State v. Di Noi

195 A. 497, 59 R.I. 348, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 195 A. 497 (State v. Di Noi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Di Noi, 195 A. 497, 59 R.I. 348, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 176 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

*350 Condon, J.

This is an indictment for murder. The defendant was tried before a jury in the superior court and was found guilty. This verdict has been approved by the trial justice, who denied defendant’s motion for a new trial. To this denial of his motion and to numerous rulings made by the trial justice in the course of the trial, the defendant took exceptions and has duly prosecuted his bill of exceptions to this court. Included in said bill is a further exception, taken to a ruling of another justice of the superior court, denying defendant’s motion to examine, before trial, certain material alleged to be in the possession of the attorney general.

Defendant’s exceptions are seventy-three in number, but exceptions numbered 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 26, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 43, 46, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55, 61, 62, 63, 69, 71, 72 and 73 are expressly waived. The exceptions which are pressed are considered here in the order and manner in which counsel for the defendant has discussed them under the several points set out in his brief. These points, restated in the language of defendant’s brief but in interrogative form, are as follows.

*351 I. Was it prejudicial error to deny defendant’s motion for leave to examine before trial certain materials in the custody of the attorney general? Exceptions 3 and 4.

II. Was it prejudicial error to allow, over repeated objections, disgraceful, irrelevant and prejudicial cross-examination of the defendant as to the details of his intimate relations with the deceased? Exceptions 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34. Also exception 59 (request to charge 23).

III. Was it prejudicial error for the trial justice to refuse to charge the jury as requested in defendant’s request to charge number 27, exception being duly noted? Exception 61.

IV. Was it prejudicial error for the trial justice to rule out reputation evidence because it was negative and to refuse to charge as requested in defendant’s request number 21? Exceptions 28 and 57.

V. Was it prejudicial error to deny items 7 to 11, both inclusive, as set forth in defendant’s motion for a bill of particulars, and thereafter to deny defendant’s request to see the original reports of state experts relative to certain substances? Exceptions 1 and 2.

VI. Was it prejudicial error to allow the state to ask leading questions of its own witness on a disputed matter of vital significance in the case? Exceptions 6 and 7.

VII. Was it prejudicial error to permit the state’s witness, Captain Franklin, to testify to a material fact on being recalled by the state, which fact he stated he did not know in his direct examination? Exceptions 8 and 9.

VIII. Was it prejudicial error to allow hearsay evidence to be introduced by the state? Exceptions 10, 11, 16.

IX. Was it prejudicial error for the court to refuse to charge as requested by the defendant in his requests numbered 6 and 8, exception being duly noted? Exceptions 44, 45.

X. Was it prejudicial error in the ruling of the trial justice to order question and answer 388 in cross-examination *352 of the state’s witness, Mrs. Jarvis, to be stricken, exception being duly noted? Exception 5.

XI. Was it prejudicial error for the trial justice to deny .the defendant a new trial because he did not have a full, fair and impartial trial? Exception 70 (includes all the following exceptions: 21, 22, 24,40,41,42, 47, 58, 60, 64, 65, 25).

XII. Was it prejudicial error for the trial justice to deny defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was against the law, the evidence, and against the weight of the law and the evidence? Exceptions 27, 66, 67, 68.

It appears from the evidence that on Tuesday, December 3, 1935, in the late afternoon, there was discovered, lying on the kitchen floor of the first-floor tenement at 12 Tobey street in the city of Providence, the dead body of one Carmella Bruno. The body bore marks about the head and hands which indicated that the deceased had come to her death from the blows of a blunt weapon in the hands of another. A careful examination of the tenement and the objects therein failed to disclose any fingerprints. There was found, however, on an upper shelf in the closet of another room in the tenement two parts of a stove shaker on which were discovered spots of blood. This shaker had apparently been used by the person who killed the deceased and had then, by such person, been hidden in the closet. The kitchen was spattered with blood in various places and there was a pool of blood at the side of the body. These things, and other indications on the body, pointed to the belief that there had been a brief struggle before the deceased was subdued and killed by several blows inflicted on her head by the killer, probably with the stove shaker.

When the deceased was discovered, the shades in the kitchen were fully drawn and no one was found in the tenement. Upon examination of her body by the medical examiner, it was evident that she had been dead for two or three days, and that she had probably been killed in the af *353 ternoon or evening of the preceding Saturday, November 30, 1935. While no clues were found in the tenement leading to the belief that any known person was guilty of the crime, suspicion was directed at the defendant, who had been intimate with the deceased and who had quarrelled with her on several occasions, making, at the same time in the presence of others, threats to kill her. One of these threats had come to the attention of the police a few weeks previous to the death of the deceased, and with this as a starting point, the defendant was arrested for questioning. Two officers went to defendant’s home a short time after the discovery of the body and found him preparing his evening meal. He professed surprise at their visit and wanted to know why they were arresting him.

The defendant was taken to the home of the deceased and was confronted there with the body of the murdered woman still lying on the floor in the position in which it had been discovered. In the presence of several police officers and within the hearing of several others, he was asked if he had committed this crime and he replied, substantially, to the effect: “You no see me do it. I no see you do it. You got to prove that I do this.” He was immediately taken to the central police station and was questioned at length by several officers, but at no time did he admit that he had killed the deceased or that he had anything to do with the homicide.

During the evening of December 3, 1935, two officers searched defendant’s tenement on Diamond street and found articles of clothing on which were blood spots. An examination of his overcoat, hat and shoes disclosed the presence of further blood stains. These stains were submitted to the state pathologist for inspection and were found, in several instances, to be human blood. The pathologist also inspected scrapings obtained from under the fingernails of the defendant and found blood and live epithelial matter, or live skin, in some of them.

*354

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A. 497, 59 R.I. 348, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-di-noi-ri-1937.