People v. Woltering

9 N.E.2d 774, 275 N.Y. 51, 1937 N.Y. LEXIS 1399
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 13, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 9 N.E.2d 774 (People v. Woltering) 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. Woltering, 9 N.E.2d 774, 275 N.Y. 51, 1937 N.Y. LEXIS 1399 (N.Y. 1937).

Opinion

Hubbs, J.

Defendant was indicted on a charge of murder in the first degree, based upon the shooting and killing of one David North on the 1st day of February, 1935. The jury found the defendant guilty of manslaughter in the first degree. The conviction rests upon circumstantial evidence.

The deceased was thirty-two years of age and resided at the southeast corner of One Hundred and Eighty-first street and Grand avenue in the Bronx. South of the apartment house in which deceased lived and immediately adjoining it, is a church yard with a driveway running through the yard east and west. The rear of the church yard faces Davidson avenue and the easterly side of the church yard is made up of a retaining wall with a fence on top of it which wall and fence are thirteen feet above the level of Davidson avenue.

On the evening of February 1, 1935, when the deceased arrived at the apartment house, he was carrying on his person $248.48 in money and various articles of jewelry. He was shot in the lobby of the apartment house which *55 is two steps above the street level. In the vestibule there is a platform four feet long and six feet wide and then thirteen steps lead to another or higher platform. On the south at the head of the thirteen steps is a row of buttons or buzzers. Separating the lobby from the main hall in the building are two French doors which were closed and locked on the night in question. Entran ce is gained either by a key or by having a tenant in an apartment press a button which releases the latch or lock, permitting a visitor to enter without a key. On the first or ground floor, as one enters the main hall, is an apartment occupied by the superintendent of the building and bis wife. The evening of February 1st was cold, the temperature ranging from twenty-one to twenty-two degrees, and there was about six inches of snow on the ground. At about six-thirty p. m. the superintendent of the building entered the house and went to bis apartment on the main floor. At the time, he did not notice anything lying on the floor of the lobby. Very shortly after the deceased entered the lobby, he rang the buzzer or bell in his apartment and his wife answered it. This occurred at about six-thirty p. M. At about six-thirty-five p. m. the superintendent heard a commotion outside which sounded as if several persons were running down steps. He immediately left his apartment, went to the door separating the main hall from the lobby, opened the door and stood on the upper landing in the lobby. He observed two men on the lower landing or platform, fighting or wrestling. One of the men was bending over with his knee almost touching the ground and the other man was standing or bending over him. The superintendent ordered them out, telling them if they wanted to fight to go outside. At that moment he heard a shot, saw smoke in the vestibule and heard the falling of glass. The superintendent ran down the steps to the lower level of the vestibule and at the same time one of the men ran out of the vestibule. North, the deceased, whom the superin *56 tendent did not at the time recognize, stood for a moment at the doorway leading to the street with his hand on the right side of his neck. Then he went out, walked about fifty feet south in the direction of the church yard and came back immediately. The superintendent had followed him out of the house and stood in front of the house observing him. When the superintendent got outside, the man who first ran out was not in sight. When North, the deceased, came back to the house, he said to the superintendent, Call the ambulance, I am shot.” It was not until then that the superintendent recognized North as a tenant in the house.

The superintendent, with the help of his wife, who had come out shortly after her husband and was in the vestibule when North, the deceased, came back, assisted North to the superintendent’s apartment. As they were escorting North upstairs to the superintendent’s apartment, the superintendent picked up in the lobby a piece of cloth about ten and one-half inches by twenty and one-half inches, torn from a winter overcoat. He had noticed that the man who ran out and was followed by North wore a dark overcoat. No one other than the superintendent of the building saw the man who shot deceased and he could not identify defendant as the man. The defendant is connected with the crime only through the medium of the piece of overcoat material found in the lobby. That material was described by an expert in the clothing business as the lower part torn from an overcoat, the left vent, and of a material known as blue montagnac and by another witness as chinchilla. The first expert pointed out the similarity between montagnac and chinchilla, the difference being that montagnac is a little wirier. The proprietor of a tailor shop testified that in June, 1934, defendant had left his winter overcoat there for repairs and had taken it from her shop in October, 1934. She described defendant’s overcoat as navy blue in color, as being half-lined and identified the piece of cloth as resembling the cloth in the winter overcoat. *57 It further appeared that the coat from which the piece was taken was a half-lined coat.

The defendant lived, with Agnes McGuirl, claimed to be his common-law wife. She testified that when defendant left his home that morning, he was wearing a winter overcoat, the material of which was like that in the piece found in the vestibule of the apartment house. She further testified that he returned to his home that night about seven-thirty o’clock; that at the time he did not have the blue winter overcoat with him but instead was wearing a gray checkered spring overcoat. She had been at home all day and he had not returned to change his coat nor was the gray overcoat in the house when he left that morning, although it was an overcoat he had previously purchased. When he arrived at his own home he called his so-called common-law wife into a bedroom out of. the hearing of her son who was twelve years of age and said to her that if anybody inquired she was to say that he arrived at home between five and six o’clock that evening and that he did not have a blue overcoat.

An aunt of defendant lived about seven minutes’ walk from the apartment house where deceased was shot, at a distance of about six city blocks south and east of the apartment house. The aunt testified that sometime between six and eight o’clock that night, the defendant came to her home carrying his overcoat on bis arm, and that it was folded so that the inside of the coat showed and that it was a dark overcoat. He said he had been in a fight, that there was blood on his overcoat and that he would call for it the next morning. He left it and went away. The next morning, he called at his aunt’s home at the time wearing a light gray coat and took away the coat which he had left there.

The gun with which deceased was killed was found in the church yard about forty or fifty feet south of the apartment house and about forty feet east of Grand avenue, which would indicate that the man who did the *58 shooting went south in Grand avenue and through the church yard. That would be a course which a man might take in going from the scene of the crime to the home of defendant’s aunt and it was in the direction that the deceased started when he left the apartment house immediately after the shooting.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.E.2d 774, 275 N.Y. 51, 1937 N.Y. LEXIS 1399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-woltering-ny-1937.