245 A.D. 69 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1935
Defendant has been convicted of first degree manslaughter for killing her paramour, Howard Rhoades. He died from a wound in the abdomen made with “ a paring knife or other sharp instrument.” The indictment charged second degree murder.
Defendant, a married woman living separate from her husband, and Rhoades, a divorced man, occupied living rooms one flight up
“ On Sunday morning, June 24, 1934, after closing, Clara and I had difficulties with reference to dividing up the money. She took the money from the cash register, but later I got the money from her, and believe 1 put it behind the bathtub. During the trouble we were upstairs and downstairs more than once. During the time she struck me several times. She was mad when I got the money away from her. At some time during the trouble I was hurt in my side. I do not know just when it occurred. When I last came down the stairs, I either fell part way down or fell after I was down in the front hall. "When I awoke or came to, I felt blood on my side and got up and started across the street, intending to go to the hospital. I did not see the knife at any time, but know that I was cut in the side sometime during the trouble. After I crossed the street, the police car came along and took me to the hospital*71 where I still am and where I am making this statement in the presence of the district attorney; Dr. Brooks, coroner, and others; realizing that my condition is serious and that I may not survive. We both had been drinking more or less and we both had had a hard day and were tired. She was not near me when I came to at the foot of the stairs.
“ The doctors have told me that my condition is serious and I am making this statement of facts to the best of my ability, realizing that I may not live and this statement can be used as a dying declaration, because made by me in full realization of my condition.
“ There was no good reason for our trouble.”
Other evidence was received bearing upon the mental state of the declarant and whether at the time the statement was made he was without hope of recovery and in the shadow of impending death. There is no evidence that he had been told there was no hope of recovery, or of statements by him to a like effect or of circumstances showing his preparation for death. To sústain the admission of the statement the district attorney relies particularly upon the testimony of a physician who was present when the statement was made. “ I recall some time during that conversation we called his attention to the fact that he had been told by his physician that he was desperately ill and might not live and from his appearance and his actions I believe he was fighting — I believe he knew he was not going to live.” I have searched in vain for authority to sustain the relevancy of expert testimony upon the subject of a state of mind under the circumstances here shown. The trial judge must determine, not only from the conversation of the declarant but from the surrounding circumstances, that there is clear proof showing the certainty of speedy death and that the declarant had no hope of recovery. (People v. Ludkowitz, 266 N. Y. 233, 239.) The verification of the declaration added nothing to its competency. Dying declarations are admissible in evidence upon the theory that the declarant, impressed with the awesome thought of approaching certain dissolution, will be urged to tell the truth with all the compulsion that would be felt after a solemn appeal to the Creator in an oath. (People v. Sarzano, 212 N. Y. 231.) The declarations must have been made in the consciousness of a swift and certain doom. “ Fear or even belief that illness will end in death will not avail of itself to make a dying declaration. There must be ‘ a settled hopeless expectation ’ * * * that death is near at hand, and what is said must have been spoken in the hush of its impending presence.” (Shepard v. United States, 290 U. S. 96, 100.) Measured by these requirements, the statement received in evidence was not a dying declaration. Its receipt as such was prejudicial
Evidence was received that defendant, several years before the transaction for which she has been convicted, was forcibly restrained from stabbing a woman; that during the struggle she did cut the fingers of those who were restraining her. Other witnesses told of bursts of temper wherein she pulled the hair of one woman and threw beer on another, and threw the salt shakers out of the window. That she remarked when in a passion, that “ she kept the knives in good repair.” Much other evidence of this character was introduced. The former wife of the deceased was permitted, over objection, to tell of his pbilanderings with defendant before the witness divorced him, and finally she was asked by the district attorney, “ I now ask you if his relations with Clara Smith was not the main contributing cause for the differences between you and your husband Howard Rhoades,” to which the witness was permitted to answer, “ It was.” Evidence which tends to prove defendant guilty of a crime or crimes not charged in the indictment is incompetent. The evidence here received does not come within any of the exceptions to this general rule. (People v. Molineux, 168 N. Y. 264; People v. Pettanza, 207 id. 560; People v. Moran, 246 id. 100.) In so far as it tends to prove defendant’s murderous and vicious propensities, it is incompetent. Character is never an issue in a criminal prosecution unless the defendant chooses to make it an issue by first giving or having given on his behalf evidence as to good character. Evidence of viciousness on the part of the deceased, the victim of the homicide, is admissible under certain conditions, but it never is admissible as against a defendant. (People v. Zackowitz, 254 N. Y. 192.) The recital of separate incidents is not the proper method to prove bad character. Each item of proof of the general character indicated in this paragraph was prejudicial.
That the judgment of conviction must be reversed is plain. It only remains for the court to decide between a new trial and a dis missal of the indictment. A new trial should be ordered if in the interest of justice. The public is interested that crimes be prevented, those guilty thereof punished and that society be orderly. The defendant has rights, and these must be considered. She may not be tried for a crime other than as charged in the indictment.
Defendant and decedent led an unconventional and abandoned life together. Each was addicted to the use of intoxicants, and when intoxicated apparently lost all poise possessed when sober. The knife with which the wound was inflicted was an implement used at the bar, equally available to either. Affection of a sort existed between them. He refused to say that his wound was inflicted by the defendant. When the necessity for an operation was indicated, his consent could not be obtained until she came and urged it. Neither intent nor motive has been established. Defendant’s fits of jealousy do not indicate a motive; they might be viewed as an explanation for her act if indeed she did inflict the wound. It was received when only the defendant and the decedent were present. That she inflicted it may be a fact—'that he received it while falling down stairs having a knife in his hand is not beyond the realm of reasonable possibility. The evidence is wholly circumstantial. Where a conviction rests wholly upon circumstantial evidence, it is necessary that there shall be positive proof of the facts from which the inference of guilt is to be drawn, and that the inference of guilt must be the only inference which can be drawn reasonably from these facts. (People v. Harris, 136 N. Y. 423; People v. Giordano, 213 id. 575.)
The judgment of conviction should be reversed and indictment dismissed.
Rhodes, Crapser, Bliss and Heffernan, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction reversed and indictment dismissed.