State v. Noel

133 A. 274, 102 N.J.L. 659, 17 Gummere 659, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 221
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 17, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 133 A. 274 (State v. Noel) 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. Noel, 133 A. 274, 102 N.J.L. 659, 17 Gummere 659, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 221 (N.J. 1926).

Opinions

The plaintiff in error, Harrison W. Noel (hereinafter referred to as the defendant, or Noel), was convicted in the Essex Oyer and Terminer of murder in the first degree without recommendation of life imprisonment. The indictment under which he was tried and convicted charged him with the murder of Raymond Pearce, on the 3d day of September, 1925. The trial judge had no alternative, in view of the verdict of the jury, except to sentence the defendant to death. This sentence was pronounced.

The writ of error directed to the Essex Oyer and Terminer brings up the record of the conviction. The questions presented to this court for its decision can be better understood and considered if a review is made of the crime for which the defendant was convicted, and a brief history of the life of the defendant prior to September 3d 1925, is given.

Raymond Pearce was a chauffeur. He drove a taxicab, a Dodge touring car, license No. 9722. He was last seen alive at the railroad station in the town of Montclair, in Essex county, on Thursday, September 3d, at about one-thirty P.M. On Saturday, September 5th, at five P.M., Herbert H. *Page 661 Matts was walking along the Little Falls road at Cedar Grove, in Essex county. When he arrived at the bridge over the Peckham river he looked through the brush at the side of the road. His eye was attracted to something white. He made an investigation. He found the dead body of a man, afterwards identified as Raymond Pearce. The white article which he had seen from the road was a shirt upon the body of Pearce. Pearce had been killed by a .32 calibre steel-jacketed bullet. This bullet had entered the lower back part of Pearce's head. The pistol from which it had been discharged had been held so close to the head of Pearce that the scalp showed a slight burn. A physician at eleven P.M. on the same day performed an autopsy. He was of the opinion that Pearce had been dead longer than fourteen hours and less than forty-eight hours, and, probably, in the neighborhood of twenty-four hours. On Saturday, September 5th, at eleven-twenty A.M., the taxicab driven by Pearce was found near Bradford avenue, Cedar Grove, in the woods. Near the place where the taxicab was found was a stone quarry. On Friday, September 4th, 1925, at about eleven-thirty A.M., the wife of the chief of police of Cedar Grove had noticed near the quarry a maroon Overland touring car, bearing the license number 156433 N.J. She told her husband what she had seen. This information was imparted to Fred Gallagher, a Montclair detective, who called up the license bureau at Trenton and received the information that the license number 156433 N.J. had been issued for a car belonging to the Noel family. Upon receiving this information the detective immediately went to the Noel home on North Mountain avenue, Montclair. He talked with the defendant and then took him to police headquarters. On Sunday, September 6th, Gallagher searched the room of Noel. He found upon the floor beggar lice, a variety of weed which grew in the woods near Bradford avenue, Cedar Grove. A box of .32 calibre steel-jacketed bullets and a receipt for a .32 calibre Spanish automatic pistol were also found in the room of Noel. The receipt showed that the pistol had been purchased on August 24th, 1925, at a sporting *Page 662 goods store in New York City. The receipt was made to Wallace Payne, Falls road, Little Falls, New Jersey. The manager of the store where the pistol had been bought testified at the trial that the pistol had been bought and mailed to Wallace Payne at the address mentioned. The postmaster at Little Falls identified Noel as the one who had received a package eight inches long and five or six inches wide on August 25th, 1925. A Spanish automatic pistol was found under the back seat of the maroon Overland touring car. Stains were observed by Captain Mason, of the Essex county prosecutor's office, on the coat of Noel and on the leather cushion of the front seat of the Dodge taxicab of Pearce. Examination of these stains showed that they were spots of the blood of mammals.

On Friday, September 4th, 1925, at about noon, John Sandin, a chauffeur in the employ of Mr. J.A. Bower, residing at 136 Upper Mountain avenue, in the town of Montclair, was cleaning a Buick sedan car. A commotion took place in front of the premises. A Dodge touring car bearing the license 0722 N.J. was pointed out to Sandin. He followed the Dodge car, with the Buick car, for some eight or nine miles, and pulled the Buick car alongside of it. The defendant, Noel, was sitting in the driver's seat. Alongside of him was a little girl about six years of age, whose name Sandin afterwards learned was Mary Daly. The defendant stopped his car, reached for a pistol, obtained it, and shot Sandin in the head. Sandin recovered, but remembers nothing which occurred after he had been shot.

Detective Gallagher, as has been stated, first saw Noel at his home on Saturday, September 5th, at about five P.M. Noel was questioned regarding the whereabouts on Friday of the Overland car. He insisted that he had driven the car to Morristown, New Jersey, on that day. This was in contradiction of the reports that had been made to Gallagher. The defendant was then taken by Gallagher to police headquarters and questioned continuously until five A.M., on Sunday, September 6th. About three or four A.M. he admitted having taken the child, Mary Daly. He said that she *Page 663 was alive and that he wanted $4,000 for her return. During the night he was besought by some five police officials, two physicians who had previously attended the defendant at the Overbook Hospital for the Insane, his mother, and the father of Mary Daly, to tell where the child might be found. The police offered to pay him $4,000 or more. Noel was also told he would not be returned to the Overbrook Hospital if he revealed the whereabouts of the little girl. Mr. Daly, the father of Mary Daly, told Noel that if he would tell him where his little girl was he would not prosecute him at all. At about five A.M., on Sunday, Noel said he would show them where Mary Daly was. He went in an automobile with several officers and directed that the car be driven from Montclair up through Little Falls, and then up a back road to a point where he directed the driver to stop. They all got out and Noel said, "There she is." The body of Mary Daly was discovered. She had been shot in the side of the head. The defendant was then brought back to police headquarters. He was then asked what he had done with Pearce. He said he had shot Pearce. He then went in an automobile with members of the police force and directed them to the place on Bradford avenue where he had shot Pearce. He was then asked what had become of the gun, and he said it was under the rear seat of his car. The Overland car was searched in the Noel garage and the pistol was found in the place Noel had designated. Upon his return to the Montclair police headquarters from the second automobile trip Noel was told by Captain Mason that he desired him to make a statement of everything he had done. Noel was then warned that such a statement would be used against him and he replied that that was all right. In answer to questions asked him by a detective, Thomas Diamond, a statement was prepared which was handed to the defendant. He read it and signed it about seven-thirty P.M., on Sunday, September 6th. The statement described the purchase of the revolver, the formation of an intention to kidnap a young girl who lived at 136 Upper Mountain avenue, in Montclair, for the purpose of obtaining money from her parents for her return, the details *Page 664

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 274, 102 N.J.L. 659, 17 Gummere 659, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-noel-nj-1926.