91 Vt. 237 | Vt. | 1917
Having been indicted for the murder of Angelo DiGioio, the respondent was convicted of murder in the second degree, and is now serving a life sentence at Windsor. The parties were fellow boarders at the house of Mrs. Pette, with whom Mrs. Caroli, a married daughter, then lived. On the morning of the homicide, DiGioio went to his work at a little after six o’clock. Half an hour later, he returned to Mrs. Pette’s, and stealthily entered the house by climbing onto a shed roof and passing thence through a window into his room. The respondent came down from his room that morning about seven o ’clock; and after he had washed, as usual, he went back upstairs. Soon after, the women named heard a noise upstairs and immediately the respondent and DiGioio appeared on the stairs fighting and struggling and the former killed the latter, stabbing him to death as hereinafter detailed.
Rose Yananden was a witness for the State. She lived next door, and on the morning in question, hearing loud talk, she went to the window and saw DiGioio in the yard in the rear of the Pette house, angry and excited, and shaking his fists toward the house. She testified that he went upon the piazza to the dining-room window of the Pette house, and kept shaking his fists all the time. If it was true that DiGioio came back to the house as stated and was shaking his fists at some one inside the dining-room, it was a circumstance of some importance in the justification of self-defence relied upon by the respondent. The evidence shows that the respondent was the only person inside the house toward whom his anger and threats were or could be directed. The state’s attorney realized the force of this testimony, and, resorting to the right of impeachment which the law gave him (State v. Slack, 69 Vt. 486, 38 Atl. 311), called her attention to the fact that twice before she had testified about this matter, and asked her if on either of those occasions she testified that DiGioio was shaking his fists while he was on the piazza. To this the respondent objected. Before the question was ruled upon, the state’s attorney said, “she has testified before the city court and the grand jury, and she didn’t testify to any such thing.’’ Immediately following a statement of this remark the
The State’s evidence tended to show that on the Thursday before the homicide, DiGioio claimed that he had lost a sum of money, and that he suspected that the respondent had stolen it from his room; and that on the next day, Mrs. Pette, in thé presence of Mrs. Caroli, talked with the respondent about this matter. After Mrs. Caroli had been on the stand as a witness for the State, the respondent called her, and after examining her as a witness turned her over to the state’s attorney. Thereupon the attorney asked her if she was present during the cpnversation between Mrs. Pette and the respondent above referred to, and she replied that she was. lie then asked her when and where it was, and subject to the respondent’s objection and exception that it was immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent, the witness was allowed to testify that it was in the kitchen on Friday, the day before the homicide, and that Mrs. Pette then said to the respondent, “John, have you been in my brother-in-law’s (Di
The state’s attorney examined Mrs. Caroli further; but the only objections made to the questions that followed were in this form: “Objected to as to form and substance.” Inasmuch as defects of form, as well as defects of substance, are of different kinds, the exceptions taken were too general to require attention. Foster’s Ex’rs v. Dickinson, 64 Vt. at page 245, 24 Atl. 253.
Raphael Crocietti, a fellow workman with DiGioio, was a witness for the respondent. An offer was made to show by him that a day or two before the homicide DiGioio was careless about his work, and the witness asked him what the matter was, 'and DiGioio replied that he was mad; that the witness then asked him if he was mad at his brother-in-law Rocco, and he replied, “no, I am mad at another man.” This offer was excluded and the respondent excepted. There was nothing in the offer tending to show that the respondent was the object of DiGioio’s anger, nor is there anything in the exceptions furnishing an ‘ ‘ open and visible connection” between the facts covered by the offer and the respondent or his defence. In the brief, counsel argue that this was when DiGioio suspected that the respondent had stolen his money. But this fact did not sufficiently appear. The ex
The respondent was a witness in his own behalf and his counsel offered to show by him that at some time before the homicide DiGioio told him that ‘ ‘ over in Italy on one occasion, he killed a man. ’ ’ This was excluded and the respondent excepted. There is nothing before us to show whether this alleged statement referred to an intentional or accidental homicide; nothing to show that it was anything more than an idle boast; nothing to show that it was made under circumstances reasonably calculated to make any impression on the respondent’s mind; nothing to show, even, that it did in fact make any impression on him. The character of DiGioio as a violent and dangerous man, if known to the respondent, was a pertinent fact under his attempted justification of self-defence, — -provided it was an actuating factor in his conduct at the time of the killing. But such evidence is admitted to justify a respondent’s mental attitude; to show that it reasonably appeared to him necessary to do what he did in order to protect his life or to avert great bodily harm. If his knowledge of the victim’s character did not influence his acts, that character was a fact of no importance. So the offer did not go far enough to make the testimony admissible.
The State’s evidence tended to show that the charred fragments of the knife used by the respondent were found, several days after the homicide, in the ash pan of the stove in the Pette house. These fragments were admitted in evidence. The State also produced a new knife exactly like the one so used as it was before it was broken and burned, and subject to the respondent’s exception, was allowed to show by Dr. Stone, a medical expert who performed the autopsy, that the wounds found on DiGioio’s body, which he described and testified about, “might have been made with such a knife.” There was no error in this ruling. It was proper to show that the respondent had such a knife, and what it was like when used; for this showed that he had the means of perpetrating the crime charged against him. State v. Noakes, 70 Vt. 247, 40 Atl. 249. Nor could this one fact have harmed the respondent, as the only question he made regarding the knife used was as to whom it belonged. The character and extent of the wounds upon the body were such that a juryman could not get an adequate idea of them or the instrument used from a mere verbal description. In such cases an expert may
The respondent excepted to the action of the court in submitting to the jury the question of his guilt of murder in either the first or second degree, insisting that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction of either of those crimes. AYe need not concern ourselves with its sufficiency to sustain a conviction of first degree murder, for on that charge the verdict rendered amounts to an acquittal. Whart. Hom., §- 898; State v. Alpert, 88 Vt. 191, 92 Atl. 32; State v. Nelson, 91 Vt. 168, 99 Atl. 881. Murder in the second degree is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought but without deliberation, premeditation or preconcerted design to kill. State v. Meyers, 58 Vt. 457, 3 Atl. 195; State v. Bradley, 64 Vt. 466, 24 Atl. 1053. This killing was unlawful if it was intentional and unjustifiable. The intent to kill could lawfully be inferred from the fact that use was made of a deadly weapon in such a way as to make the death of the victim a natural consequence. State v. McDonnell, 32 Vt. 491. It was unjustifiable, unless done in self-defence, according to the legal sense of that term. And, while the evidence in behalf of the respondent, especially that given by himself, tends to make the case one of justifiable homicide in defence of his own life, that in behalf of the State gives the killing quite a different character, and tends strongly to show that the claim of self-defence was a sham and pretense. The malice required by the law could be inferred from the facts and circumstances. There was evidence before the jury fairly and reasonably tending to show that on the evening before the homicide, and after he had learned that DiGioio suspected him of stealing his money, the respondent bought the knife used by him on DiGioio, at a local store, that it was not an ordinary pocket knife, but a murderous instrument when used as a weapon of offence; that the respondent had this knife in his hand when the men first appeared on the stairs; that he stabbed DiGioio with it once, and perhaps twice, before they reached the foot of the stairs; that
Judgment that there is no error and that the respondent takes nothing by his exceptions.