday night, but said her husband was a coward. They then left the place. Before leaving, however, he said that Spatz picked up the clubs and had one in his hand; that he started to make towards him with the club, saying, “Well, you come in here again now, we will kill you.” I says to him, “we will kill you.” “Do you want to kill me?” I says to him. He says, “Yes, if 1 get you in here any time, I kill you.” He then went out and stayed in Conner’s saloon over night, and on the following Sunday morning he, in company with Michael Donlan, returned to Spatz’s saloon, entering a rear room at the back door. He found a German sitting at the table drinking beer, and Spatz was sitting in a chair tilted back against the wall by the side of the door that entered into the bar room. His story is, that he asked Spatz to serve them with drinks and to let him explain himself to him; that he went to a table with the intention of sitting down, but *280 Spatz replied, “ You big son of a bitch, I will serve you with drinks,” and attempted to draw from his hip pocket a revolver; that as he was jDulling it out it caught in the strings of his apron, and thereupon the defendant drew his revolver and shot Spatz three times. He then ran from the saloon,- took a Park avenue car and disappeared.

The testimony of Frederick Harjes, the German, however, materially differs from that of the defendant with reference to the homicide. He had been to early morning church and had then stepped into Spatz’s place to have a visit and a glass of beer. He sat at a table and Spatz liad handed him a glass of beer and had taken a cigar in one hand and a match in the other and had sat down in a chair at the place already indicated. He said that they had been sitting there about two minutes talking when the defendant and another fellow came in and wanted beers; that Spatz said to the defendant, “ I told you many times not to come in here, leave my house, you cannot have any beer in my house.” Just as soon as Spatz replied, the defendant drew a pistol and it went “puff, puff, puff.” He saw him fire the revolver three times, and after firing the shots they went out. It appears that the decedent was seated in a chair in the act of lighting his cigar at the time the defendant and his companion entered the room and called for beer; that during the firing he attempted to rise from his chair, y called for help, and then fell to the floor. An ambulance was summoned and he was removed to the hospital, where he died the following day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 130, 189 N.Y. 275, 27 Bedell 275, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wenzel-ny-1907.