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People v. Morse

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Nov 9, 1909
196 N.Y. 306 (N.Y. 1909)

Summary

In People v. Morse (N.Y.), 89 N.E. 816, 817, the court said that where a person has committed a crime "* * * and then uses a revolver carried by him with fatal effect in his effort to avoid arrest, it presents a question for the determination of a jury whether the person so killed was not killed by the deliberate and premeditated intention of the one firing the shot."

Summary of this case from Brown v. State

Opinion

Argued October 28, 1909

Decided November 9, 1909

William W. Wingate for appellant.

John F. Clarke, District Attorney ( Peter P. Smith of counsel), for respondent.


A jury has found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree. At the trial he did not call any witnesses in his behalf, and the evidence for the People is uncontradicted. From the evidence it appears that the defendant on the evening of November 14, 1907, came up behind a woman who was walking upon one of the public streets of the borough of Brooklyn, city of New York, and grabbed a large pocket book which she was carrying in her hand. She held to the pocket book and struggled to retain it. The defendant succeeded in wrenching it from her hand and ran as the woman screamed and called "Stop thief." Her cries were heard by two young men in the vicinity who ran after and overtook the defendant while he was on a sidewalk and they jumped upon and held him. A struggle ensued during which the defendant drew from his pocket a revolver and fired a shot which failed to hit either of the young men. They, however, released their hold upon the defendant and he continued to run in the direction in which he had been running and the young men followed him. After running about two hundred feet from where he fired the first shot he came toward a policeman who had been attracted by the shot and was then running towards the defendant from the opposite direction, and when the defendant met the policeman or came within about five feet of him he fired a shot which caused the wound resulting in the policeman's death about two hours thereafter. The defendant then continued running and the young men came upon the policeman as he staggered into the gutter and they called upon him for his revolver, which he produced from his pocket and gave to one of them and he gave his night stick to the other. They followed the defendant and the one with the revolver fired in the air or at the defendant five times without hitting him. The defendant continued with the young men and others following him until he ran into a dark alley under a building where he was subsequently arrested by other officers. His revolver was found on the ground in the alley and it contained five cartridge shells, two of which had been discharged and three of which were undischarged. The identity of the defendant as the person who took the pocket book from the woman and who subsequently shot and killed the policeman is beyond controversy.

The defendant urges that the judgment of conviction should be reversed because, as he asserts, several errors were committed during the trial which seriously prejudiced his rights. We will briefly state and consider separately some of such alleged errors.

1. The evidence is not sufficient on which to find, as a fact, that the defendant shot the policeman from a deliberate and premeditated design to effect his death.

It appears that the defendant some days prior to the homicide had the revolver with which he did the shooting and it was then in his trunk in the room occupied by him. On the night of the homicide he had the revolver in his pocket. He did not put it in his pocket for any known, lawful purpose. The inference is permissible that he carried the revolver to shoot and kill, if necessary to prevent capture in case he committed a crime. His readiness to use the revolver to avoid detention and arrest is shown not only from his shooting the policeman, but from his firing the shot while he was struggling with the young men who were holding him as we have stated.

Where a person commits highway robbery or other crime in such a deliberate, intentional and premeditated manner as shown by the circumstances in this case, and then uses a revolver carried by him with fatal effect in his effort to avoid arrest, it presents a question for the determination of a jury whether the person so killed was not killed by the deliberate and premeditated intention of the one firing the shot. ( People v. Sullivan, 173 N.Y. 122; People v. Hüter, 184 N.Y. 237.)

There are in this case, however, further facts which were proper to leave to the jury upon the question of intent, deliberation and premeditation, and they are that the defendant was running in a public street where the approach of an officer in the opposite direction must have been seen by him for an appreciable space of time, and his firing the revolver directly at the officer, when the result would necessarily or probably be fatal, is of itself some evidence from which the jury might rightfully find the facts as found by them. ( People v. Governale, 193 N.Y. 581; People v. Majone, 91 N.Y. 211; Leighton v. People, 88 N.Y. 117; People v. Beckwith, 103 N.Y. 360; People v. Constantino, 153 N.Y. 24; People v. Decker, 157 N.Y. 186; People v. Ferraro, 161 N.Y. 365.)

2. Evidence was improperly received that the defendant committed highway robbery in taking the pocket book from the woman.

Evidence of the highway robbery, although not competent to prove the fact of another crime, was competent as a part of a continuous transaction, and to show that the defendant was liable to arrest, and as further showing the motive and intent of the defendant in firing the shot that killed the policeman. ( People v. Governale, supra.)

3. Evidence was improperly received of what the policeman said a few minutes after he was shot in identifying the defendant.

It sufficiently appears that the policeman appreciated that recovery was impossible and that his death was imminent, and his statements were properly received as dying declarations. ( People v. Governale, supra; People v. Del Vermo, 192 N.Y. 470. ) The policeman actually died in a very short time after he identified the man who shot him. The identity of the defendant was so conclusively established that if any error had been committed in admitting the statements of the policeman in identification of the defendant it would not have been harmful.

4. Evidence was improperly received to show that a knife was found on the ground of the alley near where the defendant was arrested.

The knife and revolver were identified by the defendant. They were left by him upon the ground of the alley when he was taken therefrom by the officer who arrested him. The fact that the knife was left by the defendant with the revolver makes it so much a part of the history of the arrest as to permit the evidence that was received in regard to it during the trial.

The other objections urged by the defendant do not present any error or require a further detailed statement. The defendant had a fair trial and the judgment of conviction should be affirmed.

CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, VANN, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT and HISCOCK, JJ., concur.

Judgment of conviction affirmed.


Summaries of

People v. Morse

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Nov 9, 1909
196 N.Y. 306 (N.Y. 1909)

In People v. Morse (N.Y.), 89 N.E. 816, 817, the court said that where a person has committed a crime "* * * and then uses a revolver carried by him with fatal effect in his effort to avoid arrest, it presents a question for the determination of a jury whether the person so killed was not killed by the deliberate and premeditated intention of the one firing the shot."

Summary of this case from Brown v. State
Case details for

People v. Morse

Case Details

Full title:THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Respondent, v . WILLIAM MORSE…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Nov 9, 1909

Citations

196 N.Y. 306 (N.Y. 1909)
89 N.E. 816

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