State v. Fuersten

135 A. 894, 103 N.J.L. 383, 1927 N.J. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 31, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 A. 894 (State v. Fuersten) 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
State v. Fuersten, 135 A. 894, 103 N.J.L. 383, 1927 N.J. LEXIS 178 (N.J. 1927).

Opinion

*385 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Trenchard, J.

Paul W. Euersten (hereinafter called the defendant) was indicted for the murder of Harriet A. Tickers, and was convicted of murder in the first degree. No recommendation of life imprisonment was made, by the jury, and he was sentenced to death. He now brings up for review the record of that conviction, together with certain bills of exceptions and a certificate of the entire proceedings had upon the trial.

At the trial, the evidence tended to show, among others, the following matters of fact:

The defendant is of foreign descent and forty-four years old. He has lived in this country for twenty-three years. He is a bachelor and lived in a room in the city of Camden. The decedent, Harriet xY. Tickers, was a married woman (but separated from her husband), and was a waitress at a Camden club. He killed her on June 29th, 1926. The defendant and the decedent had been sexually intimate for two months prior to the killing. Pie objected to her associations with other men, and with a certain woman, and seventeen days before the killing he formed in his mind a purpose to kill both her and himself. During the intervening seventeen daj7s he had further associations and sexual intercourse with her. About nine-thirty A. ii. on the day of the tragedy she came to his room, in pursuance of an arrangement made bj7 him. They undressed and laid, upon the bed for an hour or more arguing or quarreling principally about her associations with a certain woman. Shortly before eleven o’clock lie arose from the bed, took his revolver from the bureau, which was about ten feet distant from the bed, and shot her in the back, from which wound she thereafter died.

Thus far there is no dispute in the evidence. In fact, the defendant himself so testified, in effect, at the trial. It is true that he further testified that before the tragedy he had abandoned the purpose to kill her which he had formed seventeen days before. But in a statement made at police headquarters at ten forty-five o’clock in the evening of the day of the killing he admitted that during such period of seven *386 teen days he had in his mind “occasionally’-, whenever anything happens between us,” that purpose to kill her; that he made up his mind to get the revolver and shoot her while they were talking on the bed, and that he took the revolver from a bureau drawer. In no particular save one did the defendant, while on the witness-stand, deny that he made those statements. When called to testify at the trial he stated that the revolver was on and not in the bureau. He further testified that while he and the decedent were together he drank “two or three” glasses of cherry wine. While he testified that at the time of the shooting he was “dizzy,” he did not say that he was intoxicated, and admitted that he knew what he was doing.

It is now argued on behalf of the defendant that by reason of drunkenness his mental state was such that he was incapable of deliberation and premeditation, which are essential to murder in the first degree, and, therefore, the verdict, which, of course, involved a finding of capacity for deliberation and premeditation, is against the weight of the evidence. This phase of the case was submitted to the jxiry by the trial judge and we think was rightly determined against the defendant by the jury. We believe that the verdict of murder was not against the weight of the evidence.

We shall consider the remaining points in the order in which they have been so thoroughly argued by Mr. Heher, of counsel for the defendant here, but who was not engaged at the trial.

The first point relates to the charge of the court. Two extracts from it are specified as causes for reversal, the contention being that the judge failed to properly instruct the jury that a specific intent to kill was essential to a conviction of murder in the first degree, and thereby, in effect, permitted the jury to convict of that degree upon a mere finding of an intent to do serious bodily harm, done deliberately and witli premeditation.

We think that this contention is ill founded in point of fact. All that the court said upon the essentials of murder in the first degree must be considered as a whole, and if, when so considered, it is correct, not in conflict, and not mis *387 leading to the jury, it will not lead to a reversal. State v. Randall, 95 N. J. L. 452; State v. McDonald, 89 Id. 421; affirmed, 91 Id. 233; Kargman v. Carlo, 85 Id. 632. Tested by this rule the instruction in question was correct. In it we find this: “Before you will be justified in finding the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, the state must satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt that before slaying his victim the accused had formed in his mind a specific intent to take life,” and that it was carried out with deliberation and with premeditation. And that instruction, as we read the charge, was not in conflict with any other part, nor was the charge misleading.

The next point also relates to the charge. After having instructed the jury that to constitute murder in the first degree there must be an intention to take life, the judge charged the two extracts, both to the same effect, of which complaint is now made. They are in substance as follows: “No particular time need elapse between the formation of the design to take life and its willful and deliberate execution. All that was required, is that there be sufficient time to fully and dearly conceive the design to kill and then to consider and deliberate the question whether to kill or not and thereafter to determine to execute the previously formed intention. If there was sufficient time for the defendant to consider and decide each of these requirements, it is enough.”

It is not argued, and could not be successfully, that such instruction was an incorrect statement of the law. It is well within the rule upon this topic, which is: “To constitute murder in the first degree there must be an intention to take life. No particular length of time need intervene between the formation of the purpose to kill and its execution. It is not necessary that the deliberation and premeditation should continue for an hour or a minute. It is enough that the design to kill be fully conceived and purposely executed.” State v. Bonofiglio, 67 N. J L.. 239.

The defendant’s argument is that the reiteration of this statement of the law as to the time factor, emphasized the time factor rather than the intent essential to murder in the first degree to the prejudice of the defendant. But we do not *388 think that is so. The mere fact that the judge in his instruction stated a second time a correct and pertinent proposition of law will not justify a reversal as prejudicial to the defendant.

The remaining objection to the charge relate to comments upon the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 894, 103 N.J.L. 383, 1927 N.J. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fuersten-nj-1927.