Roesel v. State

41 A. 408, 62 N.J.L. 216, 33 Vroom 216, 1898 N.J. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 41 A. 408 (Roesel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roesel v. State, 41 A. 408, 62 N.J.L. 216, 33 Vroom 216, 1898 N.J. LEXIS 27 (N.J. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

The error assigned on the order of the court directing that the two persons accused should be tried separately requires no discussion. The power of the court to order several accused charged in the same indictment to be tried separately is well settled. The counsel of the plaintiff in error made no point on that exception either in their briefs or on the oral argument.

Manshande, at the trial, testified that Eoesel told him that Pitts had a large amount of money in his house, and urged him to go with him and rob the house; that on the 9th of September Eoesel purchased two tickets on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad from New York to Summit; that they rode on these tickets to Summit; that they walked from the Summit station to Pitts’ residence and went into a barn near by and waited until someone who was in Pitts’ house went away. Manshande further testified that after the visitor went away he and Eoesel went out of the barn to carry out their purpose of robbery; that Eoesel [220]*220picked up a piece of. wood, called a gambrel, and they both went to the door of Pitts’ house, and when Pitts opened the door Roesel struck him the blow on the head which caused his death. Manshande also testified that before he and Roesel left New York they procured two masks and two pieces of rope, the masks to conceal their faces and the rope to tie the two occupants of the house.

There was ample testimony to confirm the testimony of Manshande. The railroad tickets which he says Roesel purchased. were found, soon after the murder, on or near the premises of the deceased, and the ticket agent who sold them identified them as the tickets sold to Roesel. The conductor on the railroad also identified the tickets by his punch-mark. The date on the tickets showed that they had been issued on the 9th of September. The deceased was found dead, lying •upon his back upon the floor of the kitchen of the house, with a wound in his forehead and blood under his head. Mary Davis, who was the only other inmate of the house, testified that she was awakened by a noise while lying on a lounge in the same room, and when she arose and went towards where the body of Pitts lay a small man with a mask on his face struck her two severe blows, after which she made her way to a neighbor’s house and gave the alarm. Woodruff, to whose house Mary went, testified that he reached the house of the deceased about eight o’clock in the evening and found •the deceased lying on the floor, dead. A mask made of black woolen, with green lining inside, was found the next morning at the north corner of the barn, and a piece of a German newspaper published in New York of the date of September. 9th. A rope about twenty-five feet long was found on adjoining premises, alongside of the road, the morning after the murder.

The prisoner was a competent witness and was sworn in his own behalf. He did not deny the matters of fact testified to by Manshande except that he denied that he had struck the blow, nor did he contradict any of the facts testified to by the other witnesses in the case. The testimony of Manshande [221]*221is strongly confirmed by the failure of the defendant to controvert by his testimony the facts testified to by Manshande. After testifying to his age and birthplace, the entire testimony of the prisoner with regard to the charge on which he was upon trial is as follows :

“Q. You heard the testimony of George Manshande, did you?

“A. I did, sir.

“ Q. Did you strike Mr. Pitts ?

“A. I didn’t understand.

“Q. Wait; did you strike Mr. Pitts-

“A. No, sir.

“Q. Wait a minute — with a club or any other weapon, on the evening of September 9th last?

“Q. Or at any other time?

“A. No, sir.”

The prisoner was then handed over to the prosecutor for cross-examination, and all inquiry by the prosecutor touching the connection of the prisoner with the preparation for and the execution of this crime was objected to by the counsel of the prisoner and excluded by the court, on the ground that it was not a cross-examination.

The prisoner at the trial, so far as his connection with the commission of this crime was concerned, put himself upon the fact that the blow that killed the deceased was not struck by him. On this evidence the contention was at the trial, and in the assignments of error here is, that under those circumstances the prisoner was not guilty of murder. The trial judge charged the jury that if they found from the evidence that Manshande and Roesel agreed to go to the house of Pitts for the purpose of robbing the house, and that they went there on the 9th of September, in pursuance of that agreement and purpose, and that they were together at the door of Pitts’ house for that purpose, and while there together Pitts received from one of these men a blow that caused his death, they are [222]*222both guilty of murder in the first degree, uo matter which one struck the blow.

The sixty-seventh section of the Crimes act enacts “ that if any person or persons in committing or attempting to commit sodomy, rape, arson, robbery or burglary, or any unlawful act against the peace of this state, of which the probable consequence may be bloodshed, shall kill another, or if the death of anyone shall ensue from the committing or attempting to commit any such crime or act as aforesaid, * ■ * * then such person or persons so killing as aforesaid, on conviction, shall be adjudged to be guilty of'murder.” Gen. Stat., p. 1062. Section 271 of the Crimes act provides “ that all murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate any arson, rape, sodomy, robbery or burglary, shall be deemed murder of the first-degree.” Gen. Stat., p. 1100.

By the common law, all who were present, aiding and abetting in a felony, are principals. Coal Heavers’ Case, 1 Leach C. C. 64, Fost. 428. With regard to what will constitute such a presence as will render a man a principal, it is said, by Mr. Justice Foster, that if several persons set out together or in small parties upon one common design, be it murder or other felony, or for any other purpose unlawful in itself, and each takes the part assigned him, some to commit the fact, others to watch at proper distances to prevent a surprise or to favor, if need be, the escape of those who are immediately engaged, they are all, provided the fact be committed, present at it. Fost. 350. Thus, where A waits under a window while B steals articles in the house, which he throws through the window to A, the latter is a principal in the offence. Owen’s Case, 1 Moo. C. C. 96; Rosc. Cr. Ev. 213. “If diver; persons come in one company to do any unlawful thing, as to kill, rob or beat a man, or to commit a riot, or to do any other trespass, and one of them in doing thereof kill a man, this shall be adjudged murder in them all that are present of [223]*223that party abetting him and consenting to the act or ready to aid him, although they did but .look on.” 1 Hale C. L. 441. Roesel and Manshande were .engaged in a common purpose— the robbery of the deceased.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 408, 62 N.J.L. 216, 33 Vroom 216, 1898 N.J. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roesel-v-state-nj-1898.