THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT vs. JOHN WASHELESKY ALIAS JOHN WISZNESKI
Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut
June 16, 1908
81 Conn. 22
Third Judicial District, New Haven, June Term, 1908. BALDWIN, C. J., HAMERSLEY, HALL, PRENTICE and THAYER, JS.
In the case at bar, the defendant moved before the judge of the Superior Court that the proceedings be dismissed on account of the supersedeas wrought by the appeals which he had taken. This motion should have been granted.
There is error, and the cause is remanded to the judge of the Superior Court with directions to dismiss the application.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
It is for the jury to determine what weight shall be given to evidence and what facts it proves.
In respect to the weight given by this court to the action of the trial court in granting or refusing a motion for a new trial on the ground of a verdict against evidence, there is no distinction between a capital case and any other.
The charge in the present case reviewed and held not to warrant the criticism of the accused that it assumed the corpus delicti as a fact proven by the State.
Sentences or parts of a charge are to be considered in connection with the context and with the instructions as a whole.
Under
Evidence of the connection of the accused with a murder may be shown after proof of the corpus delicti, and before the identity of the murdered victim has been established. The corpus delicti is shown by proof that some person has been killed and that some one else killed him.
It is within the discretion of the trial court to admit evidence before the foundation for it has been laid, upon the assurance of counsel that the connecting link will be made afterward.
An appellant cannot complain of questions the answers to which render them harmless.
The accused urged that certain questions put by the State‘s Attorney were not asked in good faith but solely for the purpose of prejudicing the witness and the defendant‘s case in the eyes of the jury. Held that while such conduct would have been most reprehensible, there was nothing in the questions themselves which justified the criticism made by the accused.
Evidence that the deceased was seen on the night of his disappearance and at that time had a weapon, was claimed by the accused solely upon the ground that the decedent, if armed, might have met somebody and been killed by the latter. Held that this inference was so remote that the exclusion of the evidence was within the sound discretion of the trial court.
There is no occasion for this court to appoint a time for the execution of a prisoner whose conviction of murder in the first degree has been affirmed on appeal prior to the expiration of a reprieve. Under such circumstances, chapter 70 of the Public Acts of 1905, p. 295, does not apply, and the warrant for the execution will be issued by the clerk of the trial court and for the date prescribed in the reprieve.
Argued June 5th—decided June 16th, 1908.
INDICTMENT for murder in the first degree, brought to the Superior Court in New Haven County and tried to the jury before Robinson, J.; verdict and judgment of guilty, and appeal by the accused. No error.
Howard C. Webb and Levi N. Blydenburgh, for the appellant (the accused).
THAYER, J. The defendant was found guilty of murder in the first degree, and moved that the verdict be set aside as against the evidence. The motion was overruled. His exceptions to this ruling are founded upon two grounds: first, that the evidence failed to establish the death of Peter Lukaszevitz, for the murder of whom he was indicted, and second, that the evidence failed to so connect the defendant with such death, if it had been proved, as to exclude every reasonable hypothesis of his innocence. The evidence by which the State claimed to have proved that the body was that of Lukaszevitz was wholly circumstantial, came from a large number of witnesses, and we shall not undertake to review it. It is sufficient to say that there was positive evidence tending to prove a large number of independent facts from which the inference could be logically drawn that the dead body, which when found was so decomposed as to be unrecognizable, was that of Lukaszevitz. This evidence was practically uncontradicted. We think that from the facts thus claimed to have been proved, the jury might reasonably be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the body was his. The weight to be given to the evidence, and whether it established the facts claimed by the State, were matters to be determined by the jury.
Having offered evidence to prove the death, and also proof that it was caused by human agency, the State offered evidence to prove that the defendant was the agent who caused it. One witness was produced who attempted to connect the defendant with Lukaszevitz on the night of the latter‘s disappearance, and to show that, after having been assaulted by the defendant, Lukaszevitz, when last
The defendant complains that, in view of his claim upon the trial that the State had failed to prove the death of Lukaszevitz, or that it was the latter‘s body which had been found, and of the claim that his mere disappearance was not of itself sufficient proof of the corpus delicti, the charge of the court upon this branch of the case was not
The defendant complains of certain remarks made by the State‘s Attorney in closing his argument to the jury, and assigns as one of the reasons of appeal and grounds for a new trial, that the court erred in permitting these remarks to be made. The words complained of are: “The grand jurors of the county charge to you in behalf of the people of this commonwealth that John Washelesky, the
The remaining questions raised on the appeal relate to rulings upon questions of evidence. A question propounded to Birdsey A. Farnham, a witness for the State, calling for a fact tending to connect the defendant with the alleged crime, was objected to by the defendant upon the ground that the identity of the dead body as that of Peter Lukaszevitz had not been established beyond a reasonable doubt. The court overruled the objection and admitted the evidence. It is the defendant‘s claim that proof of the corpus delicti could not be complete without proof of the identity of the dead body, and that in trials for murder the body of the crime must be established before
The State offered in evidence an identification card of an account in a savings-bank under the name “John Wasieclewski,” and its admission was objected to in behalf of the defendant until it should be connected with the accused. Upon the State Attorney‘s undertaking to so connect it, it was admitted against the defendant‘s objection. It was competent for the court, in its discretion, upon the assurance of the State‘s Attorney that it would be properly connected, to thus admit the testimony before the foundation for it had been laid. The finding of the court is that in its opinion sufficient evidence was in the case to warrant the jury, if they believed it, in finding that the account belonged to the defendant, and that the name “John Wasieclewski” in the identification card referred to, was intended to represent the defendant. As the sole foundation of the defendant‘s objection was thus removed, he cannot complain of the court‘s exercise of its discretion as to the order of the proof.
Annie Walszik, the former wife of Lukaszevitz but now the wife of another man and mother of a child by him, was called as a witness for the State and afterward for the de-
The same witness testified for the defendant to troubles which occurred at and just outside her home on the night of the alleged crime, between Lukaszevitz and one Grunowalska, after the defendant had left the house. She also testified that she knew of no trouble between Lukaszevitz and the defendant that night. The defendant claimed that this trouble about which the witness testified was the same which the State‘s witness had described, wherein the defendant was said to have assaulted Lukaszevitz. On cross-examination the State‘s Attorney, against the objection of the defendant, was permitted to ask the witness whether she told one Martin Bartusewicz anything about the defendant soaking Lukaszevitz with a club. The witness answered that she did not tell him that. The evidence was admissible in view of the witness’ direct testimony. But the answers to this and the preceding question rendered those questions harmless to the defendant, and it is therefore unnecessary to inquire whether any objection could have been successfully interposed to either question, on the ground that the witness had originally been called by the State.
It is claimed, however, in behalf of the defendant, that it is apparent from the character of the questions that they were asked with no expectation of eliciting answers favorable to the State, but with the sole purpose of prejudicing
Such conduct on the part of the State‘s Attorney as is claimed by the defendant would be most reprehensible. What its effect would be upon the trial we need not consider, because we do not agree with counsel that it is apparent from the questions themselves that the purpose in asking them was what is claimed. As regards the first question, it would be apparent to the jury that the witness might deem it important to free herself from the claimed imputation. They would naturally consider that fact in weighing her testimony, had the question not been asked. How the asking of it and receiving the answer given, and which it is claimed was of such a character as the State‘s Attorney expected, could raise any prejudice against the witness, or the defendant, not existing before, is not explained. The second question was clearly pertinent and admissible. The fact that the question was asked, therefore, suggests no improper purpose in asking it. To impute the purpose which is claimed, we must assume that the State‘s Attorney knew or had good reason to believe that the witness had not used the expression attributed to her, and that he invented the expression and confronted her with a witness to whom he knew she had never uttered it. There is nothing in the question and nothing before us to in any way suggest such an assumption.
The defendant produced a witness by whom he proposed to prove that at about ten o‘clock on the night of his disappearance, Lukaszevitz came alone to her house and that at that time he had a weapon. The State objected to the evidence and it was excluded. The sole ground upon which it was claimed was that if armed he might later have met somebody and the result been his death. It is true that meetings resulting in the death of one of the parties more frequently occur when one or both of them carry weapons. In the absence of any evidence concerning the meeting, the natural inference from the fact that Lukas-
There are several remaining assignments of error upon rulings upon evidence, but they present no questions requiring discussion. The rulings are all sustainable upon familiar and well-settled rules of evidence. We pass them, therefore, with the remark that we find nothing erroneous in them.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
After the foregoing opinion had been announced, the State‘s Attorney applied to this court for an order fixing the date of the execution, and upon that application the following opinion of the court was handed down on June 25th, 1908, at a special session held at New Haven:—
BALDWIN, C. J. The State‘s Attorney has moved for the appointment of a time for the execution of the judgment by which sentence of death was pronounced against the defendant by the Superior Court in New Haven county. This motion rests upon the assumption that
Under our decision on the appeal, the judgment, of which the sentence of death formed a part, stands good. The warrant for execution is therefore to be issued upon it by the clerk of the Superior Court.
The motion is denied.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
