122 A. 844 | N.J. | 1923
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree in the Sussex Oyer and Terminer and brings error directly into this court. The certificate of the trial judge is not technically correct. It omits the common law return of the record "with all things touching and concerning the same," but it is certified that "the entire record of the proceedings had upon the trial," under section 136 of the Criminal Procedure act, is returned, and we have considered the entire record upon its merits.
The argument for the defendant is made under seven heads. The first is that the names of all jurors were not placed in the box together at the time the drawing commenced.
At the opening of the term forty-eight jurors were drawn. Later, the court ordered that twenty-four additional talesmen be drawn in the maner provided by law. This was done and the defendant was served with a copy of the indictment and the panel of forty-eight jurors, including the additional twenty-four. At the trial the forty-eight names were placed in the box and when they were exhausted without twelve traverse jurors being selected, the names of the twenty-four talesmen were put in and the drawing proceeded from that number until the jury was complete. This in nowise conflicted with any of the provisions of section 82 of the Criminal Procedure act. The specific objection is that the additional twenty-four names were not in the box at the time the drawing commenced. There is no statutory provision that they should be.
Counsel for defendant relies upon the cases of State v.Lapp,
The second point is that the challenge of the juror Frank Paddock was improperly denied. He answered on his voir dire
that he had formed an opinion that the defendant was guilty, but said that he would be guided by the evidence in reaching a verdict. There was nothing to show that his opinion implied malice or ill-will against the prisoner. And in this state it has never been ground of challenge to a juror that he has formed an opinion concerning the prisoner's guilt so long as he declares his ability to consider the case on the evidence. Wilson v.State,
The third point is that the court erred in charging the jury that they must convict the defendant of murder in the first degree or acquit him. The fourth point is involved with this: It is, that the robbery was complete before the *100 time of the killing. To a proper understanding of these points — they are really one — a short resume of the facts is necessary. They are: That on the night of June 13th, 1921, the defendant, Turco, with ten others, came to Byram township, Sussex county, with the intention of holding up and robbing a truck of the Sussex Print Works, and he, Turco, and the other conspirators, went to a point on the highway leading from Newton to Stanhope, and lay in wait until Tuesday morning, June 14th. The locality is known as the "Cat Swamp" and is a lonely place. A truck of the print works, containing silk and copper rollers valued at upwards of $9,000, left Newton and was proceeding to Passaic in charge of a driver and his helper, when six armed and masked men, including Turco, rushed from the underbrush, about six-thirty A.M., and at the point of their pistols, compelled the driver to stop. They took him and the helper from the truck and four of the men rushed them off the road and up the steep bank of a hill and into the woods, where they held them captive for several hours. After the two men had been removed from the truck the defendant, Turco, and one of the conspirators, took charge of the truck and drove it to an open space where they backed it off the road with the intention of turning around. While it was stationery, Albert Koster, the deceased, appeared, coming along the road riding a motorcycle on his way to work in Stanhope. Turco, the defendant, was at this time standing on the ground near the truck. He stepped out into the road with a pistol in his hand and order Koster to stop. He applied his brakes and made every effort to stop, and as he approached the defendant the motorcycle was moving slowly; but when he reached a point in front of the truck Turco fired his pistol at him. The first shot was apparently not fatal, and Turco then placed his left hand on Koster's shoulder, and bringing his motorcycle to a complete stop, fired at him twice, the last bullet passing through his heart and killing him. Immediately after the murder the other man, under the directions of Turco, drove the truck away in the direction of Easton. *101
The object and purpose of the conspiracy in this case was through robbery to seize the truck and run it to Easton, Pennsylvania, and distribute the silk in some portions among themselves. Clearly, the killing of Koster by Turco in the circumstances above detailed, was murder in the first degree according to our statute. 2 Comp. Stat., p. 1779, §§ 106, 107.
In 29 Corp. Jur. 1117, § 101, it is stated that where killing in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate a felony, or one of certain enumerated felonies, is made murder in the first degree, the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate the felony is regarded as standing in the place of, or as the legal equivalent of, the willfulness, deliberation and premeditation necessary under the statute as to other killings, and dispenses with the necessity of proof thereof.
In Whart. Hom. (3d. ed.) 668, § 438, it is laid down that where several persons combine and conspire together for the common object to commit robbery, and in pursuit of that object one of them does an act which causes the death of a third person, each and all are principals, and each and all may be convicted of murder, usually in the first degree under the statute.
In Conrad v. State,
The killing of Koster by Turco was clearly part of the resgestae of the robbery, which, in contemplation of law so far as the murder is concerned, was not completed. The purpose of Turco was clear. Koster had unintentionally come upon the robbers in his passage along the road to his work. Turco, the leader, undoubtedly believed that if Koster was allowed to pass and go on to the next town he would give the alarm, and he shot him in an attempt to conceal the crime for the time being and enable the robbers to make their escape unpursued.
Chief Justice Beasley, in Hunter v. State,
That the conduct of the defendant after the fact may constitute part of the res gestae is laid down by this court in State v.Rombolo,
The trial judge charged the jury that the effect of the statute which provides that if, in an attempt to commit robbery, one man, or any number of men, kill another, even though they did not start with that purpose in mind, but with the single purpose of robbery, their act, in such circumstances *103 under the law, is denominated murder. This was correct, and the facts of the case clearly brought the homicide within the statutory description. The judge, however, also charged the jury that even though Turco was not engaged in the robbery at the time, even if he were upon the highway for some lawful purpose, he had no right to take the life of a human being, and if he stood upon the highway, and, without just cause and provocation, willfully took the life of the unfortunate man going to his work early in the morning, under the circumstances portrayed in the case, he was guilty of murder in the first degree, provided he had time to think of the nature of the act he was doing, and had time to premeditate and deliberate, in the language of the statute. It is contended on behalf of the defendant that, the robbery being complete, the defendant cannot be convicted of murder in the first degree, because the elements of willfulness, premeditation and deliberation, necessary to such a crime, dissociated from robbery, were not indicated to the jury by the court. Assuming this to be a valid objection, and assuming that the question was properly raised, still we think that there is no reversible error in it, for section 136 of the Criminal Procedure act provides that no judgment given upon any indictment shall be reversed for any error except such as shall or may have prejudiced the defendant in maintaining his defense upon the merits. The instruction of the judge here objected to was entirely outside of the case. As already remarked, while still engaged in the robbery, Turco deliberately shot down and killed Koster, and this was murder committed in the perpetration of a robbery and nothing else; nor can it be distorted into anything else; therefore, when the judge charged that if Turco were not engaged in the robbery, but being upon the highway for some lawful purpose he shot and killed Koster, he charged that which was unsupported by any evidence upon which the jury could have rendered a verdict, and the jury must be considered to have found a verdict according to the evidence and not outside of it. In our opinion no theory of the case supports the view that the murder was committed as an independent act dissociated *104 from the robbery, and, consequently, the defendant can take nothing on account of this objection.
The fourth point is that there was error in the court's refusal of a trial and judgment for defendant upon his plea of autrefoisconvict. The defendant had had a previous trial upon which he was likewise convicted of murder in the first degree, upon which judgment was entered and defendant sentenced to death. That judgment was reversed and a venire de novo awarded. State v.Turco,
In Smith and Bennett v. State,
When the trial of this case was moved defendant, through his counsel, offered a plea of autrefois convict, and askedjudgment thereon. This was not the proper practice. The trial of the issue presented by the plea of autrefois acquit
(likewise autrefois convict) is, like that upon a plea of not guilty, triable by a jury only, under like procedure, except that the burden of proof of the issue lies upon the defendant; *105
and in the trial what becomes a matter of law for the court, and what a matter of fact for the jury to determine, must be regulated by the general practice relating to the admission of evidence, the effect of documents and records, and to instructions as to law to be applied by the jury to reach a conclusion. State v. Ackerman,
It is next contended on behalf of the defendant that he is exempt from punishment because the killing was the result of the use of an explosive. For this counsel relied upon the Crimes act (section 221a), which provides that whoever shall thereafter give information concerning others, or shall aid the authorities in the arrest and prosecution of parties implicated in any murder, injury or damage to person or property that may result from the use of dynamite or any other explosive by any person or persons with intent to kill or injure, shall be exempt from any prosecution or punishment, provided the person giving the information is not the only one taking part in the commission of the crime. The argument is that the killing in this case resulted from an explosion of powder in a pistol, and therefore comes within the provisions of the act.
It is perfectly apparent on the face of the statute that it is intended to meet a case where injury or death is the direct result of an explosion, not the indirect result of an explosion in the chamber of a gun or pistol which propels a bullet on its course to assassination; besides, the defendant is the only one who took part in the particular crime of committing murder; the others were guilty, if at all, because the murder was committed in the perpetration of a robbery in which all were engaged. Counsel in their brief assert that the defendant gave aid and information to the state in the prosecution *106 of two of his co-defendants. This will be assumed in deciding this attenuated point against him.
It is lastly contended on behalf of the defendant that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Our examination has led us to the conclusion that, on the contrary, it was entirely in accord with the evidence.
The judgment under review must therefore be affirmed.
For affirmance — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, TRENCHARD, PARKER, KALISCH, BLACK, KATZENBACH, WHITE, HEPPENHEIMER, ACKERSON, VAN BUSKIRK, JJ. 11.
For reversal — None.