55 A.D.2d 539 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1976
—Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County, rendered June 21, 1976, after a jury trial convicting the defendant of the crimes of manslaughter in the second degree and possession of a weapon as a felony, unanimously reversed, on the law, and the matter remanded for a new trial. Cherie Seabrook, who had just gotten a driver’s permit, stopped her car at the intersection of 161st Street and McCombs Dam Road. Sylvester Hill, the defendant, was seated in the front passenger seat and Mrs. Seabrook’s three children were in the back seat. James Mann, whose car pulled up along the right side of the Seabrook car, left his car and approached the front passenger window of the Seabrook car. Mann shouted at Hill, and Hill allegedly made no response. Mann then went back to his car, leaned over it and then returned to the Seabrook vehicle and reached his hand inside its front passenger window. A shot was fired and Mann was fatally wounded. After the shot was fired, Hill switched seats with Seabrook without leaving the car and drove off. The gun, which had fallen into the interior of the vehicle, was later thrown away. At the trial, the testimony of the People’s witnesses who were at the scene of the shooting did not establish whether or not Mann reached into the car with any object (i.e., a gun) in his hand. The defendant, who testified on his own behalf, stated that Mann reached into the car window with a nickel-plated gun in his hand. The following colloquy