17 N.Y.S. 16 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
Upon an examination of the record in this case we do not find any exceptions to the admission or exclusion of testimony; but it
The story of the complainant is that upon the 19th of September, 1889, the complainant and a companion by the name of Corcoran went into a saloon at the corner of Eighth avenue and Twenty-Fifth street for the purpose of taking a drink, they being on their way to the Fourteenth-Street Theater, which was situated in Fourteenth street, just west of Sixth avenue; that they went to the bar, and ordered their drinks; that at this time there were five or six men at the other end of the room, but the complainant did not notice that the defendant was among them; that the complainant commenced a conversation with the bar-keeper in respect to a man of the name of Kinnan, and the complainant said to the bar-keeper that Mr. Kinnan “ought to hit Mr. Barker a punch in the nose for offering such a thing to him,” (referring to a ticket that the defendant had given to Kinnan for the street-cleaning department;) that as soon as he made that remark he was grabbed by Barker, who butted him, and struck him under the mouth with his fist, and threw him on the floor; that the complainant was in a dazed condition from the violence of the assault, but, while lying on the floor, saw Barker standing up abolit to kick him, and that his intention was to kick him in the privates, and he said to him, “Don’t do that; no one but a brute would do that;” whereupon defendant kicked him three or four times, the first time in the privates. During this scuffle the complainant was not sure whether he hit Barker or not, but he believes that he did. The complainant further testified that he did not know how he got up, but was “kind o’dazed, ” and that his friend Corcoran fetched him out of the store, and he went to another liquor store, and a doctor was brought to him. It further appears from the medical testimony that the complainant was severely injured in one of his testicles, and was confined to his bed for a considerable period of time because of such injury. Corcoran was examined as a witness, and testified that he was in the saloon with the
The defendant was the first witness examined on his own behalf. He testified to being in the saloon on the night in question, when the complainant and Corcoran came in, and went up to the bar and called for a drink, and commenced talking to the bar-keeper, and the ticket for the street-cleaning department was spoken of, and complainant said, “We don’t want that ticket. My friend won’t use no ticket like that. Barker ought to stick that ticket up his ass. If I was in this man’s place I would punch Barker in the nose. Barker is no good,” etc. That Barker then walked from the end of the room where he was, going towards the complainant, for the purpose of going to the wash-room or water-closet, and that, as he got opposite to the complainant, the complainant turned around from the bar, and said, “Here’s the son of a bitch now, ” and struck him on the left side of the head so powerful a blow that he staggered. That they then clinched, and the defendant threw the complainant, and he fell on the iron rail at the foot of the bar, and they rolled off together on the floor, where the defendant held the complainant until he promised to keep still if he would let him up, whereupon defendant let him up, and as soon as he got up he struck the defendant again, and the defendant threw him again on the floor; and that during the encounter several blows were exchanged; the defendant, however, denying that he kicked complainant at all. On behalf of the defendant five witnesses were examined who were present in the saloon at the time of the encounter, all of whom testified to the commencement of the assault by the complainant, to the fact of abusive language having been used by the complainant, (although they differed somewhat as to its phraseology, some stating more than others, and also differed as to the side of the head upon which the first blow was struck, and as to whether, when complainant fell, he fell upon the iron rail at the bottom of the bar,) and all concurring that the defendant did not kick the complainant,—contradicting him, in fact, in respect to all the main features of the assault as testified to by him. The variance in the testimony of these witnesses is urged by the learned district attorney as an evidence that they were not testifying truly as to what they had seen, but simply for the purpose of shielding the defendant from the consequence of his acts. But this criticism does not seem to me to be well founded, because it is seldom that even two witnesses will agree in respect to the details of a transaction such as this was, where there is necessarily so much excitement and confusion, and the parties are acting with the greatest quickness, and where the observers are differently placed. The story of the complainant in reference to what occurred at the time he was kicked by Barker certainly does not commend itself with great force to the judgment. He states that, before Barker kicked him at all, he saw that he intended to kick him in the privates, and that he had time enough to say, “Don’t do that; no one but a brute would do that,” before the kick was delivered. This story seems to be simply incredible, even if it is physically possible to do the act in the manner testified to by complainant, as to which there is much doubt, to say the least. The complainant’s witness Corcoran tells an entirely different story in reference to the transaction of the kicking. He says that as defendant was getting up he