75 N.Y.S. 234 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The indictment charges that on July 4, 1900, at Newark Valley in the county of Tioga the defendant willfully and feloniously set fire to and burned in the night time a dwelling house then owned and occupied by her, in which at the time there was no human being except herself, and that Radford aided and abetted the commission thereof by procuring certain policies of insurance to be issued upon the dwelling house, and by directly and indirectly counseling, etc., the defendant to commit the same. Stated in full, the proof made by the prosecution at the trial is this: The defendant had lived with Radford at a boarding house in Buffalo as his wife ; in December, 1898, one Curry transferred to the defendant, then known as Ellen Grey, some real estate and furniture in Buffalo, and afterwards Curry sold it to Radford. The defendant purchased the house in Newark Valley in February, 1900, for which she paid in money and property about four thousand dollars ($4,000); she bought it through Radford from Meyers; the conveyance to her was expressly subject to two mortgages, one for two thousand dollars ($2,000) and the other for four thousand dollars ($4,000), thus making the entire purchase price about ten thousand dollars ($10,000). On the 11th day of June, 1900, she procured a policy of insurance on the house for three thousand dollars ($3,000), payable to the German Bank of Buffalo, the then holder of one of the mortgages, and July 19,1899, a policy of insurance for “not exceeding three thousand dollars ” ($3,000), loss payable to Radford as second mortgagee (this policy was for one year, and was on the 5th of May, 1900, assigned by Radford). The house burned was the best in Newark Valley, and although it cost about sixteen thousand dollars ($16,000) to build and was in excellent repair, owing to the fact that there was no market for such property in Newark Valley it
Among the furniture was that bought from Curry, and the whole was sufficient to properly furnish a house of this character. One witness for the prosecution (Pierson), testified that he helped carry about one-half a carload of furniture into the house and .that it was new. After the arrival of the furniture, and on the 11th day of June, 1900, the defendant procured a policy of insurance for one thousand dollars ($1,000) covering household furniture, jewelry, wearing apparel, pictures and many other things, and on. the sixteenth day of June another policy covering the same property for one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500). All the proj>erty specir fied in the proofs of loss was in the house when it burned. Made a compulsory witness before a sheriff’s jury, the defendant testified that she had never lived under any other name than Mary Johnson. She testified that she first discovered the fire in the kitchen, and the prosecution gave evidence that the fire was not in the kitchen but in the elevator, or a room off the kitchen. She testified that on discoving the fire she ran to the “ fire hall,” a few rods distant, screaming, and concerning this the prosecution gave evidence that the first alarm was given by a man named Halliday. The prosecution also gave, evidence that after the fire had been burning a considerable time something dropped down the elevator shaft which water did not extinguish, though the chemical engine did. This constituted the evidence of the prosecution.. It is a settled principle of criminal law- that to justify a conviction upon circumstantial evidence, the circumstances must not only point to. guilt, but must also be absolutely, inconsistent with innocence. The inference of guilt- must be the. only one that can reasonably be drawn from the facts. (Poole v. People, 80 N. Y. 645; People v. Harris, 136 id. 423.) Analyzed, and' applied to the inquiry whether there was sufficient proof to justify this conviction the evidence is this : The defendant’s true name is Mary Johnson; she falsely stated before the sheriff’s jury that she had never been known by any other name. This was wholly immaterial upon the question
All concurred, except Smith, J., dissenting; Parker, P. J., not voting.
Judgment of conviction reversed and defendant discharged.