State v. Molnar

44 A.2d 197, 133 N.J.L. 327, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 27, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 197 (State v. Molnar) 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. Molnar, 44 A.2d 197, 133 N.J.L. 327, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 230 (N.J. 1945).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

Plaintiff in error was found guilty by a Middle-sex County jury of murder in the first degree and was thereupon sentenced by the court to death. The case comes up on assignments under a strict writ of error and also on specifications for reversal under a certification of the entire record. The following facts were in evidence. In all essential respects they came from Molnar, himself, whom we shall refer to as the defendant, either in his proved confessions, or in his testimony at the trial, or in both. His testimony did not vary materially from his proved confessions.

Defendant had been married for about four years to Anna Rozanski, a daughter of Adam Rozanski. There was one child of the marriage, aged two and one-half years. Disagreements came, accompanied by court hearings and followed by a separation which began about nine months before- the date of the crime charged in the indictment. During the separation defendant lived with his mother, and his wife resided with her father. The infant child of the marriage was, under an order of custody given by the court a few daj^s earlier, with the wife at the time of the crime. Defendant nursed grievances against his wife and her family because of the “lies” that he believed they had told about him, with the result that he conceived the idea of killing his wife and, later, of killing her entire family, especially her father. He owned a “22” calibre rifle and two “32” calibre revolvers. Two or three days before the tragedy he exchanged his smaller revolvers for a “38” calibre revolver. His purpose in wanting the larger weapon, so he said, was “to kill the wife and the family and whoever else I could grab hold of.” On December 7th, 1944, he went forth to execute a deliberated plan to kill, and definitely to kill his wife and her father. He placed the revolver, loaded with five bullet cartridges, under his belt beneath his vest. *329 He “broke” the rifle so that it could be folded, and he wrapped it, as thus folded, in a newspaper and carried the same as a parcel. He placed the cartridge clip of the rifle, loaded with shells, in his pocket, as also a further supply of loose cartridges. Tims armed to kill and with the purpose to kill he sought and found his selected and unsuspecting victims at their home. The confession reads:

“Q. When you went to your wife’s house to-day, whom did you expect to shoot ? A. The wife first.
"Q. And then who? A. The father.
“Q. The father? A. That’s right.
“Q. The sister, too? A. Well, that married sister wasn’t there.
"Q. Tf she were there, would you have shot her, too? A. That’s right.
“Q. Was it your intention to kill them all? A. Well, mostly them two, because they been always- — They always got up them lies. They are always, you know, getting me messed up.
“Q. How about the sister Agnes? A. Well, she is snotty before when I used to go down there. Hone of them liked me. T felt the same way towards them.
“Q. So that you didn’t like them and they didn’t like you; is that it? A. That’s right.
"Q. And because of that feeling between you people you decided to kill them; is that right? A. Yes, for lying.”

When defendant arrived at his father-in-law’s house his wife and her sister were in the kitchen. Eozanski himself was in a bedroom, sleeping. The defendant knocked at the kitchen door and was admitted. He took the rifle package from under his coat and put it behind a chair. ■ There was some trivial conversation. The defendant’s testimony on the witness stand was that he asked his wife about some phonograph records that her brother had borrowed. His testimony follows:

“Then T asked the wife about the records, did she ask the brother for it. She said. Tie was just here. Why didn’t you ask him?’ That is all. I guess, and then I started shooting. And when T did, she was spilling hot water in the sink from the kettle.
*330 “Q. And when you started shooting you were in which room, Daniel? A.. The living room, the parlor.
“Q. And where was your wife? A. She was alongside of the sink in the kitchen, spilling hot water from the kettle in a pan or something. I don’t know.
"Q. Which firearm did you use then? A. The short one, the thirty-eight.
"Q. Did you know how many times you fired it then? A. I think it was once. Then she started hollering and backed into the closet.
“Q. Yes. A. Hollering for her pop, or what.
“Q. Then what happened, Daniel? A. I think he said ‘What is the matter’ once or twice. I don’t know just what he said, but I think I heard it once. He went right to the closet door. And then I was still in the parlor. It was on a slant. And I let one go, and he was still standing up.
' "Q. Speak louder. A. Well, he came alongside of the sink there, facing the pantry door, and I let one go' from the thirty-eight, and he was still standing up, so I gave him another one. Then he fell.”

The fact that defendant’s wife got into the closet or pantry saved her life; but Molnar, after killing the father, tried unsuccessfully to open the pantry door, fired a rifle shot or two through the door, heard no sounds from his wife and decided that she was dead. Eozanski had made no motions with respect to, and so far as appears said nothing to, the defendant. He had come into the kitchen and was facing the pantry door, behind which his daughter was taking cover, and was asking the cause of the disturbance when he was struck down by two bullets deliberately fired at him by the defendant from an adjoining room. The defendant continued his deadly fire, either from within the house or outdoors, until he had shot and seriously wounded two police officers, shot and killed a colored girl and shot and killed the deputy chief of police of the municipality. The later shootings were done with the rifle. The defendant twice refilled the clip from the supply of extra cartridges that he had. brought with him. The indictment upon which the defendant was tried was for the murder of Adam Eozanski.

*331

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Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 197, 133 N.J.L. 327, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-molnar-nj-1945.