State v. Manganella

155 A. 74, 113 Conn. 209, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 155 A. 74 (State v. Manganella) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Manganella, 155 A. 74, 113 Conn. 209, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 90 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Haines, J..

The .jury could reasonably have found the following facts: The deceased, Chillo, conducted a grocery and confectionery store in New Haven, and tji.e home of the accused was distant about two hundred and thirty-seven feet therefrom. In the early *211 afternoon of July 21st, 1928, a fifteen year old daughter of Cirillo, Angelina, was in charge of the store while a girl friend, Rose, was with her. A small son of the accused entered and made a purchase for one cent, giving Angelina therefor, one penny.

Shortly thereafter the accused appeared at the store and demanded of Angelina four cents change, claiming that his son had given a nickel, and upon her denial that she had received a nickel, he called her a crook, and asked for her father, and when informed that he was absent, left the store, returning a few moments later and again demanding four cents, and entered the store and looked around for Cirillo without finding him; becoming further abusive to Angelina, she agreed to give the four cents to avoid further argument, and the accused thereupon sent four of his children to the store for four penny cups of lemonade which were served to them by Angelina; a short time later the accused came again to the store and finding Cirillo was there, he stood in front of the store and challenged him to come outside, opening a large pocket knife which he held in his hand, and calling him a coward and a crook; Cirillo was at the time, cutting bread for a customer, Boggia, and told the accused to go away as he was busy and did not care to argue with him, but after further taunts by the accused, he started to go out but was restrained by Boggia, whereupon the accused shouted “I’ll fix you” and went toward his own home and returning in about three minutes, approached the store from the direction of his home and standing in front of the store repeated his abuse of Cirillo, who was still engaged in cutting bread and preparing sandwiches for Boggia, using a bread knife for that purpose; Cirillo then attempted to come out of the store and was urged by Boggia not to do so and not to heed the *212 taunts of the accused. Boggia also urged the accused to go away, but he refused and continued to abuse Cirillo; while Boggia stood against the door to prevent Cirillo from coming out, the accused was standing about ten feet from the store with his right hand in the side pocket of his coat; Boggia approached the accused a second time and asked him to go away but he refused, and. Cirillo then came out of the store and the accused drew a revolver from the side pocket of his coat and said “John, I’m going to shoot you” and fired two shots at Cirillo, who then advanced toward the accused with the bread knife in his hand while the accused backed away toward an automobile which stood about fifteen feet from the store, and as Cirillo closed in on him at this spot and seized the hand with the revolver in it, he struck the accused with the knife, whereupon the accused turned and ran toward his home; after going a short distance, the accused fired three more shots at Cirillo, one of which struck a bystander; Cirillo then walked back into the store while the accused went toward his home. Cirillo was at once taken to a hospital where it was found he had two bullet wounds in his body and one in his hand, and where he died two days thereafter as a result of these wounds; shortly after the shooting, the accused was taken to the railroad station by his brother-in-law and left on the train and did not come back to New Haven until June 17th, 1930, at which time he was placed under arrest. The State also claimed to have proved that Cirillo, knowing that he was about to die, made a statement concerning the circumstances of the shooting. While the main features of the foregoing recital of the events of that afternoon are not in dispute, the accused claims to have proved that his son did give Angelina a nickel instead of a penny, and as she did not return any *213 change after the one cent purchase, he went to the store and asked for Cirillo and finding he was not there, he went away and returned a little later with the same result, and so went home; that shortly afterward he left his home to go to his place of employment, which required him to pass the store, and as he was doing so, Cirillo made offensive remarks about him, and he thereupon requested him to come out and talk things over, but Cirillo was restrained by Boggia, seeing which the accused started on toward his place of employment; that when he was near the automobile he was overtaken by Cirillo, who had the bread knife in his hand, and who pushed him against the automobile and attacked him with the knife, inflicting several wounds upon him, and being thus attacked, the accused drew a gun from his pocket and shot twice at him and broke away from him; that when he thus fired, he believed his life was in danger, that he then started to run toward his home but was pursued by Cirillo, and when he had almost reached the corner of the street he saw Cirillo almost upon him with the knife, and again believed his life was in danger and so fired, three more shots at Cirillo. The accused further claimed to have proved that he was employed in delivering bread and at certain times collected money, and since the War he had always carried a gun. He also claimed to have proved that Cirillo had the reputation of being quarrelsome.

Fifteen of the assignments of error (twelve to twenty-six) relate to rulings upon evidence. Counsel for the accused erroneously discuss these rulings by reference to the transcript of evidence. We are confined in our consideration of them, to the statement of the rulings in the finding.

One of the physicians who examined Cirillo soon after he was takeu to the hospital, was asked to tell *214 of his condition and described his wounds, adding, that he was “in a moribund condition” when he arrived. The objection that this was not responsive, was properly overruled. No ground of exception to the second ruling was stated and it is therefore not entitled to consideration. State v. Perretta, 93 Conn. 328, 339, 106 Atl. 690; Peterson v. Thomas, 105 Conn. 625, 626, 136 Atl. 687. An attending physician was asked if he had any conversation with Cirillo at the hospital as to whether he expected to die. This question was clearly admissible as preliminary to a claim of dying declaration. The witness was then asked what he said to Cirillo relative to his dying. The objection that this was leading was untenable. Counsel for the accused discusses objections and exceptions taken to a dying declaration of Cirillo. It appears that Dr. Mongillo in the presence of Cirillo, the coroner and a stenographer at the hospital, talked with Cirillo in the Italian language, the coroner' asking questions and the doctor, having first been sworn, interpreting them and Cirillo’s answers, which were all taken down by the stenographer. Cirillo was thus asked if he realized that he was dying and answered “Yes.” When again asked if he knew he was at the point of death and was liable to die shortly, he again answered “Yes.” After Dr. Mongillo had testified, the coroner took the stand as a witness and gave the questions and the answers thus obtained from Cirillo. In this connection the fourteenth assignment of error refers to section VII of the finding which recites the above examination of Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A. 74, 113 Conn. 209, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-manganella-conn-1931.