People v. Hamilton
People v. Hamilton
Opinion of the Court
We fail to discover in this record any sufficient grounds for a reversal of the "conviction. The verdict in our judgment, was not against the weight of evidence, or against law, nor does justice require that a new trial shall be had. § 528, Grim. Code. The minutes are exceptionally free from errors. The defendant was accorded every right and privilege to which an accused person is entitled under the law, and the only point relied upon by the learned counsel for the defendant at the argument was the inadequacy of the proofs to support a judgment where the forfeiture of a human life must be the penalty of its enforcement.
We have given the testimony a careful perusal, and are unable to perceive any inherent or fatal weakness in it. Although circumstantial, it is of the most satisfactory and conclusive character, and demonstrates, we think, to a moral certainty, that the crime charged in the indictment was committed, and that the defendant was the author of it.
The murdered woman was the defendant’s wife, and was found upon the morning of May 2, 1892, in the edge of a small pond about six hundred feet from the station on the Long Island Railroad at Winfield. The body was rigid, and had been dead several hours, unquestionably since the previous evening. The throat was cut from ear to ear. Both carotid arteries, both jugular veins, both pneumo-gastric nerves and all the tissues from the anterior artery to the vertebral column, including the larynx, had been completely severed, so that the head was attached to the body only by means of the vertebrae of the spine. There were plain indications that the weapon had been twice applied. The deceased was a woman of slight physique, weigh
There was another species of evidence which may properly have had equal weight in establishing the defendant’s guilt.
There was found near the body of the murdered woman a razor, a cuff button and a broken cane. • If these articles were the property of the defendant, they furnished very strong evidence that he was present at the time of the murder and participated in it.. It is very clear from the testimony that they all belonged to him, or were in his possession just before the homicide occurred. The button matched an odd one found in his room; all Ms shaving utensils were at Ms boarding house, except the razor, which, he claimed, was at the place where he worked, on the railroad, only a few miles away, but which he did not produce, and apparently made no- effort to produce it. He admitted he had tire cane, or one just like it, on the evening of the murder, but claimed that it was mysteriously taken from his hand while standing on the sidewalk at Flushing, by some one hurriedly passing by, who immediately disappeared, and was not seen or heard of afterwards; but to a witness for the People he stated that he loaned the cane to his wife to walk with, because she was lame from rheumatism. The defendant evidently appreciated the force of these damaging facts, but his explanation of them was so unreasonable and improbable that it may have discredited his entire defense in the minds of the jury.
, The People’s case was fortified by very convincing proof of a¡
Deliberation and premeditation were also proven. It may fairly be inferred that the wife was induced to go to Winfield upon the pretext that he intended to go to housekeeping with her there and for the purpose of looking at the house which he proposed to rent; they occupied separate coaches upon the train so that he might not be seen in her company; he did not go into the station with her, but waited outside until she joined hito, which all indicated that he had some secret purpose for avoiding observation; and he took with him the razor with which the fatal wound was inflicted. He also produced a letter which he claimed his wife had left under his pillow with a bottle of poison, .when they stopped over night in New York on one occasion, which purported to contain a confession of infidelity on her part, and indicated a frame of mind which contemplated self-destruction. It was shown that the letter was not in her handwriting, and it might properly be argued that it was fabricated by the defendant and was intended to support the theory of suicide in case of her death by violence, and that the razor was left near the body for the purpose of sustaining a claim of this kind.
We have thus recounted the principal facts proven in this case. There were many other circumstances pointing in the same direction, all of which are in our judgment inconsistent with any other hypothesis than that of the guilt of the defendant; and in discharging the duty imposed upon us by the legislature, which requires a review of the facts by this court as well as the law in capital cases, we are constrained to concur in the
The judgment of conviction must be. affirmed.
All concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PEOPLE v. JAMES L. HAMILTON
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published