State v. Mattio

31 So. 2d 801, 212 La. 284, 1947 La. LEXIS 844
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 26, 1947
DocketNo. 38047.
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 31 So. 2d 801 (State v. Mattio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mattio, 31 So. 2d 801, 212 La. 284, 1947 La. LEXIS 844 (La. 1947).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Irvin Mattio is appealing from his conviction and sentence for the murder of Sylvian Paul Cassagne on May 3, 1945.

The indicting of him by the Orleans Parish Grand Jury occurred May 10, 1945. When arraigned four days later he pleaded not guilty.

On July 23, 1945, appellant, through his attorney, obtained an order of court requiring the Superintendent of the New Orleans Police Department and the District Attorney of Orleans Parish to show cause why his attorney should not be permitted to see, read, and, if thought advisable, make a copy of the police report, then in the possession of the superintendent and the district attorney, which was prepared by the police officers who investigated the commission of the alleged offense. At a hearing of the rule to show cause, issued pursuant to the order, the court refused to grant to appellant the privilege sought, and to the ruling a bill of exceptions was reserved.

On July 25, 1945, the trial was proceeded with, and on the following day the jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged. During the course of the trial appellant reserved thirteen bills of exceptions.

When brought before the court for sentence on September 4, 1945, appellant, through his counsel, filed a motion for a new trial. This motion was denied, to which ruling the final bill of exceptions was reserved, and appellant was sentenced to death by electrocution. This appeal followed.

To properly discuss many of the fifteen bills of exceptions contained in the record it is necessary first to briefly set forth the factual background of the alleged offense committed. The fatal cutting or stabbing of decedent, Sylvian Paul Cassagne, occurred on the sidewalk immediately in front of the Dixie Theatre in New Orleans, a motion picture establishment owned and operated by one Paul Brunet and located in a building bearing Municipal No. 1309 South Rampart Street.

On the ground floor of the building, behind the ticket office, are a small lobby, the private office of the owner, and a stairway leading to the second floor where the picture show is conducted. On reaching the second floor, after ascending the stairs, a patron faces the screen (situated in the building’s rear) and also the backs of the numerous theatre chairs. Among the regular emyloyees of the establishment at the time were Albert Nuss, the floor manager, and Henry West, the janitor and the attendant at the cold drink stand. While *147 not an employee, the decedent was a close personal friend of Brunet and often visited him at night, assisting in the collecting of tickets.

As appellant sat in the third or fourth row of the theatre, about nine o’clock of the night of May 3, 1945, one Earl Silket entered the show and walked down the aisle toward the screen. Momentarily thereafter a struggle between those two ensued, and the other patrons, becoming panicky because of the commotion created, commenced to leave hurriedly. Nuss, the floor manager, observed the difficulty and intervened; whereupon, appellant rushed toward the stairway at the front of the building. Just before reaching the top of the stairs, however, he was stopped and held by Henry West, the janitor and cold drink attendant, to whom instructions of “catch that man” had been yelled by Nuss. Appellant was then delivered by West to Brunet, the owner and operator who had come to the second floor to make an investigation of the disturbance, and they began descending the stairs. When part of the way down appellant began to struggle, in an effort to free himself from Brunet’s hold, causing both to tumble the remaining distance to the lobby and resulting in a hip injury to Brunet. Decedent, who was standing near by, came to the assistance of Brunet, and they, along with Nuss, sought to detain appellant who continued his desperate struggle.

About this time Brunet went into his private office, some ten feet away, and returned with a wooden instrument commonly known as a billy. With it, a moment or so later, he struck appellant on the forehead once. The latter on being struck fell to his knees near the entrance door, then recovered and went out onto the sidewalk. Also going outside was the decedent; while Brunet partially ascen4ed the stairs to observe the situation in the picture show.

As decedent stood on the sidewalk, in front of the establishment, appellant cut or stabbed him three times, with what he called a Texas knife, and then left the scene. After receiving the injuries, which affected his heart and lungs, the small intestine, and ulnar artery of the left wrist, decedent returned to the lobby and spoke to Brunet, saying: “Paul, he cut me.” He was rushed to the hospital, but shortly after reaching there death resulted.

On his being arrested two days later, appellant admitted the cutting of decedent; also, he conducted the arresting officers to a sewer drain or manhole, located at the corner of Liberty and Clio Streets, where they recovered the knife which he had used and later deposited there. Then he was taken to the office of the district attorney and there questioned by Superintendent of Police George Reyer, in the presence of the district attorney, several police officers, and other officials. After answering -a few questions propounded to him, he proceeded to talk at length, giving in detail his *148 version of the commission of the alleged offense. What he had to say, together with the questions propounded, was taken down in writing and transcribed by the district attorney’s stenographer.

In the statement, which was signed by him, he said that as he sat in the Dixie Theatre, Earl Silket (referred to as Tweed) grabbed him and attempted to stab him with a knife. In the scuffle that followed he slipped to the floor with Silket on top. When the floor manager separated them he ran toward the stairway. The statement in part, further reads: “ * * * I tussled with Mr. Cassagne, Mr. Brunet and the colored porter who works there down the steps. While the scuffle was going on the stairs inside the door that leads to the street, my pistol fell from my pocket. Mr. Cassagne said to Mr. Paul Brunet, ‘Go get the black jack.’ Mr. Paul Brunet came back with the black jack. At that time when Mr. Paul came back I was still scuffling with Mr. Cassagne and the porter and somebody else that I do not know trying to get away from them. When Mr. Paul came he grabbed me again, and I was scuffling with them and told them to turn me loose and while I was scuffling with them, Mr. Paul had the black jack and just as I was about to break loose he hit me over the forehead with the black jack and it stunned me and I started to fall and they picked me up. I snatched a loose and I stumbled through the door to the sidewalk, I felt my head and felt the blood. Mr. Cassagne while I was on the sidewalk came towards-me as if to grab me. I said to him ‘Man let me alone, I aint done nothing.’ At the time I backed off from him, I had my knife in my hand having taken it out of my pocket when I stumbled through the-door and after I backed off from Mr. Cassagne I jumped right back into him and jugged him with the knife and as well as-I can remember I jugged him in the chest which side I do not remember. I just remember jugging him once but I may have-jugged him more than once. After I jugged him once I started walking down Rampart Street towards Erato Street and after five (5) feet I noticed a colored man following me and this colored man hollowed, ‘Catch him he done cut Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
31 So. 2d 801, 212 La. 284, 1947 La. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mattio-la-1947.